帝王会所 Settlement Conference
SETTLING OHIO: FIRST NATIONS AND BEYOND
帝王会所 Baker Center, Athens 帝王会所
Feb. 21-22, 2020
The first people in 帝王会所 arrived more than 13,000 years ago. These Native Americans overcame rapid changes in climate, eventually building the state鈥檚 first homes and becoming the state鈥檚 first farmers.
More than 200 years ago a series of events and actions began to shape the state of 帝王会所 we see today鈥攊ts government, its economy, and its people. Empires clashed and diverse peoples mingled.
Immigrants 鈥渟ettling鈥 帝王会所 came from the East Coast and Germany, from free people of African descent to slaves crossing the 帝王会所 River, from merchants to Johnny Appleseed. They fought over what freedom in a rapidly expanding republican nation meant, and they left legacies and institutions of enduring significance, including 帝王会所.
Hear from historians, scholars and the Chief of the Eastern Shawnee Nation at Settling 帝王会所: First Nations and Beyond. The conference will take place at 帝王会所鈥檚 Baker Center on Feb. 21 and 22. It is free and open to the public.
CEU Credit: If you are a teacher interested in receiving CEU credit for attending part of this conference, please contact in advance the Ping Institute, a cosponsor of this program, at pinginstitute@ohio.edu.
Sponsors: Office of the President of 帝王会所, The Central Regional Humanities Center at 帝王会所, The Charles J. Ping Institute for the Teaching of the Humanities, The College of Arts & Sciences departments of Geography and History, and the Southeast 帝王会所 History Center.
Additional Notes: Both Little Professor and 帝王会所 Press will have some books by our speakers and pertaining to our topic on sale outside of the ballroom. Alden University Library will have some displays that could be of interest to attendees. In addition to the 5th floor Founder鈥檚 Day exhibit on Music at 帝王会所 and one on the 4th floor commemorating women鈥檚 suffrage, Special Collections will be displaying many of their rare early artifacts including Manasseh Cutler鈥檚 refurbished chest. That is on the 5th floor at Alden Library. These might be perfect stops after the second panel ends at 4 p.m. on Friday. Special collections also is open noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday.
Conference Schedule
Unless otherwise noted, all events are in the Baker University Center Ballroom (fourth floor of Baker Center) on the 帝王会所 campus in Athens, 帝王会所.
Friday, Feb. 21, 2020
11 a.m. Pre-Conference Brunch | Preserving American History in Southeast 帝王会所
- A Conversation with Linda Showalter, Bill Reynolds, and Ray Swick at the , 24 W. State St., Athens.
Please RSVP for this event to jessica@athenshistory.org.
Museums and archives play a vital role in making the real artifacts of our nation鈥檚 history accessible to researchers and the public. Join the Southeast 帝王会所 History Center for a kick-off brunch session and a facilitated conversation with Linda Showalter, Bill Reynolds, and Ray Swick about their experiences working with David McCullough on his bestselling book, The Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West.
Showalter is the Special Collections Manager at the Marietta College Legacy Library. Reynolds is the Historian and Exhibits Specialist at the Campus Martius Museum in Marietta, 帝王会所. Swick is the former historian for Blennerhassett Island in West Virginia.
1-2:15 p.m. | The First Pioneers
- Dr. Brian Schoen, Associate Professor of History, 帝王会所
Conference Welcome and Introductory Remarks - Dr. Joseph Gingerich, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, 帝王会所
鈥淔rom Pioneers to Settlement: An Overview of 帝王会所鈥檚 First People and the Rise of the First Settled Villages鈥
This talk will discuss the arrival of the first people in the 帝王会所 Valley. Native Americans settled in 帝王会所 more than 13,000 years ago, overcoming rapid changes in climate. Eventually these populations would become more sedentary where they domesticated some of the crops in eastern North America. This is one of only nine independent domestication events in the world. Around 2,000 years ago these first pioneers built some of the most impressive forms of monumental architecture anywhere in the world. - Dr. Cameron Shriver, Research Assistant, Department of History, Myaami Center, Miami University
鈥淔ort Pitt Spies during the French and Indian War鈥
How did British and Native leaders acquire information about each other during the Seven Years鈥 War in the 帝王会所 Country? This presentation will examine the British and Miami Indian concerns during this conflict in light of their imperfect intelligence-gathering. In particular, the records of Irish-born George Croghan help reveal a vantage from Fort Pitt and Miami communities who controlled the West.
