► &f fc 9^: LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 751 367 7 SOUVENIR —OK PENNYROYALDOM. COMPILED BY John Kirkpatrick. CAMBRIDGE, OHIO: JKFFERSONIAN STEAM PRINTING HOUSE. I885. R<^ " But to recall the early toils of those Who romped these hill with gleeful, childish bent, The Pennyroyal's aromatic scent, Is subtler than the rarest garden rose." — Robert B. Buchanan. INTRODUCTION. The publisher in the compilation of this Souvenir of Pennyroyaldom, has sought no more than to give a faithful report of its five annual reunions, as gathered from the full publications of the newspapers owned and pub- lished by men born, reared and educated to maturer years in Oxford Town- ship. These publications were very full and few inaccuracies will be found. The compiler has taken the privilege of not reproducing a few things in no way related to the Pennyroyal Reunion or its purposes. This compilation was undertaken as a labor of love, without expecta- tion ot further remuneration than would meet the cost of its preparation in this permanent form. The publisher had a desire to see gathered in one handy volume, all the valuable and interesting reminiscences of the early and later life of a people renowned throughout all lands and climes for their sturdy manhood and morals, for their thoroughly grounded religious convictions and their nmde patriotism. Wherever the sons and daughters ot the Pennyroyal land have gone, they have carried with them in their lives the proofs that they come from a noble home built by a great ancestry. In commemoration of virtues whose memories should be perpetuated, the publisher and compiler has ventured to present this Souvenir of Penny- royaldom. JOHN KIRKPATRICK. Origin of the Pennyroyal Reunion. On the retirement of Jonathan Rose, from the office of County Com- missioner and at the incoming of Patrick Lochary, a banquet was made at a Cambridge restaurant, to which were invited representatives of the press> the county officers, members of the bar and many other citizens. The oc- casion was a pleasant one and after the substantials were cleared away speech making broke out. It was observed that many present were from Oxford township— the place of Mr. Rose's home. The township had been long known by the name of Pennyroyaldom, and it became the subject of the evening amongst the orators and many a sally of humor was made upon it. The evening was so pleasantly passed that Mr. Rose some weeks after, proposed at some future time to renew it at his home — by making a real Pennyroyal Festival. The writer objected, as such a gathering as should be present would be beyond the hospitality of even so good a host, and sug- gested a genuine permanent annual reunion. The idea was at once carried out and from these circumstances came the great success of the Pennyroyal reunions, which it is hoped may continue in succession for many years to Come. SOUYBRIR OR PBPPVROVOUOOm", FIRST REUNIDN, ^^IIE First Pennyroyal Reunion was held at Gardiner's prove in Ox- v\sg/) ibrd township on Tuesday and Wednesday, August 17th and 18th, 1880. It was designed to be one of those social gatherings which are so popular, and to perpetuate memories of the olden times of Oxford township, famed for her many good qualities in all the history of Guernsey county, the state and the nation. On the first day no less than fifteen hundred people were upon the grounds and the second day brought, it is judged, nearly, if not fully, four thousand persons to engage in and enjoy the occasion. The two days were filled with the utmost social enjoyment possible to be crowded into such space of time with a company of like numbers. The stage was wreathed with the aromatic pennyroyal and in great letters of the herb the words " Pennyroyal " appeared on the back of the stage and " Welcome " in front of it. A motto, " Welcome to All," was also back of the stage, having been sent for the occasion from New Orleans, Louisiana, by Dr. Stewart L. Henry. After a few remarks by the President of the Pennyroyal Association, J. O. Grimes, Esq., the blessings of Heaven were invoked upon the ceremonies in a prayer by Rev. I. X. White. The Pennyroyal Choir sang " Home, Sweet Home!" The address of welcome, delivered by Hon. Newell Kennon, came next, as follows: Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen — When I first heard it announced that there would be a Pennyroyal Reunion in Oxford township, a gathering together of the people who now live here, with those who have removed from amongst us and settled in different parts of the country, I thought when this assemblage would take place, (as I now see it before me to-day), that I would like to be present and participate in its proceedings in some way. When the Committee of Arrangements conferred tin 1 honor on me in behalf of the people of Oxford township, of bidding a hearty welcome to all 6 SOUVENIR OF PENNYRO YALBOM. that might be hereto-day, I gladly accepted the plea-ant task, because I felt that I was selected on account of the e hoary locks of mine and of my being a native of this township. Having