Ohio History Journal




A HALF CENTURY OF THE WRITING OF HISTORY

A HALF CENTURY OF THE WRITING OF HISTORY

IN OHIO

 

By FRANCIS P. WEISENBURGER

Slightly more than a century ago Mrs. Frances Trollope

returned to her home in England after two years of residence in

Cincinnati. Thereupon she published her Domestic Manners of

the Americans,l a somewhat ironical commentary upon life in

the United States. Thus she became one of the earliest represen-

tatives of a ubiquitous tribe of Europeans that from time to time

has contrasted the culture of Europe with that of America and

has found the latter wanting--or perhaps non-existent.         She

pointed to the crudities of the Americans--their boastfulness,

their lack of refinement, and their emphasis upon material values.

After dealing specifically with the situation in Cincinnati she

generalized as to the taste for intellectual fare in America as a

whole:

In truth there are many reasons which render a very general diffusion

of literature impossible in America. I can scarcely class the universal read-

ing of newspapers as an exception to this remark; if I could, my statement

would be exactly the reverse, and I should say that America beat the world

in letters. The fact is, that throughout all ranks of society, from the

successful merchant, which is the highest, to the domestic serving man,

which is the lowest, they are all too actively employed to read, except at

such broken intervals as may suffice for a peep at a newspaper.2

Mrs. Trollope's business failure in Cincinnati may have con-

tributed a note of vindictiveness to her impressions of the Ameri-

can scene, but no candid student of the period would now find

reason to challenge the essential truth in much that she said. The

careful observer of social tendencies must of course often experi-

ence a feeling of stark amazement at the glib generalizations that

are frequently formulated concerning a people so complex as the

American. In a crude and materialistic generation there have

always been individuals who have thirsted for more beautiful,

 

1 Mrs. Frances Trollope, Domestic Manners of the Americans (London, 1832), 2v.

2 Ibid., I, 128.

(326)



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WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO             327

 

more rational, and more ethical expressions of life. But the

American of the pioneer period was necessarily preoccupied with

the hard task of winning a mastery over nature and a minimum

economic security for his family and himself. Incidentally the

material basis was being established that would be capable of sus-

taining a more mature civilization.

In the United States of a century ago the older established

communities--generally east of the Appalachians--had already

begun to feel the beginnings of substantial literary and historical

endeavors. No part of the region west of the Alleghenies, how-

ever, was much removed from the pioneer stage. A few interested

citizens of such a relatively old and prosperous community as

Cincinnati had established the Ohio Historical and Philosophical

Society (in 1831). On the other hand, Ohio's first historian of

the statehood period, Caleb Atwater, who published his History of

the State of Ohio at Cincinnati in 1838, was an unsuccessful Cir-

cleville lawyer and politician. He seemed to contemporaries "like

a disappointed, unhappy man" whose writings "were but a meagre

source of support."3 Eccentrics might write history, but there

was not an interested public sufficiently large to give much con-

sideration to their efforts.

A half century was to elapse before Ohio was to support a

permanent State society devoted to the interests of archaeology

and history. In a sense the State was following a trend of the

nation as a whole in this expanding interest in things historical.

In September, 1884, the American Historical Association was

founded at Saratoga, New York, and on Lincoln Day of the next

year preliminary steps were taken for the establishment of the

Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society. The organiza-

tion meeting was held in Columbus on March 12, 1885, and ex-

Senator Allen Granberry Thurman became the first president by

action of the Board of Trustees taken on the following day.4

This occurred in a period when historiography in the United

States was indeed "between two worlds." Behind were the tra-

 

3 Henry Howe, Historical Collections of Ohio (Cincinnati, 1908), II, 417.

4 Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society Quarterly (Columbus, Ohio,

1887-), I (1887), 83-96.



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ditions of eulogistic praise and special pleading; ahead were the

more difficult efforts of reconstructing the past in a spirit of cool

impartiality and aloof detachment. At that time less than twenty

colleges in the country had professors of history, and school

teachers did not prepare themselves by special courses in order to

give instruction in the subject.5 The graduate schools of the

nation were only beginning to adopt the careful, critical methods

used in German universities. Hence, it is not surprising that, as

Tyler Dennett (now president of Williams College) has pointed

out, two of the best known contributions to American history in

the years from 1885 to 1905 came from three men each of whom

was really a thorough-going amateur. It is significant for the pur-

poses of the present discussion that of these three (John George

Nicolay, John Hay, and James Ford Rhodes), the latter two in

1885 were residents of Ohio (Cleveland). Hay moved to Wash-

ington early in 1886, several years before the publication of the

monumental, though somewhat biased biography of the great

Civil War President.6 Yet his most unremitting efforts at this

task coincided approximately with the last year and a half of his

residence in Cleveland.7

Rhodes, the other Ohio historian mentioned, was a wealthy

business man of Cleveland who had retired from active participa-

tion in industrial and financial affairs to devote himself to the

first of the series of volumes to be known as the History of the

United States from the Compromise of 1850.8 Rhodes knew well

that a writer of books walking down the streets of Cleveland

would be stared at as a rather "remarkable personage."9 In that

city, nevertheless, he found a kindred spirit, a sympathetic adviser,

who was moreover an expert in the field of history into which

Rhodes as an amateur was venturing. This counsellor was Ed-

ward Gaylord Bourne, whose writings particularly in the field of

 

5 John Franklin Jameson, "Early Days of the American Historical Association,

1884-1895," in American Historical Review (New York, 1895-), XL (1934-35), 1-8.

6 John George Nicolay and John Hay, Abraham Lincoln: A History (New York,

1890), 10v.

7 Tyler Dennett, John Hay: From Poetry to Politics (New York, 1933), 136,

144, 138.

8 James Ford Rhodes, History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850

(New York, 1892-1919), 8v.

9 Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe, James Ford Rhodes (New York, 1929), 45.



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Latin-American history were later to be nationally recognized as

authoritative.10 He was at the time (in fact, from 1888 to 1895)

a member of the faculty of Adelbert College (now part of West-

ern Reserve University), Cleveland. Rhodes and Bourne dined

at the home of the former once or twice a month, and the

acquaintance ripened into friendship. Bourne was employed to

spend part of his vacation during the summer of 1889 in collecting

notes for the work and he assisted materially in the revision of

the early drafts of Rhodes' first three volumes.11 In November,

1891, Rhodes submitted the manuscript of the first two volumes

to Harper and Brothers, and in the same year removed from

Cleveland to Cambridge, Massachusetts. Yet the volumes pro-

duced during his residence in Ohio are among his best, for, as a

recent writer has said, the first five volumes are on practically

the same definitive scale, but the last two betray some eagerness

for the conclusion of an ambitious effort.12

Scholars who were dedicating themselves to the Muse of His-

tory during this period had a marked tendency to leave Ohio. A

primary reason was that remunerative positions in the State were

relatively few. This was true in the case of Burke Aaron Hins-

dale who had served from   1870 to 1882 as president of Hiram

College and from 1882 to 1886 as superintendent of the Cleve-

land public schools. Upon his retirement from the latter posi-

tion he devoted himself to historical writing. His Old Northwest

(New York, 1888), a history of the area bounded by Pennsyl-

vania on the east, the Ohio River on the south, the Mississippi

River on the west, and the Great Lakes on the north, was a

praiseworthy accomplishment. In the same year of its publica-

tion, however, he received an appointment to the faculty of the

University of Michigan and removed to Ann Arbor.13

In this year also a young man was finishing his college course

at Oberlin and receiving in Ohio opportunities and inspiration that

 

10 Especially his Spain in America, volume three of his The American Nation:

A History (New York, 1906), 26v.

