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AMERICAN SETTLEMENTS
The civil organization of the
Northwest Territory was now complete, and notwithstanding
the uncertainty of Indian affairs, settlers from the East
began to come into the country rapidly. The New England
Company sent their men during the Winter of 178708 pressing
on over the Alleghenies by the old Indian path which had
been opened into Braddock's road, and which has since been
made a national turnpike from Cumberland westward. Through
the weary winter days they toiled on, and by April were
all gathered on the Yohiogany, where boats had been built,
and at once started for the Muskingum. Here they arrived
on the 7th of that month, and unless the Moravian missionaries
be regarded as the pioneers of Ohio, this little band can
justly claim that honor.

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Gen. St. Clair, the appointed
Governor of the Northwest, not having yet arrived, a set
of laws were passed, written out, and published by being
nailed to a tree in the embryo town, and Jonathan Meigs
appointed to administer them.
Washington in writing of this,
the first American settlement in the Northwest, said: "No
colony in America was ever settled under such favorable
auspices as that which has just commenced at Muskingum.
Information, property and strength will be its characteristics.
I know many of its settlers personally, and there never
were men better calculated to promote the welfare of such
a community."

A pioneer dwelling.
(click on image for larger size)
On the 2d of July a meeting
of the directors and agents was held on the banks of the
Muskingum, "for the purpose of naming the newborn city
and its squares." As yet the settlement was known as
the "Muskingum," but that was now changed to the
name of Marietta, in honor of Marie Antoinette. The square
upon which the block-houses stood was called "Campus
Martius;" square number 19, "Capitolium;"
square number 61, "Cecilia;" and the
great road through the covert way, "Sacra Via."
Two days after, an oration was delivered by James M. Varnum,
who with S. H. Parsons and John Armstrong had been appointed
to the judicial bench of the territory on the 16th of October,
1787. ON July 9, Gov. St. Clair arrived, and the colony
began to assume form. The act of 1787 provided two district
grades of government for the Northwest,

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under the first of which the whole power was
invested in the hands of a governor and three district judges.
This was immediately formed upon the Governor's arrival,
and the first laws of the colony passed on the 25th of July.
These provided for the organization of the militia, and
on the next day appeared the Governor's proclamation, erecting
all that country that had been ceded by the Indians east
of the Scioto River into the County of Washington. From
that time forward, notwithstanding the doubts yet existing
as to the Indians, all Marietta prospered, and on the 2d
of September the first court of the territory was held with
imposing ceremonies.
The emigration westward at this
time was very great. The commander at Fort Harmer, at the
mouth of the Muskingum, reported four thousand five hundred
persons as having passed that post between February and
June, 1788—many of whom would have purchased of the
"Associates," as the New England Company was called,
had they been ready to receive them.
On the 26th of November, 1787,
Symmes issued a pamphlet stating the terms of his contract
and the plan of sale he intended to adopt. In January, 1788,
Matthias Denman, of New Jersey, took an active interest
in Symmes' purchase, and located among other tracts the
sections upon which Cincinnati has been built. Retaining
one-third of this locality, he sold the other two-thirds
to Robert Patterson and John Filson, and the three, about
August, commenced to lay out a town on the spot, which was
designated as being opposite Licking River, to the mouth
of which they proposed to have a road cut from Lexington.
The naming of the town is thus narrated in the "Western
Annals":—"Mr. Filson, who had been a schoolmaster,
was appointed to name the town, and, in respect to its situation,
and as if with a prophetic perception of the mixed race
that were to inhabit it in after days, he named it Losantiville,
which interpreted, means: ville, the town; anti,
against or opposite to; os, the mouth; L.
of Licking."
Meanwhile, in July, Symmes got
thirty persons and eight four-horse teams under way for
the West. These reached Limestone (now Maysville) in September,
where were several persons from Redstone. Here Mr. Symmes
tried to found a settlement, but the great freshet of 1789
caused the "Point," as it was and is yet called,
to be fifteen feet under water, and the settlement to be
abandoned. The little band of settlers removed to the mouth
of the Miami. Before Symmes and his colony left the "Point,"
two settlements had been made on his purchase. The first
was by Mr. Stiltes, the original projector of the whole
plan, who, with a colony of Redstone people, had located
at the mouth of the Miami, whither Symmes went with his
Maysville colony. Here a clearing had

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been made by the Indians owing to the great
fertility of the soil. Mr. Stiltes with his colony came
to this place on the 18th of November, 1788, with twenty-six
persons, and, building a block-house, prepared to remain
through the Winter. They named the settlement Columbia.
Here they were kindly treated by the Indians, but suffered
greatly from the flood of 1789.
On the 4th of March, 1789, the
Constitution of the United States went into operation, and
on April 30, George Washington was inaugurated President
of the American people, and during the next Summer, an Indian
war wa commenced by the tribes north of the Ohio. The President
at first used pacific means; but these failing, he sent
General Harmer against the hostile tribes. He destroyed
several villages, but

