Ohio History Journal



Full Text Results For settlement northwest ohio

"Friends of Freedom: Lincoln, Chase, and Wartime Racial Policy," by Frederick J. Blue. Volume 102, , Summer-Autumn, 1993, pp. 85-97.
... FREDERICK J FREDERICK J BLUE Friends of Freedom Lincoln Chase and Wartime Racial Policy Historians have long differed over what motivated Abraham Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation They have also disagreed over what place the President believed blacks should occupy after emancipation In failing to reach a consensus on what led Lincoln to the most important decision of his administration they have debated over what factors and persons may have influenced him1 Among those individuals ...

Volume 87, Number 4, Autumn, 1978, pp. 450-479.
... settlement sites of eastern settlement of the area settlements Radiocarbon dates settlement-subsistence settlement landscape since settlement process p 68 As the
Volume 99, , Summer-Autumn, 1990, pp. 168-200.
... settlement a dominant premise settlements as elsewhere on settlement of the two areas overlapping in time and the two geographic categories not always sharply defined there are few striking contrasts A balanced presentation must record the similarities alongside the differences However if conditions intrinsic to the subject at hand pose ...

"The Spruce Run Earthworks: A Forgotten Adena Site in Delaware County, Ohio," by James B. Griffin. Volume 56, Number 2, April, 1947, pp. 188-200.
... DOCUMENT DOCUMENT THE SPRUCE RUN EARTHWORKS A FORGOTTEN ADENA SITE IN DELAWARE COUNTY OHIO by JAMES B GRIFFIN Director Museum of Anthropology University of Michigan The Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society has published many papers on Ohio archaeology for the purpose of preserving the history of the State's first inhabitants ...

"John Butler Tytus: Inventor of the Continuous Steel Mill," Volume 76, Number 3, Summer, 1967, pp. 132-145, notes 176-177.
... John Butler Tytus Inventor of the Continuous Steel Mill by GEORGE C CROUT and WILFRED D VORHIS The continuous rolling mill which produces an unending ribbon of steel to meet the needs of modern world-wide industrial societies was developed by an Ohioan John Butler Tytus While many men at the American Rolling Mill now the Armco Steel Corporation with home offices at Middletown helped in the development of this revolutionary process of steel ...

"Race and Realism in the Fiction of Charles W. Chesnutt," Volume 81, Number 2, Spring, 1972, pp. 122-130.
... CARY D CARY D WINTZ Race and Realism in the Fiction of Charles WChesnutt In this day of increased awareness of the role blacks have played in American history and culture it is somewhat surprising that Charles W Chesnutt is only recently being recognized by students of history and literature He played an important part in the development of black American literature during the last decade of the nineteenth century and also helped to lay the foundation for the Negro Renaissance of the 1920's ...

"The Mound Builders," Volume 9, Number 4, April, 1901, pp. 530-531.
... settlement and growth of the older communities and institutions of the county and it is perhaps not too much to say that this book contains more information and data relative to the history of the various families of the county in question that is usually given in county histories As a sample of the extent of the work the list of early marriages in the county numbers 7500 and their early burials 5000 The book is produced in attractive binding ...

"SURVEY OF PUBLICATIONS IN OHIO HISTORY, ARCHAEOLOGY, AND NATURAL HISTORY, A," "July 1945-July 1946," compiled by James H. Rodabaugh and S. Winifred Smith. Volume 55, Number 4, October-December, 1946, pp. 374-400.
...ohioan XVIII No 7 July ohio Company BREDLOW ohio Pipelines Played ohioan XVII No 8 August 1945 2-II WICKENDEN Arthur C History of the Oxford USO Club in Communikay July 1945 2-7 MISCELLANEOUS FENNER Laura As Early Ohio Celebrated the Fourth ...

"Clement L. Vallandigham Views the Charleston Convention," by James W. Geary. Volume 86, Number 2, Spring, 1977, pp. 127-134.
... northwestern Democrats agreed with Vallandigham's opinion on this fundamental principle See John T Hubbell The Douglas Democrats and the Election of 1860 Mid-America LV 1973 108-11 130 13 On either April 24 or April 25 1860 Douglas sent a telegram to his supporters at Charleston that prohibited them from accepting a program which went beyond an endorsement of the Cincinnati Platform of 1856 He also restricted them to a policy which ...

Volume 58, Number 4, October, 1949, pp. 463-475.
... HISTORICAL NEWS HISTORICAL NEWS Historical Societies ALLEN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY Lima James A MacDonell President The society has recently acquired a Kodagraph film reader a gift from the president James A MacDonell Several old Lima newspapers have been microfilmed up to 1912 Current papers have been filmed since January 1 1947 During recent months the society has been engaged in a campaign to collect unpaid pledges for the proposed 175000 museum A large percentage of the necessary funds ...

Volume 48, Number 4, October, 1939, pp. 341-345.
... BOOK REVIEWS BOOK REVIEWS The Tree of Liberty By Elizabeth Page Farrar amp Rinehart Inc 1939 985p 300 On the best seller list since its publication in the spring this historic novel offers an unusual combination of entertainment and enlightenment The story is that of Matthew Howard and Jane Peyton the former a frontiersman from the Shenandoah Valley the latter the daughter of a tidewater planter In their married life is dramatized the bitter conflict of the two main traditions which underlie ...