11 James Ford Rhodes, Historical Essays (New York, 1909), 197.

12 Dumas Malone "Rhodes, James Ford," in Dictionary of American Biography

(New York, 1928-), XV, 532.

13 Harold E. Davis, "Burke Aaron Hinsdale," in Ohio State Archaeological and

Historical Society Quarterly, XLI (1932), 241-83.



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later were to find expression in historical achievements of genuine

merit. This college senior of 1887-1888, John Rogers Commons

was to become one of the foremost historians of the American

labor movement. As he recalls in his autobiography, during his

career at Oberlin he cooperated with other students in establish-

ing a Henry George Club as a means of discussing the single tax.

Their "dear" Professor James Monroe was tolerant of their

"youthful doctrinism," and he later induced two trustees of

Oberlin College to lend Commons the money necessary for fur-

ther education at Johns Hopkins.14

If, as the Jesuits have taught for centuries and as more novel

education theorists have since advocated, the early years of life

are a definite determinant in the formation of character, another

leading historiographer of the period owes his scholarly interests

to his birth and childhood in another Ohio college town. Hubert

Howe Bancroft, born in Granville, Licking County, who went to

California at the age of twenty, was the directing force in the pre-

paration of a monumental history of the Pacific coast region,

covering twenty-eight volumes, exclusive of others in related

series.15 Perhaps less widely known was William Milligan

Sloane, born at Richmond, Ohio, in 1850, who served as a profes-

sor at Princeton for many years and gained distinction as a his-

torical writer. It is interesting to note that the first article in the

initial number of the American Historical Review was from his

pen.16

During the period from 1885 to 1915 those professional

scholars in the field of history who continued to be associated

with Ohio educational institutions were apt to be overburdened

with teaching and administrative duties. As a result there was

often little time for creative scholarship that finds expression in

research and historical writing. Thus George Wells Knight who

appeared on the first program of the American Historical Asso-

ciation at Saratoga in 1884 with a paper on federal land grants

for education in the United States was later relatively unpro-

 

14 John Rogers Commons, Myself (New York, 1934), 38-41.

15 Among these are his History of California (San Francisco, 1884-1890), 7v.

16 William Milligan Sloane, "History and Democracy," in American Historical

Review, I (1895-96), 1-23.



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WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO              331

 

ductive as a writer of history. Joining the faculty of the Ohio

State University in 1885, he served conspicuously, however, as

an able administrator, an effective teacher, and as a counsellor to

hundreds of students.

Other teachers in Ohio, moreover, were so handicapped for

money and materials needed for serious endeavors that the strug-

gle was an almost impossible one. Professor Wilbur Henry Sie-

bert of the Ohio State University recalls one scholarly young in-

structor with a verve for research, Sidney Short, who in the years

before large Ohio libraries and inter-library loans would pur-

chase books needed for his work and then re-sell them after they

had performed their service. More than one earnest soul realized

full well the compelling truth inherent in Carl Schurz's remark

to a young man interested in historiography as a life work that it

was "an aristocratic profession." An opulent business man such

as Rhodes in his mature years might turn to history as a means

of expressing his conspicuous abilities. Even John Hay, how-

ever, could scarcely have indulged himself as a writer of historical

biography if love and fortune had not pointed in the same direc-

tion in his marriage to the daughter of the wealthy Amasa Stone

of Cleveland. Most Ohio college and university professors had

neither inherited nor married a fortune and were forced to re-

linquish any youthful hopes of authorship as an important part

of their careers. And, as a matter of fact, they were not expected

generally by college presidents and boards of trustees to devote

much concern to such prospects. Teaching, it appeared, was the

vocation to which they were called!

Only a small minority of Americans (and Ohioans were a

part of the whole), moreover, were interested in specialized works

of history such as our graduate schools have turned out in more

recent years. They were much more interested in writings like

the chatty chronicles of Henry Howe who had traveled through

Ohio in 1846 and 1847, gathering all sorts of data and recording

the recollections of pioneer citizens. In the latter year he had

published his first Historical Collections of Ohio, then in three

volumes, and in 1885 had returned to the State to bring the



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series up to date. The cost of the publication of the new work,

however, exhausted his private resources, and it was only after

his death in 1893 that the Ohio Legislature appropriated $20,000

for the purchase of the plates and copyright and distributed the

volumes to citizens through their State representatives.

Such a person as Philip Van Ness Myers, long associated

with the University of Cincinnati might publish and profit by the

extensive sale of textbooks such as his Outlines of Medieval and

Modern History (Boston, 1898), Rome, Its Rise and Fall (Bos-

ton, 1900), History of Greece (Boston, 1895), but such ambitions

and opportunities did not come to many.

During the period since 1887 the Ohio State Archaeological

and Historical Society has regularly issued publications (chiefly

the QUARTERLY), thus rendering valuable service in fostering an

interest in Ohio's history among the people of the State. Many

of the articles by archaeological experts such as William Corless

Mills, Gerard Fowke, Warren King Moorehead, Henry Clyde

Shetrone, and Emerson Frank Greenman have explained the pre-

historic culture of the mound-builder. Other contributions were

written by persons whose special knowledge of the localities and

periods involved gave unusual interest and value to their con-

tributions. In some cases data relating to pioneer life have been

preserved that otherwise might have been lost. In many in-

stances, moreover, problems of Ohio history have been attacked

that would have been too local in their significance to claim much

of the time of the professional historian. Yet these productions

have added materially to the sum total of our knowledge of the

history of Ohio, and therefore of the larger America. In this

connection the numerous articles by Emilius Oviatt Randall,

Daniel Joseph Ryan, and Charles Burleigh Galbreath, each long

associated with the Society, may be mentioned. Contributions of

William Henry Hunter of Chillicothe such as "The Influence of

Pennsylvania on Ohio" and "The Pathfinders of Jefferson

County,"17 give one a better understanding of the early history

of eastern Ohio. Frazer Ells Wilson has delved into problems

17 Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society Quarterly, XII (1903), 287-

309; VIII (1889), 132-263.



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 333

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO                 333

 

related to the vicinity of Greenville in such contributions as "St.