Breaking Prairie
(click on image for larger size)
was defeated in two battles, near the present
City of Fort Wayne, Indiana. From this time till the close
of 1795, the principal events were the wars with the various
Indian tribes. In 1796, General St. Clair was appointed
in command, and marched against the Indians; but while he
was encamped on a stream, the St. Mary, a branch of the
Maumee, he was attacked and defeated with the loss of six
hundred men.
General Wayne was now sent against
the savages. In August, 1794, he met them near the rapids
of the Maumee, and gained a complete victory. This success,
followed by vigorous measures, compelled the Indians to
sue for peace, and on the 30th of July, the following year,
the treaty of Greenville was signed by the principal chiefs,
by which a large tract of country was ceded to the United
States.
BEfore proceeding in our narrative,
we will pause to notice Fort Washington, erected in the
early part of this war on the site of Cincinnati. Nearly
all of the great cities of the Northwest, and indeed of
the

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whole country, have had their nuclei
in those rude pioneer structures, known as forts or stockades.
Thus Forts Dearborn, Washington, Ponchartrain, mark the
original sites of the now proud Cities of Chicago, Cincinnati
and Detroit. So of most of the flourishing cities east and
west of the Mississippi. Fort Washington, erected by Doughty
in 1790, was a rude but highly interesting structure. It
was composed of a number of strongly-built hewn log cabins.
Those designed for soldiers' barracks were a story and a
half high, while those composing the officers quarters were
more imposing and more conveniently arranged and furnished.
The whole were so place as to form a hollow square, enclosing
about an acre of ground, with a block house at each of the
four angles.
The logs for the construction
of this fort were cut from the ground upon which it was
erected. It stood between Third and Fourth Streets of the
present city (Cincinnati) extending east of Eastern Row,
now Broadway, which was then a narrow alley, and the eastern
boundary of the town as it was originally laid out. On the
bank of the river, immediately in front of the fort, was
an appendage of the fort, called the Artificer's Yard. It
contained about two acres of ground, enclosed by small contiguous
buildings, occupied by workshops and quarters of laborers.
Within this enclosure there was a large two-story frame
house, familiarly called the "Yellow House," built
for the accommodation of the Quartermaster General. For
many years this was the best finished and most commodious
edifice in the Queen City. Fort Washington was for some
time the headquarters of both the civil and military governments
of the Northwestern Territory.
Following the consummation of
the treaty various gigantic land speculations were entered
into by different persons, who hoped to obtain from the
Indians in Michigan and northern Indiana, large tracts of
lands. Thee were generally discovered in time to prevent
the outrageous schemes from being carried out, and from
involving the settlers in war. On October 27, 1795, the
treaty between the United States and Spain was signed, whereby
the free navigation of the Mississippi was secured.
No sooner had the treaty of
1795 been ratified than settlements began to pour rapidly
into the West. The great event of the year 1796 was the
occupation of that part of the Northwest including Michigan,
which was this year, under the provisions of the treaty,
evacuated by the British forces. The United States, owing
to certain conditions, did not feel justified in addressing
the authorities in Canada in relation to Detroit and other
frontier posts. When at last the British authorities were
called to give them up, they at once complied, and General
Wayne, who had done so much to preserve the frontier settlements,
and who, before the year's close, sickened and died near
Erie, transferred his head-

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quarters to the neighborhood of the lakes,
where a county named after him was formed, which included
the northwest of Ohio, all of Michigan, and the northeast
of Indiana. During this same year settlements were formed
at the present City of Chillicothe, along the Miami from
Middletown to Piqua, while in the more distant West, settlers,
and speculators began to appear in great numbers. In September,
the City of Cleveland was laid out, and during the Summer
and Autumn, Samuel Jackson and Jonathan Sharpless erected
the first manufactory of paper—the "Redstone
Paper Mill"—in the West. St. Louis contained
some seventy houses, and Detroit over three hundred, and
along the river, contiguous to it, were more than three
thousand inhabitants, mostly French Canadians, Indians and
half-breeds, scarcely any American venturing yet into that
part of the Northwest.
The election of representatives
for the territory had taken place, and on the 4th of February,
1799, they convened at Losantiville—now known as Cincinnati,
having been named so by Gov. St. Clair, and considered the
capital of the Territory—to nominate persons from
whom the members of the Legislature were to be chosen in
accordance with a previous ordinance. This nomination being
made, the Assembly adjourned until the 16th of the following
September. From those named the President selected as members
of the council, Henry Vandenburg, of Vincennes, Robert Oliver,
of Marietta, James Findlay and Jacob Burnett, of Cincinnati,
and David Vance, of Vanceville. On the 16th of September
the Territorial Legislature met, and on the 24th the two
houses were duly organized, Henry Vandenburg being elected
President of the Council.
The message of Gov. St. Clair
was addressed to the Legislature September 20th, and on
October 13th that body elected as a delegate to Congress
Gen. Wm. Henry Harrison, who received eleven of the votes
cast, being a majority of one over his opponent, Arthur
St. Clair, son of Gen. St. Clair.
The whole number of acts passed
at this session, and approved by the governor, were thirty-seven—eleven
others were passed, but received his veto. The most important
of those passed related to the militia, to the administration,
and to taxation. On the 19th of December this protracted
session of the first Legislature in the West was closed,
and on the 30th of December the President nominated Charles
Willing Byrd to the office of the Secretary of the Territoryvice
Wm. Henry Harrison, elected to Congress. The Senate confirmed
his nomination the next day.
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Division of the
Northwest Territory
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