mingled with and among this people for well nigh seventy years, I remember this township and surrounding neigh- borhood when it was almost a howling wilderness, when the first settlers had to boil their venison and other wild meats without salt ; none to In ob- tained here and no way to get it only by packing it across the mountains on horseback. The old fashioned pack saddle was used for that purpose, not on McAdamized roads or railways such as we have to-day, but along a lonely and winding path through dense forests surrounded with dangers on every hand. At this early day the men commenced chopping, hewing ami splitting; and their wives and daughters spinning, weaving and knitting. Nearly all the clothes worn by the early pioneers of this township were manufactured and made by the women. Whilst the axe-man was engaged in felling the forest ami clearing off and cultivating the ground that it might give seed to the sower and bread to the eater, these men of strong arms and determined will prepared the way that their children might enjoy all the comforts of this life. The rough log cabin, poorly furnished, was their only shelter from the rains of summer anil the storms and snows of winter. These log cabins have now nearly all disappeared ami in their places now stand the neat and comfortable dwell- ings built and furnished in modern style. Their school houses were built in the same rough manner, the windows of which were paper greased with hog's lard to let in the light. The teacher generally kept two or three hickory withes in the corner by which he secured order in his school. At that time the school library consisted principally of the old United States Spelling Book, the Western Calculator and Murray's Grammar. I have often been gratified and it would have been gratifying to you to have seen and heard the little bright eyed, barefooted urchins of that day spell A-C-O-lt-N, B-A-R-E-F-O-O-T, etc. These were the little fellows that were rocked in sugar troughs, fed on johnny cake and mush and milk, growing up with strong constitutions, having strength of body and of mind sufficient to enable them to fight successfully the battles of life. Whatever calling they pursued they acquitted themselves with honor to themselves and advantage to others. These men acquired a high reputation in Guernsey county, and for nearly seventy years some of them have been selected by the political assemblies to (ill County ami Slate offices. Others went forth to till their part in life's drama ; very many of them to spread the glad tidings of peace ami good will to men ; some as educators in schools and colleges; some as lawyers to see that the scales of justice are held in even balance; others as physicians to heal the sick; ami to-day the political papers of our county are edited by the sons of Oxford township; which papers give tone and tongue to the people as far as they circulate, with the exception of to a few stubborn men in Oxford township, who always have, and always will continue to do as they please. The earliest Grecians in their philosophic doctrines taught the people the importance of meeting together as we have to-day in our Pennyroyal Reunion; of having friendly communication one with another, as we hope to have this day and to-morrow and in all the future of our lives. Your chosen orator is hereto-day to give the history of Pennyrovaldoin in Oxford township, and the reasons why this Reunion is called " Penny- royal Reunion." Your poets are here to sing of " Pennyroyal." Your old SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 1 men arc here whose memories are vivid as to the first settlers of this region of country. They will trace its history all along the line from then until now. Your young men are here, who are enjoying the fruits of the labor •<>t' a departed parentage, t be " in honor of Pennyroyal- dom." Its boundaries are not limited, but Oxford township is olaimed to l>c the center. But a "history" of pennyroyaldom means something more than has been said and indeed more than time will permit to be said on this occasion. Hence we will content ourselves with a few tacts and incidents eon- nected with it, some of which are written and others traditional, (iai'i'nscy county was erected or organized in 1810 from territory formed by territory formerly included in the counties of Belmont and Muskingum ami was so called because a large number of its inhabitants were from the Isle of Guern- sey. James Dillon of " Tinker Hill" in Oxford township was o >f the first Commissioners, Oxford township was organized, of course, at the same time, but there is no record until the year 1813, of which the following is a verbatim copy : " At a township meating held on the 5th of April 1813 in oxford Town-hip guern- .