Clair's Defeat"18 and "The Treaty of Greenville."19 Helen

Mary Carpenter of Norwalk has written authoritatively of her

own locality in "The Origin and Location of the Firelands of the

Western Reserve."20 Clement L. Martzolff, who was for many

years associated with Ohio University at Athens, contributed

articles especially valuable in relation to the development of south

central Ohio, such as "Zane's Trace," "Ohio University," and

"Early Religious Movements in the Muskingum Valley,"21

Such special studies as that by Charles Clifford Huntington, of

the Geography Department of the Ohio State University, "A

History of Banking and Currency in Ohio before the Civil

War"22 and that of Edward Alanson Miller, long associated with

Oberlin College (1900-1931), "History of Educational Legisla-

tion in Ohio from 1803 to 1850,"23 must always be consulted for

an understanding of those subjects. Huntington also wrote (with

C. P. McClelland) a History of Ohio Canals (Columbus, Ohio,

1905), published by the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical

Society.

These monographs illustrate another service rendered by the

last-mentioned organization. For many years its publications have

been an avenue of encouragement to scholars (especially in Ohio)

who have been starting along the road of historical research.

Forty years ago the Society's QUARTERLY contained an article by

Siebert, "The Underground Railroad in Ohio,"24 before he had

become the established authority in the United States on the

subject of the underground railroad. The Society also issued the

first significant article of Archer Butler Hulbert,25 a graduate of

Marietta College, who served as professor at that institution

(1904-1918) and who later not only edited the valuable records

of the Ohio Company but established himself as a leading writer

 

18 Ibid., XI         (1902), 34-43.

19 Ibid., XII        (1903), 128-59.

20 Ibid., XLIV (1935), 163-203.

21 Ibid., XIII (1904), 297-331; XIX (1910), 411-45; XXV (1916), 183-90.

22 Ibid., XXIV (1915), 235-540.

23 Ibid., XXVII (1918), 1-271.

24 Ibid., IV  (1892), 44-63.

25 Archer Butler Hulbert, "Indian Thoroughfares of Ohio," ibid., VIII (1889),

264-95.



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on western American history. It opened its pages to one of the

first productions of Wallace Notestein, a son of a Wooster Col-

lege professor and a graduate of that institution who has since

acquired a national reputation in the field of English history.26

The article by Isaac Joslin Cox, "The Indian as a Diplomatic

Factor in the History of the Old Northwest,"27 indicated the

early trend of interest of one now well known in the field of

diplomatic history. Reginald Charles McGrane's interest in the

history of the Middle West was early shown by an article, "The

Evolution of the Ohio-Erie Boundary."28 Homer Carey Hock-

ett's special field of western history was indicated in his "Internal

Improvements, 1815-25."29 Carl Frederick Wittke's abilities as

a historian of the immigrant groups in American life were sug-

gested in two articles "Ohio's German-language Press and the

Peace Negotiations" and "Ohio's German-language Press and

the War."30

Professor Eugene Holloway Roseboom of the History De-

partment of the Ohio State University while a graduate student

contributed a valuable article, his master's thesis, "The Presi-

dential Election of 1824 in Ohio."31  An early production by

Arthur Meier Schlesinger, now professor of history at Harvard

University, related to the youthful life of Salmon Portland

Chase.32  Professor Francis Robert Aumann of the Political

Science Department of the Ohio State University contributed

"The Development of the Judicial System of Ohio."33 Roscoe

Huhn Eckelberry of the College of Education, Ohio State Uni-

versity, wrote in the field of his specialty, "An Early Proposal for

a State Polytechnic School" and "The McNeely Normal School

and Hopedale Normal College."34 Benjamin Harrison Pershing

of Wittenberg College is the author of a biography of Winthrop

Sargent, secretary of the Northwest Territory, and of an article

 

26 Ibid., XVI (1907), 269-91.

27 Ibid., XVIII (1909), 542-65.

28 Ibid., XXII (1913), 326-29.

29 Ibid., XXV (1916), 140-45.

30 Ibid., XXIX (1920), 49-79; XXVIII (1919), 82-95.

31 Ibid., XXVI (1917), 153-224.

32 Ibid. XXVIII (1919), 119-61.

33 Ibid., XLI (1932), 195-236.

34 Ibid., XXXIX (1930), 400-10; XL (1931), 86-136.



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 335

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO                 335

 

on "Membership in the General Assembly of Ohio."35 Harold

Eugene Davis of Hiram College dealt in painstaking fashion with

the life of Hinsdale,36 and with "Religion on the Western Reserve,

1800-1825."37 Francis Phelps Weisenburger wrote a rather full

account of the "Life of Charles Hammond, First Great Journalist

of the Old Northwest."38

Graduate students at Ohio State University and other Ohio

institutions have also offered the Society the results of their care-

ful research. Among these may be mentioned: Forrest William

Clonts, "The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio;"39 Edgar

Allan Holt, now dean of the University of Omaha, "Party

Politics in Ohio, 1840-50;"40 Erwin Hugh Price, "The Election

of 1848 in Ohio;"41 Elizabeth F. Yager, "The Presidential Cam-

paign of 1864 in Ohio."42 Professor Ruhl Jacob Bartlett, now

chairman of the Department of History, Tufts College, Massa-

chusetts, as a graduate student at the Ohio State University con-

tributed "The Struggle for Statehood in Ohio,"43 and Randolph

Chandler Downes now of the Western Pennsylvania Historical

Society submitted the results of some of his researches. Among

his productions while in Ohio were "Thomas Jefferson and the

Removal of Governor St. Clair in 1802"44 and "The Evolution

of County Boundaries."45

Other organizations besides the Archaeological and Historical

Society have also materially assisted in making available to the

reader the results of the researches of Ohioans. The Publications

(1906-) of the Ohio Historical and Philosophical Society at Cin-

cinnati have made available in printed form various valuable col-

lections of letters and other manuscript material. An example

is the publication (1934) of the autobiography and Civil War

letters of Colonel A. W. Gilbert, Citizen-Soldier of Cincinnati,

 

35 Ibid., XXXV (1926), 583-602; XL (1931), 222-83.

36 Ibid., XLI (1932), 241-83.

37 Ibid., XXXVIII (1929), 475-201.

38 Ibid., XLIII (1934), 340-427.

39 Ibid., XXXI (1922), 38-97.

40 Ibid., XXXVII (1928), 439-591; XXXVIII (1929), 47-182; 260-402.

41 Ibid., XXXVI (1927), 188-311.

42 Ibid., XXXIV (1925), 548-89.

43 Ibid., XXXII (1923), 472-503.

44 Ibid., XXXVI (1927), 62-77.

45 Ibid., XXXVI (1927), 340-477.



336 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

336   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

edited by William Ernest and Ophia D. Smith. The "Old North-

west" Genealogical Quarterly, published at Columbus, Ohio,

(1898-1912), consists of fifteen volumes relating chiefly to Ohio.

Included in this were the autobiography and letters of Allen

Trimble, governor of Ohio (1822-1826), and a biography of

Jeremiah Morrow, representative, United States Senator and Ohio

governor, by his grandson, Josiah Morrow. At Norwalk, Ohio,

the publication of the Firelands Pioneer (1858-) by the Firelands

Historical Society preserved material valuable for a study of the

history of that area. The Western Reserve Historical Society

Tracts (Cleveland, 1870-) have included some valuable studies.