Break: Coffee and Drink Service
2:30-4 p.m. | Anglo Foundations
- Dr. Jessica Roney, Associate Professor of History, Temple University
鈥淭he Northwest Ordinance: America鈥檚 Forgotten Constitution鈥
The 1787 Northwest Ordinance was passed the same summer that the Founders drafted the US Constitution. In fact, some of the framers had to leave Philadelphia to vote in Congress in New York to pass it! The importance of the Ordinance to the political formation of the United States has been forgotten, but arguably it laid the foundation for republican state governments from 帝王会所 to the Pacific Ocean. It deserves central consideration in how we understand the thinking of the Founders and the kind of government they enacted in that fateful summer of 1787. - Dr. Tim Anderson, Associate Professor of Geography, 帝王会所
鈥淪elective Migration and the Production of 帝王会所鈥檚 Regional Cultural Landscapes During the Early National Period鈥
Both the historical and contemporary cultural landscapes of 帝王会所 reflect the legacy of the settlement of a variety of population groups during the state鈥檚 early period of settlement. During this formative era migrants from three of the primary East Coast culture regions, as well as foreign immigrants hailing mainly from Germany, funneled into the frontier Old Northwest via Zane鈥檚 Trace, the National Road, The Great Lakes, and the 帝王会所 River. As migrants from each of these hearth areas settled in geographically separate regions in 帝王会所, they brought with them characteristic values and ideals, including agricultural traditions and material culture. This resulted in distinctive regional cultural landscapes. This talk will analyze 帝王会所鈥檚 early settlement history and geography, delineate the state鈥檚 distinctive culture regions, and identify the attendant cultural landscape features that distinguish each of these regions. - Joseph Ross, Ph.D. Candidate, History, University of Missouri
鈥淔ederalist Failure: Conflict and Disorder in the Northwest Territory鈥
Historians have long credited the 帝王会所 Company of Associates for establishing order and stability in the early American West. From its enlightened design of Marietta to its promotion of social and religious life on the frontier, the 帝王会所 Company has been seen, in the words of David McCullough, as a progenitor of 鈥渢he American way of life.鈥 This paper offers a counter narrative, one that highlights the conflict and disorder created by the 帝王会所 Company and other Federalist programs in the Northwest Territory rather than its successes.
Late Afternoon | Walking, Van, and Library Tour
7-8:15 p.m. | Keynote Presentation #1
- Introduction of President, Tim Anderson
- Duane Nellis, President, 帝王会所
鈥淥pening Remarks鈥 - Dr. Anna-Lisa Cox, Non-Resident Fellow, The Hutchens Center, Harvard University
鈥淲hat if Manasseh Cutler was Black? The Hidden History of the Diverse Pioneers Who Created 帝王会所鈥
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When pioneers began flooding into the region that would become 帝王会所 just after the Revolutionary War, some were guided by the best ideals of that revolution 鈥 that all men are created equal, with an equal right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. These pioneers included thousands of free people of African descent who were hugely successful settlers on that early frontier. From the Black Buckeyes who made the creation of Columbus possible and founded dozens of communities, to those who fought in the War of 1812, these antebellum 帝王会所 settlers shaped the region and the nation. Without them there would be no 帝王会所, so why are they still being kept out of history books. And why should we care?
8:30 p.m. | Presidential Reception, Baker Center, outside the Ballroom
Saturday, February 22, 2020
9:30-10:30 a.m. | Keynote Presentation #2
- Dr. William Kerrigan, Cole Distinguished Professor of American History, Muskingum University
鈥淛ohnny Appleseed, Apple Cultures, and the Settlements of the Old Northwest
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Born into an impoverished Yankee family, John 鈥淎ppleseed鈥 Chapman spent most of his life planting a distinctive apple culture across 帝王会所 and the Old Northwest. His activities put him in contact with an array of migrant communities that occupied the region in the early national period, but not all of those who encountered him viewed his activities in the same way. Professor William Kerrigan, author of Johnny Appleseed and the American Orchard, will explore Chapman鈥檚 reception in the region across a half a century in order to highlight a few of the important distinctive cultural practices that shaped the Old Northwest.