"Leaden Plate at the Mouth of the Muskingum," Volume 29, Binding Supplement, , , pp. 477-480.
... LEADEN PLATE AT THE MOUTH OF THE MUSKINGUM LEADEN PLATE AT THE MOUTH OF THE MUSKINGUM In the October QUARTE RL Y were published cuts of the leaden plate prepared for deposit at the mouth of the Conewango and the one buried at the mouth of the Kanawha On the following pages are illustrations of the remnant of the plate buried at the mouth of the Muskingum and what was probably its entire text This plate was considerably multilated A portion of the lead was cut away for bullets before the ...

"The Challenge of the Times to the Historian," Volume 61, Number 1, January, 1952, pp. 1-10.
... THE CHALLENGE OF THE TIMES TO THE HISTORIAN1 THE CHALLENGE OF THE TIMES TO THE HISTORIAN1 by CARL WITTKE Professor of History and Dean of the Graduate School Western Reserve University The question is frequently asked nowadays Why do historians have so little influence in public affairs and why have men and women who have been especially trained to study and distill conclusions from the long experience of the past so little status as counselors and molders of public opinion in present-day ...

"Launching The Ship," by Ida Eckert-Lawrence. Volume 10, Number 1, July, 1901, pp. 46-48.
... 46 Ohio Arch 46 Ohio Arch and His Society Publications LAUNCHING THE SHIP BY IDA ECKERT-LAWRENCE This poem was written by Mrs Lawrence and read by her as she stood by President McKinley upon the occasion of the launching of the Ohio at San Francisco May 18 1901 Mrs Lawrence is a native of Richland county
"Boz Reports on Ohio," Volume 51, Number 3, July-September, 1942, pp. 195-202.
... BOZ REPORTS ON OHIO BOZ REPORTS ON OHIO By ROBERT PRICE On Tuesday the twenty-sixth of April 1842 Charles Dickens writing from America to John Forster in London began his letter with the heading Niagara Falls upon the English Side1 Then very suggestively he drew ten dashes underneath the word English 2 Dickens' first tour of the United States then just about completed had not been altogether ...

"Some Notes on Ohio Historiography," by Clarence E. Carter. Volume 28, Number 2, April, 1919, pp. 176-185.
... settlement of the NorthWestern settlement to approximately the time of publication in 1847 But the outline is very meagre and filled with error By far the larger part of the volume is taken up by a journalistic description of the various counties of the state giving such common facts concerning their history topography population towns and ...

"'Bluff Ben' Wade in Lawrence, Kansas: The Issue of Class Conflict," Volume 65, Number 1, January, 1956, pp. 44-52.
... Bluff Ben Wade in Lawrence Kansas Bluff Ben Wade in Lawrence Kansas The Issue of Class Conflict By WILLIAM FRANK ZORNOW Most historians know of Theodore Roosevelt's famous speech at Osawatomie Kansas on August 31 1910 in which he outlined the policies later advocated during the campaign of 1912 but few have considered the equally important Lawrence speech of Senator Benjamin F Wade of Ohio on June 10 1867 The latter might have had ...

"John Sherman and the Silver Drive of 1877-78: The Origins of the Gigantic Subsidy," by Jeannette P. Nichols. Volume 46, Number 2, April, 1937, pp. 148-165.
... JOHN SHERMAN AND THE SILVER DRIVE OF 1877-78 JOHN SHERMAN AND THE SILVER DRIVE OF 1877-78 THE ORIGINS OF THE GIGANTIC SUBSIDY By JEANNETTE P NICHOLS That tour de force the Silver Purchase Act of 1934 is too close to the present to be judged fairly1 While some critics claim that it simply signifies a cowardly unpatriotic surrender to a small group of wealthy mine-owners others suspect that the faithful servitors of those interests--the fourteen senators from the seven silver states--had the ...

"Newspapers in Battle: The Dayton Empire and the Dayton Journal During the Civil War," by Carl M. Becker. Volume 99, , Winter-Spring, 1990, pp. 29-50.
... CARL M CARL M BECKER Newspapers in Battle The Dayton Empire and the Dayton Journal During the Civil War Throughout the Civil War as Union armies fought and bled Northern newspapers opposing and supporting the Lincoln administration engaged in a war of words that sometimes triggered violence on the home front Especially in the Middle West the Peace Democrats or Copperheads as these ultra-conservative Democrats came to be known employed the press for a continuing assault on Lincoln and his ...

"In His Veins Coursed No Bootlicking Blood: The Career of Peter H. Clark," by Lawrence Grossman. Volume 86, Number 2, Spring, 1977, pp. 79-95.
... LAWRENCE GROSSMAN LAWRENCE GROSSMAN In His Veins Coursed No Bootlicking Blood The Career of Peter H Clark Peter H Clark was one of the most prominent black leaders of the nineteenth century Working as a schoolteacher he emerged as a champion of the antebellum Negro community in Cincinnati achieved recognition after the Civil War as one of the leading black men of Ohio and became a figure of national importance in racial matters by the 1880s ...