Colonel Charles Whittlesey contributed an article to number 66

(1886), "Col. Bradstreet's Misfortunes on Lake Erie in 1764;"

Elbert Jay Benton, who has been associated with Western Re-

serve University since 1903, wrote the introduction to material

on "Northern Ohio during the War of 1812" in number 92

(1913); William Cox Cochran presented an article on "The

Western Reserve and the Fugitive Slave Law" in number 101

(1920); and Benton contributed an excellent account of "The

Movement for Peace without Victory during the Civil War" to

number 99 (1918). Other tracts of the society have contained

such documentary material as the "Papers of the Connecticut

Land Company," Tract number 96 (1916), and letters of Samuel

Huntington, early Ohio governor, Tract number 95 (1915).

Ohioans have been frequent contributors to the various na-

tionally-known historical journals. Thus, among the articles in

the American Historical Review are: Wilbur Henry Siebert,

"Light on the Underground Railroad," I (1895-96), 455-63;

Henry Eldridge Bourne (who joined the staff of Western Reserve

University in 1892 and who is now the managing editor of the

American Historical Review), "Municipal Politics in Paris in

1789," XI (1905-06), 263-86; "American Constitutional Prece-

dents in the French National Assembly," VIII (1902-03), 466-

90, and "Improvising a Government in Paris in July, 1789," X

(1904-05), 280-308; Clarence Perkins (who was a member of the

Department of History of the Ohio State University from 1909



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to 1920 and who is now at the University of North Dakota),

"The Wealth of the Knight Templars in England and the Dis-

position of It after Their Dissolution," XV (1909-10), 252-63;

Isaac Joslin Cox (who was a member of the faculty of the Uni-

versity of Cincinnati from 1904 to 1919 and who is now at

Northwestern University), "The American Intervention in West

Florida," XVII (1911-12), 290-311, and "General Wilkinson and

His Later Intrigues with the Spaniards," XIX (1913-14), 794-

812; John R. Knipfing (of the Department of European History

at the Ohio State University, 1917-1925), "German Historians

and Macedonian Imperialism," XXVI (1920-21), 657-71. Ken-

neth Scott Latourette (professor at Denison University, 1916-

1921, and now at Yale), "Chinese Historical Studies during the

Past Seven Years," XXVI (1920-21), 703-16; Clarence Edwin

Carter (who joined the staff of Miami University in 1910), "The

Significance of the Military Office in America, 1763-1775,"

XXVIII (1922-23), 475-88; Albert Tangeman Volwiler (of

Wittenberg, and now of Ohio University), "Tariff Strategy and

Propaganda in the United States, 1887-1888," XXXVI (1930-

31), 76-96; Arthur Charles Cole (for ten years professor at the

Ohio State University, and now of Western Reserve University),

"Lincoln's Election an Immediate Menace to Slavery in the

States?" XXXVI (1930-31), 740-67; Reginald Charles McGrane

(on the faculty of the University of Cincinnati since 1915),

"Some Aspects of American State Debts in the Forties,"

XXXVIII (1932-33), 673-86, and Helen Robbins Bittermann (of

Columbus, Ohio), "The Influence of Irish Monks on Merovin-

gian Diocesan Organization," XL (1934-35), 232-45.

To the Mississippi Valley Historical Review (Cedar Rapids,

Iowa, 1914-) (which since 1930 has been edited at Cleveland by

Cole, assisted by Bertha Esther Josephson, a graduate of the

Ohio State University), Ohioans have contributed many articles.

For the earlier Proceedings (Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1907-) of the

Mississippi Valley Historical Association Henry Noble Sherwood

of Cincinnati wrote, "The Settlement of the John Randolph Slaves

in Ohio," V (1911-12), 35-59; Karl Frederick Geiser, professor



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338   OHIO ARCHEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

at Oberlin College, "The Western Reserve in the Anti-slavery

Movement, 1840-1860," V (1911-12), 73-98, and "New England

and the Western Reserve," VI (1912-13), 62-78; Cox, then of the

University of Cincinnati, "The New Invasion of the Goths and

Vandals," VIII (1914-15), 176-200; Siebert, "The Loyalists in

West Florida and the Natchez District," VIII (1914-15), 102-22;

McGrane of the University of Cincinnati, "The Veto Power in

Ohio," IX (1915-18), 177-89; Cochran of Cincinnati, "Perils of

River Navigation in the Sixties," X  (1918-21), 318-33; Ellis

Merton Coulter, then of Marietta College, "Elijah Clarke's For-

eign Intrigues and the Trans-Oconee Republic," X (1918-21),

260-79; Arthur Henry Hirsch, who joined the staff of Ohio

Wesleyan University in 1919, "The Construction of the Miami

and Erie Canal," X  (1918-21), 349-62; and Wittke, "Ohio's

German-language Press in the Campaign of 1920," X (1918-21),

468-80.

Among the articles in the Review itself are the following by

Ohioans:

Beverley Waugh Bond, Jr. (on the faculty of the University

of Cincinnati since 1920), "Two Westward Journeys of John

Filson," IX (1922-23), 320-30; (ed.), "Captivity of Charles

Stewart," XIII (1926-27), 58; "American Experiment in Co-

lonial Government," XV (1928-29), 221-35; "American Civili-

zation Comes to the Old Northwest" (being the presidential

address of Mississippi Valley Historical Association, 1932), XIX

(1932-33), 3-29.

Clarence Edwin Carter, "Some Aspects of British Adminis-

tration in West Florida," IV (1917-18), 314-41; "Notes on Gage

MSS.," XV (1928-29), 511-19.

Clayton Sumner Ellsworth (of the College of Wooster),

"Ohio's Legislative Attack upon Abolition Schools," XXI (1934-

35), 379-86.

Robert Stillman Fletcher (of Oberlin College), "The End

of the Open Range in Eastern Montana," XVI (1929-30), 188-

211, and "The Government of the Oberlin Colony," XX (1933-

34), 179-90.



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 339

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO              339

 

Arthur Henry Hirsch, "Effort of the Grange to Control the

Price of Farm Machinery," XV (1928-29), 473-96.

Homer Carey Hockett (of the Ohio State University), "The

Influence of the West on Political Parties," IV (1917-18), 459-

569; "The Literary Movement in Writing History," XII (1925-

26), 469-82; and "Little Essays on the Police Power," (being

the presidential address of Mississippi Valley Historical Asso-

ciation, 1930), XVII (1930-31), 3-23.

Geraldine Hopkins (of Oberlin College) (ed.) "A Rare

Abolitionist Document," XVIII (1931-32), 60-64.

George Frederick Howe (of the University of Cincinnati),

"The New York Custom House Controversy," XVIII (1931-

32), 350-63.

Henry Clyde Hubbart (of Ohio Wesleyan University),

"'Pro-Southern' Influences in the Free West, 1840-1865," XX

(1933-34), 45-62.