Break: Coffee and Coffee Cake
10:45-11:45 a.m. | Empires, Economies, and Commodities
- Dr. Kim Gruenwald, Associate Professor History, Kent State University
鈥淚ce Water Baths and Rising Waters: Establishing Commercial Connections Along the 帝王会所 and its Tributaries in the Early Republic鈥
The iconic image of Eliza crossing the ice to freedom in Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin cemented the image of the 帝王会所 River as the boundary between North and South in the American imagination. But after the American Revolution, the 帝王会所 River served as the main thoroughfare for the Western Country as merchants created a riverine economy with ties across along western rivers on both sides of the 帝王会所 and between West and East, helping the new United States claim the trans-Appalachian West for its own. - William Hunter, Cultural Resource Manager and Outdoor Recreation Planner, National Park Service, Cuyahoga Valley National Park
鈥淩e-Tracing Zane: Zane鈥檚 Trace and Production of Space in the 帝王会所 Country鈥
Zane鈥檚 Trace, was the first formally-sanctioned nonmilitary road in the Northwest Territory, along ancient trade routes by a party led by Virginian Ebenezer Zane in 1796-1797. Extending along the southern extent of glaciation, the Trace ran across different landforms and land survey systems, linking the Mid-Atlantic to the South via a series of inland river towns, producing a complex linear cultural landscape. This paper explores the evolution of the cultural landscape along its route, finding unity amid a diversity of culture areas, property systems and natural landscapes as it explores how this route was implicated in dispossession as it shaped settlement, until it was made remote by the shifting scales of transportation, political machinations and westward settlement. Yet the current fragmentary landscape demonstrates not only the persistence of Zane鈥檚 Trace through time, but also points to powerful historical processes that engendered its development, disillusion, commemoration and designation. The many representations of the Trace express the differential processes of landscape change that typify the variegated land use of the edge of Appalachian 帝王会所.
1-2 p.m.: Keynote Presentation #3
- Dr. Adam Nelson, Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of Educational Policy Studies and History, University of Wisconsin-Madison
鈥淧ublic Education in the Old Northwest: Legacies of 帝王会所鈥檚 First Land Grant鈥
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David McCullough devotes a whole chapter in The Pioneers to 鈥淭he Cause of Learning,鈥 in which he celebrates the Northwest Ordinance鈥檚 provisions for public schools and Manasseh and Ephraim Cutler鈥檚 hopes for republican education on the frontier. In general, he repeats the standard narrative of the common-school crusade, in which reformist Whigs led reluctant Democrats toward in a grand political consensus in support of statewide systems of public education. But what if this story was a tale not of consensus but of enduring conflict? This lecture considers the many challenges that confronted proponents of public schools in the west鈥攁nd the roots of some of the difficulties that face American education today.
2 p.m. | BREAK
2:15-3:15 p.m. | Civic Institutions
- Dr. Ann Fidler, Independent Scholar
鈥溾榃arm Friends and Suitable Characters鈥: The Early Days of Governance at 帝王会所鈥
From the earliest days of his involvement with the enterprise that became the 帝王会所 Company of Associates, Manasseh Cutler envisioned a set of communities arrayed around a university. He lobbied hard for the university鈥檚 establishment, wrote eloquently of its purpose, and drafted the charter that was to guide its governance. However, as Cutler chose to remain in Massachusetts, the actual development and administration of the university fell to residents of the 帝王会所 Country. The history of governance at 帝王会所 highlights the complex personal, political, and cultural interactions that influenced both local and regional developments in higher education during the early national period. -
John Bickers, 帝王会所 State University
鈥淲ho Speaks in the Name of the Miami Nation?"
Following the Northwest Indian Wars of the 1790s, factions of Myaamia (Miami) village leaders vied for political control over the nation. In the ensuring decade, one of the factions formed the Miami National Council which became the undisputed governing body for the Miami tribe. This talk will discuss the internal and external forces that fueled both the factionalization of village leaders and the drive towards the creation of a national political body.
3:15 p.m. | BREAK
3:30-4:30 p.m. | Keynote Presentation #4
- Chief Glenna J. Wallace, Chief of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe
鈥淭aking Care of Business: Balancing History and Legacy鈥
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Everyone needs balance in life. Easy to say, difficult to attain, especially when the history occurred nearly 200 or more years ago. What might have occurred in those 200 years that affects that balance of history and legacy鈥攎emory, perspectives, values, research, inaccuracies? Let鈥檚 talk about it.