Ohio History Journal



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Volume 33, Binding Supplement, , 1924, pp. 597-613.
... INDEX TO VOLUME XXXII INDEX TO VOLUME XXXII Alder Jonathan early pioneer honored Bible Indian translates Gospels into with marker 533-536 sketch of life Shawnee language 339-340 Bibles proby great-granddaughter 534-535 advided for prisoners at Ohio Penidresses by C B Galbreath L C tentiary 390 Dick and others 535 unveiling by Bibliography Shorthorn Cattle 65-66 descendants 535 list of descendants works of George Kennan 226 Mitchpresent ...

"Caleb Atwater: Versatile Pioneer," Volume 54, Number 2, April-June, 1945, pp. 79-88.
... settlement at Marietta as settlement at Mantua where he lived until his death Amzi served as judge of the Court of Common Pleas and was a writer of poetry However it is not the purpose of this paper to pursue Atwater genealogy intriguing though it may be According to the genealogy of the family there have been in all some 8000 persons bearing the family name in America while the family ...

"Editorialana," Volume 14, Number 2, April, 1905, pp. 216-224.
... EDITORIALANA EDITORIALANA THE AVERY HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES A philosophical essayist on the study of history tritely remarks that a historian should be possessed of industry conscience and imagination Industry and patience to faithfully exhume the facts conscience to truthfully and impartially exploit them and imagination to vividly portray the scenes and events involved that the reader in his mind's eye may perceive them realistically reproduced Such is the ideal historian Such an one to ...

"John Brough," by Osman Castle Hooper. Volume 13, Number 1, Janaury, 1904, pp. 40-70.
... settlement He was looked up to in a double sense for he was six feet tall and of fine physique and besides was philosopher in a homely way It was natural that he should be chosen Justice of the Peace and equally so that the Squire as he was commonly called should be elected sheriff of the county That distinction came to him in 1811 Then the Broughs moved into the court house and jail building which also contained living quarters for the ...

"Marcus A. Hanna," by Charles Dick. Volume 13, Number 3, July, 1904, pp. 355-374.
... settlement at Marietta settlements who followed the frontier as it receded westward In his family is to be found Scotch-Irish Cavalier and Puritan Presbyterian and Quaker stock While his parents were residents of Ohio they traced their descent to Virginia and Connecticut He thus combined the best blood of North and South His entire life ...

"Ulysses A. Plyley," Volume 40, Number 2, April, 1931, pp. 200-205.
... ULYSSES A ULYSSES A PLYLEY BY FRANK WARNER M D COLUMBUS OHIO On the 19th of May 1930 Ulysses A Plyley died at the age of 85 years He was born in the house in which he died This house is located on Plyley's Ridge a few miles west of Chillicothe Ohio on the pike leading to Greenfield He was the last child to occupy this old homestead of his father William Plyley who had lived there through his ...

"Dedication of Tablet at Chillicothe," Volume 42, Number 4, October, 1933, pp. 458.
... 458 Ohio Arch 458 Ohio Arch and Hist Society Publications Inscription on tablet placed by U S D 1 812 on the Ross County Court House Chillicothe Ohio May 17 1933 CHILLICOTHE CAPITAL OF THE NORTHWEST TERRITORY AND FIRST CAPITAL OF OHIO The ...

"Archaeological Remains of Jackson County," by William C. Mills. Volume 21, Numbers 2 & 3, April-July, 1912, pp. 175-214.
... settlements by pack horses So important was this source of supply to the inhabitants that when Ohio was formed into a state a tract of land six miles square embracing the saline waters was set apart by Congress for the use of the state In 1804 an act was passed by the Legislature of Ohio regulating the management of this tract and appointing ...

"Stanton-The Patriot," by Andrew Carnegie. Volume 15, Number 3, July, 1906, pp. 290-310.
... settlement vanished Even Mr Stanton never rendered his country a greater service than that performed in January 1861 He was denounced as no better than an abolitionist by Southern Democrats who favored the right of secession and also by those who did not go so far but who refused to sustain the Government under Republican control To both he was equally odious because he stood for maintaining the Government under all circumstances He entered ...

"Lincoln in Ohio," by John H. Cramer. Volume 54, Number 2, April-June, 1945, pp. 149-168.
... settlements in what is now settlements negro slavery had existed for many years -- perhaps more than a hundred if not as much as two hundred years -- at Kaskaskia in Illinois and at St Genevieve or Cape Girardeau perhaps in Missouri The number of slaves was not very great but there was about the same number in each place They were there when we acquired the territory There was no effort made ...