Archer Butler Hulbert (while at Marietta College), "Meth-

ods and Operations of Scioto Group of Speculators," I (1914-15),

502-15.

Reginald Charles McGrane (ed.), "William Clark's Journal

of Wayne's Campaign," I (1914-15), 418-44; "Ohio and the

Greenback Movement," XI (1924-25), 526-42.

Wilbur Henry Siebert, "Dispersion of the American To-

ries," I (1914-15), 185-97; "Loyalists in West Florida and the

Natchez District," II (1915-16), 465-83; "Kentucky's Struggle

with Its Loyalist Proprietors," VII (1920-21), 113-26.

William Ernest Smith (of Miami University), "Francis P.

Blair, Pen-Executive of Andrew Jackson," XVII (1930-31),

543-56.

William Thomas Utter, of Denison University, contributed

three articles to the Review while residing outside of Ohio, but

much of the work upon them was done when an instructor at

the Ohio State University.

Albert Tangeman Volwiler (ed.), "William Trent's Jour-

nal," XI (1924-25), 390-413; (ed.), "Letters from a Civil War

Officer," XIV (1927-28), 508-29.



340 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

340   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

Francis Phelps Weisenburger (of the Ohio State Univer-

sity), "John McLean, Postmaster-General," XVIII (1931-32),

23-33; "The Time of Mark Hanna's First Acquaintance with

McKinley," XXI (1934-35), 78-81.

Among other learned publications of note is the Journal of

Modern History (Chicago, 1929-), to which Frederick Binkerd

Artz of Oberlin College contributed "The Electoral System in

France during the Bourbon Restoration, 1815-30," I (1929),

205-18. In the Canadian Historical Review  (Toronto, 1920-),

Wittke, of the Department of History at Ohio State University,

published "Canadian Refugees in the American Revolution,"

III (1922), 320-33, and one of his former students, Dr.

William Daniel Overman, now curator of history at the Ohio

State Archaeological and Historical Society, presented, "I. D.

Andrews and Reciprocity in 1854: an Episode in Dollar Diplo-

macy," XV (1934), 248-63. To the Hispanic American Histori-

cal Review  (Baltimore, Maryland, 1918-), Lawrence Francis

Hill of the Ohio State University contributed, "Confederate

Exiles to Brazil," VII (1927), 192-210, and the "Abolition of

the African Slave Trade to Brazil," XI (1931), 169-97.

To the Proceedings (Worcester, Massachusetts, 1843-) of

the American Antiquarian Society, Siebert has contributed a

number of significant articles on the Loyalists: "East Florida as

a Refuge of Southern Loyalists, 1774-1785," new Series,

XXXVII (1927), 222-46, and "George Washington and the

Loyalists," new Series, XLIII (1933), 34-48. To the Proceed-

ings (Boston, 1859-) of the Massachusetts Historical Society he

contributed "The Colony of Massachusetts Loyalists at Bristol,

England" (1912). In the Transactions (Ottawa, 1883-) of the

Royal Society of Canada, he (with Florence Edna Gilliam) pre-

sented "Loyalists in Prince Edward Island," third Series, IV

(1910), 190-217; "The Loyalist Settlements on the Gaspe Penin-

sula," VIII (1914), 399-405; "The Temporary Settlements of

Loyalists at Machiche, P. Q.," VIII (1914), 407-14; "The Loy-

alists and the Six Nation Indians," IX (1915), 79-128; "The

Refugee Loyalists of Connecticut," X (1916), 72-92.



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 341

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO              341

 

Siebert has also contributed "Slavery and White Servitude

in East Florida, 1726-1776," to the Quarterly Periodical (Talla-

hassee, 1908-) of the Florida Historical Society, X (1931-32),

3-23; "Spanish and French Privateering in Southern Waters,

July 1762 to March 1763," to the Georgia Historical Quarterly

(Savannah, 1917-), XVI (1932), and "Loyalist Troops of New

England" to the New England Quarterly, IV (1931), 108-47.

Some articles of value were also printed in the Ohio History

Teachers' Journal, published at the Ohio State University from

1916 to 1925.

Ohioans have also made numerous contributions to the Dic-

tionary of American Biography, edited by Allen Johnson and

Dumas Malone. It would be a difficult task to list each Ohioan

who has aided in this work but the following persons should be

mentioned: Benton, Bond, Carter, Galbreath, Geiser, Hockett,

McGrane, Edwin William Pahlow, Pershing, Smith, Charles

Franklin Thwing, Utter, Volwiler, Siebert, Cole, Newton Diehl

Baker, Walter Gillan Clippinger, Harlow Lindley, Roseboom,

Hirsch, Gilbert Hobbs Barnes, Alonzo Hubert Tuttle, Weisen-

burger and Wittke.

Turning to the published volumes written by Ohioans one

finds it well-nigh impossible to mention all the historical works

contributed by citizens of the State during the last half century.

Some of the most important, nevertheless, should be suggested.

Artz is the author of France under the Bourbon Restoration,

1814-1830 (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1931), and Reaction and

Revolution, 1814-1832 (New York, 1934). Barnes of the Eco-

nomics Department of Ohio Wesleyan University is the author of

The Anti-slavery Impulse, 1830-1844 (New York, 1933), and is

the editor (with Dwight Dumond of the University of Michi-

gan) of the Letters of Theodore Dwight Weld, Angelina Grimke

Weld, and Sarah Grimke, 1822-1844 (New York, 1935), 2v.

Benton is the author of The Wabash Trade Route (Baltimore,

Maryland, 1903); International Law and the Diplomacy of the

Spanish-American War (Baltimore, Maryland, 1908); Movement

for Peace without Victory during the Civil War (Cleveland,



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342   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

1918); and is joint author of several history texts. Bond has

edited the Correspondence of John Cleves Symmes (New York,

1926) and has written The Civilization of the Old Northwest

(New York, 1934). Henry Eldridge Bourne has published The

Teaching of History and Civics (New York, 1902); History of

Medieval and Modern Europe (New York, 1905); The Revolu-

tionary Period in Europe (New York, 1914); and (with Benton)

several American history texts. He also edited an edition of

William Edward Hartpole Lecky's French Revolution (New

York, 1904). Professor Francis William Buckler, historian of

Oriental studies and a member of the faculty of Oberlin School

of Theology since 1925, has written Harunu'l-Rashid and Charles

the Great (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1931) and has contributed

to the Cambridge History of British Foreign Policy, 1783-1919

(New York, 1922-23), 3v. Carter, who joined the faculty of

Miami University in 1910, published Great Britain and the Illi-

nois Country, 1763-1774 (Washington, 1910), which won the

Justin Winsor prize of 1908. Since that time he has written,

with Clarence Walworth Alvord in the Illinois State Historical

Library Collections (Springfield, 1903-), The Critical Period,

1763-1765 (1915); The New Regime, 1765-1767 (1916), and

Trade and Politics, 1767-69 (1921). He has recently edited The

Correspondence of General Thomas Gage with the Secretaries of

State (New Haven, Connecticut, 1931-33), 2v., and is now en-

gaged in the editing of the Territorial Papers of the United States

(Washington, 1934-) under grant of the United States Govern-

ment. Cole wrote two well-esteemed volumes before coming to

Ohio in 1920 and has since published The Irrepressible Conflict

(New York, 1934). Cox while at the University of Cincinnati

published The Journeys of La Salle as Related by H. de Tonty

and Others (New York, 1905), 2v., and The West Florida Con-

troversy, 1798-1813 (Baltimore, Maryland, 1918). Hasting Eells

of Ohio Wesleyan University is the author of a life of Martin

Bucer, Reformation leader (New Haven, Connecticut, 1931) and

Europe Since 1500 (New York, 1933). Vergilius Ture Anselm

Ferm of Wooster College has written The Crisis in American



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 343

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO             343

 

