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    11 matches on "Land settlement--Ohio"
    Ohio Companys Purchase
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    Ohio Companys Purchase  Save
    Description: Map of the Ohio Companys Purchase. The purchase contract was for approximately 1,500,000 acres along the Ohio River in south eastern Ohio. One section was to be set aside for public schools, one section for religious purposes and two townships were to be used for a university. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL07516
    Subjects: Ohio Company (1786-1795); Maps--Ohio; Land settlement--Ohio
    Places: Ohio
     
    1804 map of Ohio engraving
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    1804 map of Ohio engraving  Save
    Description: 1804 map of Ohio engraving signed: "Drawn by S. Lewis, Engraved by A. [illegible]." Samuel Lewis of Philadelphia was a famous American geographer and cartographer and an extremely important figure in early American map-making who learned his trade from the prominent English cartographer Aaron Arrowsmith. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL07758
    Subjects: Maps--Ohio; Ohio History; Engravings (prints); Land settlement--Ohio; Geography and Natural Resources
     
    Ohio Company Land Office at Campus Martius Museum
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    Ohio Company Land Office at Campus Martius Museum  Save
    Description: Photograph of the Ohio Company Land Office taken between 1935-1943. The Campus Martius Museum highlights migration in Ohio's history. The museum is on the site of the fortification built by the Ohio Company of Associates, as their headquarters, in 1788 when they founded the first organized American settlement in the Northwest Territory. The restored Rufus Putnam house, part of the original fort, is now enclosed within a wing of the museum. Behind the museum is the Ohio Company's Land Office. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B15F01_069
    Subjects: Marietta (Ohio); Campus Martius (Marietta, Ohio); Ohio Company; Land settlement--Ohio; Historical museums--Ohio
    Places: Marietta (Ohio); Washington County (Ohio)
     
    'Emigrant' illustration
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    'Emigrant' illustration  Save
    Description: Drawing depicting a clearing in the forest with a person leaning against a tree. Behind him is a small home with a thatched roof. The illustration is titled "The Emigrant," and comes from "The New Monthly Family Magazine: A Miscellany of Moral and Religious Instruction" (Volume 5, 1884). View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL07053
    Subjects: Ohio History--Settlement and Early Statehood; Land settlement--Ohio
    Places: Ohio
     
    John Cleves Symmes portrait
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    John Cleves Symmes portrait  Save
    Description: Reproduction of a portrait of John Cleves Symmes. Symmes was a political leader in both New Jersey and Ohio, a land developer, and a businessman. During the 1780s, Symmes became interested in the Ohio Country. In 1794, President Washington approved a land patent for Symmes and some of his associates to purchase land between the Great and Little Miami Rivers. This was known as the Symmes or Miami Purchase. Text below the image reads "John Cleves Symmes (1742-1814, North Bend) The pioneer land proprietor between the Miamis." View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL02895
    Subjects: Symmes, John Cleves, 1742-1814; Miami Purchase; Land settlement--Ohio; Ohio History
    Places: North Bend (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
    John Johnston Home photograph
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    John Johnston Home photograph  Save
    Description: This image shows John Johnston's estate in Piqua, Ohio. John Johnston (also spelled Johnson) was an Indian Agent in Ohio in the early years of the new state. He was born in 1775 in Ireland. While he was a young child, his family moved to Pennsylvania. Johnston participated in Anthony Wayne's assault on American Indians living in the Northwest Territory during the early 1790s. President James Madison selected Johnston as the Indian Agent overseeing the native reservations in northwestern Ohio. He served in this position for more than thirty years until the 1840s. His office was located in Piqua. Johnston played an important political and social role in Ohio as well. He was a strong advocate of the Whig Party. He helped found Kenyon College and also served on the board of trustees of Miami University. Johnston also published one of the earliest histories of the American Indians that once called Ohio home. He died in 1861 in Washington, DC. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06522
    Subjects: American Indian history and society; Land settlement--Ohio; American Indian agents
    Places: Piqua (Ohio); Miami County (Ohio)
     
    John Cleves Symmes Tomb
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    John Cleves Symmes Tomb  Save
    Description: The tomb of John Cleves Symmes (1742-1814). Symmes would come to be a prominent figure in the history of the early United States. He served some time in Congress and was also at one time a judge for the state of New Jersey. Symmes would eventually decide that it would be a good idea to start a settlement in what is today Ohio, pooling money together with others to acquire land out in the rugged frontier. Despite his good investment, there were glaring issues that soon cropped up and caused him trouble. Because of his disregard for policies about land ownership, there were cases where many people paid Symmes for land he didn't even own, which became a disaster for these settlers. Because of this disaster, private owners were no longer able to buy up land and then sell it. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06776
    Subjects: Symmes, John Cleves, 1742-1814; Northwest Territory--History; Northwest Territory--Politics and government; Land settlement--Ohio
    Places: Northwest Territory; North Bend (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
    DeWitt Log Cabin photograph
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    DeWitt Log Cabin photograph  Save
    Description: Completed in 1805 by Zachariah DeWitt, this two-story log homestead is the oldest building in Oxford Township and one of the oldest remaining log structures in Ohio. Located on Miami University land and listed in the National Register of Historic Places, it has been under the care of the Oxford Museum Association since 1973. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL07520
    Subjects: National Register of Historic Places; Land settlement--Ohio; Log cabins;
    Places: Oxford (Ohio); Butler County (Ohio)
     
    James Reynolds portrait
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    James Reynolds portrait  Save
    Description: James C. Reynolds was the founder and namesake of the city of Reynoldsburg in central Ohio. Born in 1806, he arrived in the area which would become Reynoldsburg around 1831. After founding the city along the heavily-traveled Cumberland Road (also known as National Road), he served as a Brigadier General in the Ohio Militia and was a representative in the Ohio General Assembly. He died in 1854. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL04074
    Subjects: Land settlement--Ohio; Cities and towns--Ohio; National Road
    Places: Reynoldsburg (Ohio); Fairfield County (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio); Licking County (Ohio)
     
    Joel Wright compass
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    Joel Wright compass  Save
    Description: This Vernier surveyor's compass which measures 14" by 7" (36 by 18 cm) was used by Joel Wright to plat the city of Columbus prior to its founding in 1812. The typical 19th-century brass and wooden compass was made in Winchester, Virginia. Joel Wright (1750-1829) was a Quaker born in Menallen, Pennsylvania, who first came to Ohio in 1788 as part of a team to survey the Northwest Territory. He surveyed the Muskingum, Scioto, and Great Miami valleys, and eventually settled in Ohio in 1806 in an area near present-day Waynesville. While a resident of Ohio, Wright platted the towns of Columbus, Dayton, and Springboro, Ohio, and Louisville, Kentucky. He was also the first surveyor of Warren County. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: Om1487_1535360_001
    Subjects: Land settlement--Ohio; Geography and Natural Resources; Surveying; Surveying equipment
    Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
     
    Fort Harmar print
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    Fort Harmar print  Save
    Description: Photographic reproduction of a print depicting Fort Harmar in 1790. The original print was published in the American Pioneer, volume 1, 1842. Colonel Josiah Harmar was sent to the Ohio frontier to discourage illegal settlers from moving into Ohio. He ordered Fort Harmar to be built in October 1785. The fort was built near present-day Marietta on the north side of the Ohio River by the mouth of the Muskingum River. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL02986
    Subjects: Land settlement--Ohio; Ohio History--Settlement and Early Statehood
    Places: Fort Harmar (Ohio); Marietta (Ohio); Washington County (Ohio)
     
      11 matches on "Land settlement--Ohio"
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