"Mill Creek Park and the Source of Mill Creek," by Charles Burleigh Galbreath. Volume 43, Number 2, April, 1934, pp. 137-207.
... settlement that was to become the City of Youngstown was first located two youthful members of the pioneer Youngstown party threaded their way up the valley of a creek and through a magnificent gorge to the beautiful waterfall that was later to become known as Lanterman's Falls Probably venturesome white men had visited the valley even before that summer but it was almost a century after Youngstown's founding before there was any movement to ...

"Surgeon's Mate at Fort Defiance: The Journal of Joseph Gardner Andrews for the Year 1795-III, A," edited by Richard C. Knopf. Volume 66, Number 3, July, 1957, pp. 238-268.
... A Surgeon's Mate at Fort Defiance A Surgeon's Mate at Fort Defiance The Journal of Joseph Gardner Andrews For the Year 1795--III Edited by R I CHARD C KNOPF This is the third and last installment of the Andrews journal The ague which Andrews noted on August 21 had commenced among the soldiery of the Garrison now in September attacks in force By October 1 two-thirds of the ninety-four persons on the post including Andrews are affected with it Then it withdraws though on October 29 twenty-three ...

"Jeptha H. Wade and the Cleveland and Cincinnati Telegraph Company," by Russell H. Anderson. Volume 58, Number 1, January, 1949, pp. 80-93.
... JEPTHA H JEPTHA H WADE AND THE CLEVELAND AND CINCINNATI TELEGRAPH COMPANY by RUSSELL H ANDERSON Director Western Reserve Historical Society Jeptha H Wade was the organizer moving spirit and principal owner of the Cleveland and Cincinnati Telegraph Company and the story of his activities in building and operating its line leads into his career in the nation-wide telegraph field especially as a principal in the Western Union Telegraph Company It was with this
"Executive Mansion," Volume 29, Number 3, July, 1920, pp. 270-281.
... settlements extended into the rich valleys where it was found by travellers and explorers and was by them carried back to the east and shown as a rare curiosity from what was then known as the 'far west' possessing certain medical properties for which it was rarely prized But the name never became fully crystallized until 1840 when in the crucible of what is known as the 'bitterest longest and most extraordinary political contest ever waged in ...

"The Ohio-Michigan Boundary Dispute Re-Examined," Volume 45, Number 4, October, 1936, pp. 299-319.
... settlement Congressional settlement was haughtily settlement Early in April 1835 settlement and as John Quincy settlement by a majority of settlement of the boundary dispute Cannons ...

"Grant Tablet Dedication: Address of Governor Andrew L. Harris," Volume 18, Number 3, July, 1909, pp. 380-384.
... GRANT TABLET DEDICATION GRANT TABLET DEDICATION ADDRESS OF GOVERNOR ANDREW L HARRIS At Point Pleasant Ohio the birth place of Ulysses S Grant there was dedicated on Wednesday October 2d 1907 a tablet to the memory of the great general and president Many distinguished citizens participated and of the several speeches that of Governor Harris was especially in sympathy with the occasion-EDITOR On this occasion I am doubly honored It is my ...

"Ohio and Western Expansion," by Willis Arden Chamberlin. Volume 31, Number 3, July, 1922, pp. 304-336.
... settlement has swept westward carrying a constant stream of population into the interior states This movement has brought out the natural advantage of Ohio which has 308 Ohio Arch 308 Ohio Arch and Hist Society Publications long since ceased to be considered the backdoor of the populous ...

"Local History in Our Public Schools," Volume 18, Number 4, October, 1909, pp. 422-431.
... settlement of Columbus 2 settlements of colonization of noted men and women of the part taken by the citizens in the Civil War A strong love of history can be induced and fostered by beginning this study close to the home Though these words are so encouraging to our objects it is to be regretted that as far as the Report goes no definite action nor recommendation was taken along these lines ...

The Kentucky Revival and its Influence on the Miami Valley," by J. P. MacLean. Volume 12, Number 3, July, 1903, pp. 242-286.
... settlements were almost wholly communities of farmers Books and newspapers were but sparingly supplied to them and religion was their chief intellectual food Without the advantages enjoyed by their descendants scattered though naturally gregarious a religious revival would hold out its allurements to all alike 242 The Kentucky Revival Etc The Kentucky Revival Etc 243 STATE OF SOCIETY The early settlers of both
"An Entrepreneurial Enterprise and the Financial Crisis of 1819: The Worthington Manufacturing Company" Volume 110, , Summer-Autumn, 2001, pp. 136-152.
... settlement made the road less settlement He had political settlement of the village a decade earlier He exhibited all of the characteristics Max Weber attributed to entrepreneurial leaders confidence dominance a sense of purpose and the ability to articulate goals that followers were prepared to accept Those who have researched charismatic ...