Lutheran Theology: a Study of the Issue between American

Lutheranism and Old Lutheranism (New York, 1927). William

Franklin Gephart, now a St. Louis banker, but a native Ohioan,

a graduate of Ohio State University, and a member of the eco-

nomics faculty (1905-1913), published as a Columbia University

Study (New York, 1909) his doctoral dissertation, Transporta-

tion and Industrial Development in the Middle West. George

Andrews Hedger and others at the University of Cincinnati have

written An Introduction to Western Civilization (New York,

1933). Hirsch is the author of Huguenots of Colonial South

Carolina (Durham, North Carolina, 1928). Hill has written Jose

de Escandon and the Founding of Nuevo Santander (Columbus,

Ohio, 1926)--largely a product of his previous residence in Cali-

fornia; and Diplomatic Relations between the United States and

Brazil (Durham, North Carolina, 1932). Hockett contributed a

chapter, "Federalism and the West," to Essays in American His-

tory Dedicated to Frederick Jackson Turner (New York, 1910).

He has also written Western Influences on Political Parties to

1825 (Columbus, Ohio, 1917); A Political and Social History of

the United States (New York, 1925) and a new edition, The Po-

litical and Social Growth of the United States (New York, 1933),

and Introduction to Research in American History (New York,

1931). George Frederick Howe has written the first adequate

biography of Chester Alan Arthur (mentioned below). John

Life La Monte of the University of Cincinnati is the author of

Feudal Monarchy in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem,   1100 to

1291 (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1932). McGrane has edited

The Correspondence of Nicholas Biddle (New York, 1919),

president of the Second Bank of the U. S., and has written the

Panic of 1837 (Chicago, 1924) and a Life of William Allen (Co-

lumbus, Ohio, 1925). Edgar Holmes McNeal of the Ohio State

University is the joint author with Oliver Joseph Thatcher of

Europe in the Middle Age, new and revised edition (New York,

1920), and a Source Book for Mediaeval History (New York,

1905). Jacob Conrad Meyer of Western Reserve University is

the author of Church and State in Massachusetts from 1740 to



344 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

344   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

1833: a Chapter in the History of the Development of Individual

Freedom  (Cleveland, 1930). Arthur Herbert Noyes, late asso-

ciate professor at the Ohio State University, was the author of

The Military Obligation in Mediaeval England with Especial Ref-

erence to Commissions of Array (Columbus, Ohio, 1931) and

Europe--Its History and Its World Relationships, 1789-1933

(Boston, 1934). He also cooperated with Jonathan French Scott

of New York University and Albert Hyma of the University of

Michigan in the issuing of Readings in Medieval History (New

York, 1933). Pahlow of the College of Education, Ohio State

University, has written Man's Great Adventure, an Introduction

to World History (Boston, 1932). Howard Robinson, for many

years professor and dean at Miami University and who joins

the faculty of the Ohio State University in 1935, has written

A History of Great Britain (Boston, 1927) and Bayle the Sceptic

(New York, 1931). He also contributed a study of "Bayle's

Profanation of Sacred History" to the Essays in Intellectual His-

tory Dedicated to James Harvey Robinson (New York, 1929).

Roseboom and Weisenburger have cooperated in the production

of a History of Ohio (New York, 1934), the first single volume

history of the State to be written from the viewpoint of modern

scholarship. Miss Clara Eve Schieber of Ohio Northern Uni-

versity is the author of The Transformation of American Senti-

ment toward Germany, 1870-1914 (Boston, 1923). Siebert has

written The Underground Railroad from   Slavery to Freedom

(New  York, 1898); The Government of Ohio (New York,

1904); Report on the Collections of Materials in English and

European History . . . in the Libraries of the U. S. (Washington,

1905); The Legacy of the American Revolution to the British

West Indies and Bahamas (Columbus, Ohio, 1913); The Exodus

of the Loyalists from Penobscot to Passamaquoddy (Columbus,

Ohio, 1914); The Loyalist Refugees of New Hampshire (Colum-

bus, Ohio, I916); The Loyalists of Pennsylvania (Columbus,

Ohio, 1920); Loyalists in East Florida, 1774-1785: I, Narrative,

II, Records of Their Claims for Losses of Property in the Prov-

ince (De Land, Florida, 1929), 2V.; Ohio State University's



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 345

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO              345

 

Share in the World War (in press). Henry Harrison Simms

who had previously written Rise of the Whigs in Virginia (Rich-

mond, Virginia, 1929), since coming to the faculty of the Ohio

State University in 1929, has become the author of Life of John

Taylor: The Story of a Brilliant Leader in the Early Virginia

State Rights School (Richmond, Virginia, 1932). Theodore

Clarke Smith, now of Williams College, while an assistant pro-

fessor of history at the Ohio State University (1901-1903), was

the author of "Political Reconstruction" in Cambridge Modern

History (New York, 1902-11), VII (1903). William Warren

Sweet, while a member of the faculty of Ohio Wesleyan Uni-

versity (1911-1913), was the author of The Methodist Episcopal

Church and the Civil War (Delaware, Ohio, 1912). Professor

William Ernest Smith is the writer of the much-esteemed Francis

Preston Blair Family in Politics (New York, 1933), 2v. Vol-

wiler has written George Croghan and the Westward Movement

(Cleveland, 1926), a life of the noted Indian trader, and has

made considerable progress on a biography of President Benja-

min Harrison. George Adrian Washburne of the Ohio State

University is the author of a volume in the publications of Co-

lumbia University, Imperial Control of the Administration of

Justice in the Thirteen American Colonies, 1684-1776 (New

York, 1923). Wittke has shown a catholic interest in the his-

torical field in the publication of The History of English Parlia-

mentary Privilege (Columbus, Ohio, 1921); History of Canada

(New York, 1928); and Tambo and Bones: A History of the

American Minstrel Stage (Durham, North Carolina, 1930). In

1932 he lectured in Germany in celebration of the bi-centennial

of the birth of Washington. These lectures have been published

as George Washington Und Seine Zeit (Bremen-Leipzig, 1933).

