Ohio History Journal



Full Text Results For ohio general assembly 1848

Volume 70, Number 4, October, 1961, pp. 355-359.
... general history of the Western Reserve and the Connecticut Land Company The book was financed by the Clara Belle Ritchie Trust Fund The Historical and Philosophical Society of Ohio announces that The Journals of John May edited by Dwight L Smith of Miami University is being published this fall by the society The January 1962 issue of the society's Bulletin will be a special issue on Germany ...

"The Making of Pine Tar in Hocking County," by Pascal A. Bright. Volume 41, Number 2, April, 1932, pp. 151-160.
... THE MAKING OF PINE TAR IN HOCKING THE MAKING OF PINE TAR IN HOCKING COUNTY BY PASCAL A BRIGHT One of the primitive industries in southern Ohio where pine trees are found native was the making of pine tar In the summer of 1929 in company with Mr Emory Bainter who then lived on Big Pine Creek Mr A L Burgess of Columbus whose photographs have done so much to help popularize the state parks and his son I was on a trip in the park region of ...

Volume 55, Number 4, October-December, 1946, pp. 413-422.
... general and Ohio literature general chapters display a generalized Woodland generally fact and fiction are intricately interwoven and chronology is sometimes altered to suit the needs of the narrative In the main however the background ...

"Country Carpenters, Federal Buildings: An Early Architectural Tradition in Ohio's Western Reserve," by Nancy J. Brcak. Volume 98, , Summer-Autumn, 1989, pp. 131-146.
... general vocabulary of Federal architecture culled from memories of existing structures andor derived from carpenter's handbooks but suited to his own taste and skills These buildings represent the countrified version of the New England Federal style of Bulfinch Benjamin and McIntire that was so characteristic of Reserve architecture around the year 1820 In the Western Reserve the Federal style was of primary importance in those areas which ...

Volume 87, Number 4, Autumn, 1978, pp. 450-479.
... generally recognized by general thesis is that in general public as well as generally flattering generally negative generally The latter will
"Ohio Agriculture Today," Volume 65, Number 3, July, 1956, pp. 259-271.
... generally on a relatively general farming orchards vineyards and vegetable nurseries have become profitable businesses Inland the rolling acid lands support hay and pasture and a thriving dairy business with some fruit and vegetable cultivation near the cities Northwestern Ohio has its old black swamp which once lay under Lake Erie where ...

"The Challenge of the Times to the Historian," Volume 61, Number 1, January, 1952, pp. 1-10.
... assembly and religion as specifically provided in the federal and state constitutions have the weight of a long and wholesome tradition of the Anglo-Saxon peoples behind them They distinguish what we have come to call the American way of life and they must be preserved and defended against thought control of any kind and especially in the case of teachers journalists ministers writers creative artists and others who provide the vehicles ...

"'Do the Job He Left Behind': The Cleveland Womanpower Committee, 1943-1945," by Julieanne Phillips. Volume 109, , Summer-Autumn, 2000, pp. 144-166.
... Do the Job He Left Behind Summer-Autumn 2000 pp 144-166 This article is presented page by page and footnoted according to the original print version If a sentence appears to be incomplete scroll down to continue with the next page Copyright 2000 by the Ohio Historical Society All rights reserved Do the Job He Left Behind The Cleveland Womanpower Committee 1943-1945 By Julieanne Phillips We feel you just haven't come to grips with the manpower ...

"A Survey of Publications on the History and Archaeology of Ohio, 1970 to 1971," Volume 79, Numbers 3 & 4, Summer-Autumn, 1970, pp. 243-250.
... compiled by compiled by HELEN M THURSTON A Survey of Publications on the History and Archaeology of Ohio 1970 to 1971 ARCHAEOLOGY Central States Archaeological Journal 1970 published by several archaeological societies Ohio Archaeologist 1970 published by the Archaeological Society of Ohio A quarterly devoted to the discussion and ...

Volume 107, , Winter-Spring, 1998, pp. 78-115.
... generalizations about general and his replacement generals with whom he was general mandate from the general and a member of the general and Department of
"OHS Committee Report: Ash Cave," Volume 33, Number 3 & 4, July-October, 1924, pp. 585-586.
... general conditions at the Park have been good The custodian Mr Guy Wallace has rendered efficient and satisfactory services He is attentive and courteous to visitors During the year a new fence has been constructed along the front and west sides of the Park greatly improving its appearance and adding to the security of the premises A new roof has been put on the barn which is now in condition to last for many years The Park with the great ...

"Appendix: Report of the Registrar and a List of Accessions 1933-'34," by H. R. Goodwin. Volume 43, Number 3, July, 1934, pp. 332-336.
... 332 Ohio Arch 332 Ohio Arch and Hist Society Publications ilton Montana Dr J M Brennan University of Kansas Dr Alan Stone U S National Museum Washington Dr T H Hubbell University of Michigan Dr C L Fluke University of Wisconsin and others Your curator gave 29 lectures during the year before 3000 people and gave one talk over radio station WOSU besides leading a number of field-trips for ...

"Paul Laurence Dunbar and William Dean Howells," Volume 67, Number 2, April, 1958, pp. 95-108.
... generally known at this generally a sound and conservative critic who wrote in the Chicago Dial for February 1 1897 that Dunbar's work hardly justified the praise Howells gave it 18 Dunbar Collection Ohio Historical Society Library 19 Cunningham biography p 164 104 THE OHIO HISTORICAL ...

"Road to Boston: 1860 Travel Correspondence of William Dean Howells, The," edited by Robert Price. Volume 80, Number 2, Spring, 1971, pp. 85-154.
... general store The paper general information which general agent at the Falls general effect It is said to be the finest structure of the kind in the New World and 120 OHIO HISTORY 120
Volume 88, Number 2, Spring, 1979, pp. 213-243.
... generally accepted by generally looking for general reshuffling of home general factors of social general discussion which generally disinterested in
"Bentley's Lake," by A. J. Baughman. Volume 14, Number 1, January, 1905, pp. 60-61.
...general of militia History and historical associations are interestingly woven about the lake and its locality ...

"The Personal Element in History," Volume 48, Number 2, April, 1939, pp. 153-163.
... generally specialists in the period and field in which 16 Edward P Cheyney Law in History and Other Essays New York 1927 163-4 OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS 159 OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS 159 the subject lived and worked contributed to this colossal undertaking Some of the biographical sketches are in themselves fairly ...

"Albert Shaw's Ohio Youth," by Lloyd J. Graybar. Volume 74, Number 1, Winter, 1965, pp. 29-34, notes 72-73.
... general backing10 As concerns his daily life however the activities he pursued were quite normal and pleasurable He grew close to his mother and sister Mary who was but two years older Of Lucy and Griffin Jr he was fond and there certainly was none of the discord that one usually associates with the relationships of stepchildren but they were considerably older 32 OHIO HISTORY 32
"The Bank Wars, the Idea of 'Party,' and the Division of the Electorate in Jacksonian Ohio," by Stephen C. Fox. Volume 88, Number 3, Summer, 1979, pp. 253-276.
... 1848 confirms that to a 1848 Average Average 1848 The new counties 1848 created from 1848 the changes in 1848 when their 1848 was ...

"Society and the Quarterly, The," by George W. Knight. Volume 1, Number 1, June, 1887, pp. 79-82.
... general students but for general history of the general literary magazines to publish all of the valuable papers presented to the Society It is necessary that the Society should itself print them For these reasons then primarily is the publication of this QUARTERLY undertaken Its scope and contents will not however be limited to addresses ...