Professor Harold Monk Vinacke of the University of Cincinnati

has written a History of the Far East in Modern Times (New

York, 1928). In the classical field, Professor Allen Brown West

of the University of Cincinnati has contributed The Athenian As-

sessment of 425 B. C. (Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1934) in collabo-

ration with Benjamin Dean Meritt.



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346   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

The Ohio State University Press has aided in the publication

of various historical works, some of which, the work of the Ohio

State University faculty members, have already been mentioned.

Others written by graduate students at that University include

William Best Hesseltine, now of the University of Wisconsin,

Civil War Prisons (Columbus, Ohio, 1930); Bartlett, John C.

Fremont and the Republican Party (Columbus, Ohio, 1930);

Ruth Loving Higgins, now dean of Beaver College, Expansion

in New York with Especial Reference to the Eighteenth Century

(Columbus, Ohio, 1931).

Ohio memoirs have offered a field for writing to those who

have figured actively in the State's history, to members of their

families, and to some of their associates. Thus John Sherman,

long a Representative and Senator from Ohio, wrote his Recollec-

tions of Forty Years (Akron, Ohio, 1895), 2v.; Senator Joseph

Benson Foraker attempted to justify his own political actions in

Notes of a Busy Life (Cincinnati, Ohio, 1916), 2v.; and the lat-

ter's widow submitted her recollections in I Would Live It Again

(New York, 1932). Brand Whitlock, intimately associated for

years with Toledo municipal politics, wrote Forty Years of It

(New York, 1914). Tom Loftin Johnson's life work, especially

in relation to Cleveland, was discussed in My Story (New York,

1911). The biography of one who had much to do with the first

settlement of Ohio, though he never settled in the region, was

written by his Ohio grandchildren, William Parker and Julia

Perkins Cutler, in The Life, Journals and Correspondence of Rev.

Manasseh Cutler (Cincinnati, Ohio, 1888), 2v. Julia Perkins

Cutler also contributed a life of her father who was a member of

Ohio's first constitutional convention in Life and Times of Eph-

riam Cutler (Cincinnati, 1890). Another volume of interest for

the early settlement of the State is Mary Cone, Life of Rufus

Putnam (Cleveland, 1886). David Meade Massie of Chillicothe

told the story of the life of his grandfather, the founder of that

city, in Nathaniel Massie, a Pioneer of Ohio (Cincinnati, 1896).

William Edward Gilmore wrote a biography of the first governor

of the State, Life of Edward Tiffin (Chillicothe, Ohio, 1897).



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 347

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO             347

 

The career of one of the ablest business and political leaders in

the Ohio of a century ago is discussed by his son-in-law in James

Lawrence Bates, Alfred Kelley, His Life and Work (Columbus,

Ohio, 1888). Lowry F. Sater of Columbus, long an active and

intelligent leader in Democratic circles, has given a sketch of the

life of an able governor of the State in James Edwin Campbell, a

Contemporary Political Study (Columbus, Ohio, 1932). Herbert

Smith Duffy, a young Ohio lawyer and politician, has written of

the career of President Taft in William Howard Taft (New

York, 1930).

Allen O. Myers, a journalist of long experience in the State,

has left a rather sensational presentation of certain aspects of

Ohio politics in Bosses and Boodle (Cincinnati, 1895). Wash-

ington Gladden, for many years a leading clergyman and civic

leader of Columbus, left pertinent comments on the history of

the period in his Recollections (Boston, 1909).

In more specialized fields Ohioans have given accounts of

the course of the State's history. The evolution of the land

system of Ohio is told by William Edwards Peters in Ohio Lands

(Athens, Ohio, 1918), and by Professor Christopher Elias Sher-

man of the Engineering College of the Ohio State University in

Original Land Subdivisions (Columbus, Ohio, 1925). Farming

in Ohio is dealt with by William Allison Lloyd, John Ironside

Falconer and Charles Embree Thorne in The Agriculture of Ohio

(Wooster, Ohio, 1918).

Local religious history is dealt with by John Marshall Barker

in History of Ohio Methodism (New York, 1898) and by Joseph

Beatty Doyle in The [Episcopal] Church in Eastern Ohio (Steu-

benville, Ohio, 1914). A group of northern Ohio ministers pre-

sented interesting material in Ohio Church Society Papers (Ober-

lin, Ohio, 1889-1900), IIV.

William Henry Venable made a distinct contribution to the

understanding of literary history in Ohio in his Beginnings of

Literary Culture in the Ohio Valley (Cincinnati, 1891), and his

son Emerson Venable has made a further contribution in his

Poets of Ohio (Cincinnati, 1909). Mrs. Edna Maria Clark of



348 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

348   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

Columbus has made a study of Ohio Art and Artists (Richmond,

Virginia, 1932). Osman Castle Hooper, long an active news-

paperman and professor of journalism at the Ohio State Univer-

sity, has published a creditable volume, History of Ohio Journal-

ism (Columbus, Ohio, 1933). James Jesse Burns's Educational

History of Ohio (Columbus, Ohio, 1905) was in many respects

a pioneer work in the field but possesses defects often found in

volumes that precede the researches of specialized scholars.

Thwing in a less local study of collegiate education in the

United States has given A History of Higher Education in Amer-

ica (New York, 1906), as viewed through his own vantage-point

as president of Western Reserve University.

Many writers in the field of Ohio and western history have

nurtured their interest while residents of the State but only ac-

quired the leisure and opportunities for historiography after

removing from the State. Thus Charles Augustus Hanna, whose

The Wilderness Trail (New York, 1911),, 2v., is valuable for the

early years of the Old Northwest, was a native of Cadiz but did

his writing as a resident of New York City. Consul Willshire

Butterfield, who delved into problems of the colonial and Indian

periods and wrote a number of volumes such as The History of

the Girtys (Cincinnati, 1890), was a school superintendent and

lawyer in Ohio but the period of his authorship is connected with

his residence in Nebraska. In the field of biography Albert

Gallatin Riddle received recognition for his Life of . . . Benjamin

F. Wade (Cleveland, 1886), but although he was for many years

a well-known Cleveland lawyer and politician, his writings were

produced after he had located in Washington, D. C. Thomas

Boyd was a native of Defiance and was a high school student

there shortly before enlisting in the World War, but his popular

yet reliable biographies, Simon Girty, the White Savage (New

York, 1928) and Mad Anthony Wayne (New York, 1929) were

written during his residence in the East. Robert Emmet Chad-

dock, whose doctorial dissertation Ohio before 1850, a Study of

the Early Influence of Pennsylvania and Southern Populations in

Ohio, Volume XXXI of the Columbia University Studies in His-



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 349

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO             349

 

tory, Economics, and Public Law (New York, 1908), was one of

the earliest scholarly studies of Ohio's history, as judged by mod-

ern standards, is a native of Ohio. He is also a graduate and

one-time faculty member at the College of Wooster, but like

others that have been mentioned his reputation as a writer has

been achieved outside of the State.

Many Ohioans, however, who have continued to live in the

State have made studies of localities within its boundaries. From

these productions it is impossible to select particular ones for

special mention without seeming to be unjust to others. Among

Cincinnatians who have contributed to an understanding of their

city's history, however, are Charles Theodore Greve, in Centennial

History of Cincinnati and Representative Citizens (Chicago,

1904), 2v., and Charles Frederic Goss in Cincinnati, the Queen

City (Cincinnati, 1912), 4v. Other works of merit that Ohioans

have written about their cherished localities are James Harrison

Kennedy, A History of the City of Cleveland (Cleveland, 1896);

Samuel  Peter Orth, A History of Cleveland, Ohio (Chicago,

1910), 3v.; Alfred Mathews, Ohio and Her Western Reserve

(New York, 1902); Alfred Emory Lee, History of the City of

Columbus (New York, 1892), 2v.; Henry Bushnell, The History

of Granville, Licking County, Ohio (Columbus, Ohio, 1889); and

Nevin Otto Winter, A History of Northwest Ohio (Chicago,

1917), 3v.

In dealing with the history of the State as a whole, Rufus

King of Cincinnati, a grandson of the earlier New York states-

man of the same name and a man of considerable eminence in his

own right, published a small volume in the American Common-

wealths series, Ohio; First Fruits of the Ordinance of 1787 (Bos-

ton, 1888). Almost a quarter of a century later Randall and

Ryan of Columbus published their History of Ohio (New York,

1912), 5v., which embodied the results of much careful study but

placed relatively little emphasis on the period since the Civil War.

Then a decade ago, Galbreath issued his History of Ohio (New

York, 1925), 5v., which hardly added to the author's "creditable

record" in Ohio historiography. Two assistant professors of his-



350 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

350   OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

tory (of whom the present author is one) have recently published

a single volume work of the State's history.

In concluding this paper, it may be said with emphasis that

historiography in Ohio has made decided progress during the last

decade and a half. When the well-known American Nation series

was produced thirty years ago Edwin Erle Sparks, a native of

Ohio, who had received both his bachelor's and master's degrees

from the Ohio State University but had long before removed

from the State, contributed the volume on National Development,

1877-1885 (New York, 1907). To Edward Gaylord Bourne and

Theodore Clarke Smith who had earlier taught in Ohio, the for-

mer at Western Reserve University and the latter at Ohio State

University, were intrusted Spain in America, 1450-1580 (New

York, 1904), and Parties and Slavery, 1850-1859 (New York,

1906), respectively. No resident of Ohio, however, contributed

a single one of the twenty-eight volumes, though persons in Mich-

igan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, and Pennsylvania shared in

the task. Similarly when the Chronicles of America series was

projected by the Yale University Press under the editorship of

Allen Johnson of that University to give "a new interpretation

of American History," the writing of only one of the fifty was

intrusted to an Ohioan; and he, Hulbert, author of Paths of In-

land Commerce (New Haven, Connecticut, 1919), left the State

before its publication.46

At the present time, however, in the much smaller (about

twenty volume) series, American Political Leaders, George Fred-

erick Howe has written Chester A. Arthur, A Quarter Century of

Machine Politics (New York, 1934). Incidentally another vol-

ume, James A. Garfield, Party Chieftain (New York, 1931), is

the product of the pen of Robert Granville Caldwell, a graduate

of the College of Wooster (and now minister to Portugal), and

of the volumes yet to be published, Hesseltine is to write Ulysses

S. Grant, and Robert M. La Follette is to owe authorship to

 

46 The authors of several other volumes, Nathaniel Wright Stephenson and

Samuel Peter Orth, had lived earlier in Ohio for many years. The former was a

native of Cincinnati and was an editorial writer in that city during the 'nineties; the

latter had been an Akron College professor and Cleveland attorney (1897-1912).



WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO 351

WRITING OF HISTORY IN OHIO              351

 

Frederic Clemson Howe, for many years a public-spirited lawyer

of Cleveland and one-time member of the Ohio Senate.

In the History of American Life, a small series now in

process of publication (12 volumes) and devoted especially to

economic and social aspects, Cole has contributed The Irrepres-

sible Conflict, 1850-1865. Incidentally another volume of the se-

ries is written by Schlesinger, now professor at Harvard Uni-

versity, a native of Xenia, Ohio, a graduate and former faculty

member of the Ohio State University. How much of his interest

in historiography was acquired in Ohio is problematical, but one

of his published works is dedicated "in gratitude" to Knight, one

of his early teachers at the Ohio State University.

Turning to European history, of the twenty volumes contem-

plated in the Rise of Modern Europe series under the editorship

of Professor William Leonard Langer of Harvard, three are

assigned to professors in Ohio institutions of higher learning.

One, Artz, Reaction and Revolution, 1814-1832, is already pub-

lished. Other volumes tentatively entitled Dynastic Politics and

Colonial Enterprise, 1740-1763, and The Triumph of Nationalism,

1852-1871, are being prepared by Walter L. Dorn of the Ohio

State University and Robert Cedric Binkley of Western Reserve

University respectively.

Historiography, moreover, as seen through the efforts of the

Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, is in a position

that is in some respects very encouraging. Current matters of

interest relating to the Society's work are recorded in the monthly

news-letter, Museum Echoes, a relatively recent innovation. The

QUARTERLY, official periodical of the Society, underwent (begin-

ning with the January, 1935, issue) a change in physical make-up

which is an outward and visible sign of the enhanced quality of

the scholarly historical articles that may be expected under the

direction of Lindley, the editor, and his board of associates. The

longer studies, published from time to time as volumes in the

Ohio Historical Collections, included, previous to this year, Holt's

Party Politics in Ohio, 1840-1850 (Columbus, Ohio, 1930), and

Donnal Vore Smith's Salmon P. Chase and Civil War Politics



352 OHIO ARCH AEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

352   OHIO ARCH AEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

(Columbus, Ohio, 1931). Within the last few weeks, however,

two additional volumes have been issued, Downes, Frontier Ohio,

1788-1803 (Columbus, Ohio, 1935), and Robert Hamilton Bishop

(Columbus, Ohio, 1935), life of the first president of Miami

University, by James Howard Rodabaugh, a graduate student at

the Ohio State University.

Historians interested in Ohio history have prepared other

meritorious studies which await the prospect of publication.

Newspaper collections such as the unrivalled files of Ohio publi-

cations in the Society's Library; manuscript collections such as

those under Overman's supervision in the Society's possession

and those in the Hayes Library at Fremont, the Western Reserve

Historical Society Library at Cleveland, and the Ohio Historical

and Philosophical Society Collection at Cincinnati--all these and

others beckon to the Ohio historian. Proper financial support for

the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society's publishing

opportunities would usher in a veritable rebirth of enthusiasm

for the writing of the State's history. Surely a Commonwealth

which in 1938 will observe the sesquicentennial of the founding

of its first organized permanent settlement should be mature

enough to support such a program. To seek to guide the future

by an adequate understanding of the years that lie behind would

seem to be merely a wise and prudent course!