-<•,- county sta'e of Ohio at the house of David Wherrys for the purpose of Election the several Township officers as follows X imely Justices of the peas 2 Thomas Henderson John Kennon, Clerk Samuel Dillon, Trus ees Michael King, Win. Dillon, Enoch Marsh, supervisors Enoch marsh, Henry Clear? Elijah Bell Win Scoggan .tames McCoy fence Viewers John and long Tom Henderson Overseeis of the poor Jacob GiNhell Win Hen- derson Treasurer David Wherry. The Superv sors Trus".eea clerk Treasurer fence Viewers anil Overseers of the poor Met on the U)th day of april <\- were scvcrlv sworn into there Respective officers a Cording to law. " Bamuf.i Pai.ton Clk." The history of Pennyroyaldom in this respect is no doubt much the same as that of the surrounding townships and counties. The following ad- ditional names we find connected with its early history: Christian Wine, Ezekiel Vance, Thomas 15. Kirkputrick, John Burnett, Jacob (iatchcll, John Cranston, William Cochran, Edward Morton, Samuel Marlow, James Gilliland, William Orr, Benjamin Masters, James Hall, John Aides, Philip Roseman, etc. The habits and customs of the people iti those days were very different from what they are now. They lived in their log cabins with pun- cheon floors and clapboard doors not close enough to keep out the snakes, much less the frosts of winter. Their diet was chiefly corn bread and wild meat and that frequently without salt as that had to lie conveyed from cast of the mountains on horseback and consequently was very scarce and high priced. Their clothing was of buckskin and tow-linen or flax manufactured by their own hands and worn to church as well as to their own work and it' they could not get along with their spinning, imagine old Mr. Bonnett pack- ing his little wheel from house to house to spin at a "fippennybit" a dozen, or Daniel Errington going around carrying his press board ; ml goose to make up their homespun goods, or John Stage to make their winter shoes, and at the same time living in dread of the hostile Indian and constantly annoyed by the howl of the wolf or alarm of the rattlesnake. But not- withstanding all this they had their fun and frolics, their flax pullings and quiltings and making rails and grubbing and a little dance at night. SOUVENIR OF PENNYBOYALDOM. 11 Bui they finally succeeded in banishing the Indian, destroying the snake, clearing up the forests and did the best they could to educate their children and lay the foundation for the support and education of a happy and prosperous people. In 1827 the National mad was built by the gov- ernment right through the centre of Pennyroyaldom and proved to be a great National thoroughfare for traveling, droving and teaming which caused lands to advance in value and made a ready market for all kinds of produce. Middletown was laid out the same year by Benjamin Masters and was so named because it is midway between Wheeling and Zanesville and was for many years a flourishing and active business town. Fairview was laid out before the National Road was built, on the Old Wheeling Road, and was so named because of its elevated situation, and, like all other towns along, the National Road, flourished until the iron horse robbed it of its patronage, I see those persons around me to-day who have lived through nearly all those years and are as connecting links from the past to the present, who were living when Ohio was admitted into the Union 78 years ago. They can hear witness to all that I have said and volumes more. They have seen the dense forest give way to fruitful fields, They have seen the logcabins shadowed by costly mansions. They have seen the Indian, the wolf and tl e deer flee before the tide of civilization. They have seen the wilderness to bloom and become ♦lotted all over with comfortable school houses and churches, and, although their hair is silvered o'er with age, although their brows are already crowned with the ehaplets of immortality, yet at the mention of those things which happened in the days of their youth and manhood I sec their count- enances brighten and their eyes sparkle and 1 expect after little to hear their tongues speak in confirmation of what I have said and much more than 1 know to say. But ti me bach to my history I want to say a few words in reference to our schools. I do not know who first taught school in Oxford township, but I am told that William Armstrong was the first who taught in Center district in a little cabin on the farm now owned by James E. Merryman. The second school house was built on the farm now owned by Samuel Ferguson — and this brings me up to a period within my own recollection for I went to school there just one day and the teacher's name was John B. Warnock. That was about the year 1830 or 1831. The third school house was built near the place where Center School House now stands and the fourth was built on the same site as the present and if it was appropriate on an occasion like this I would like to contrast the past with the present, not only the houses, but the teachers and the manner of conducting the school. In thinking over these things I often wonder how it is that so many eminent men and women (as you will sec by reference to the programme) have gone out from Pennyroyaldom to nearly all parts of the Union and are filling high places of honor and trust, and I am truly gratified to see so many of them here to take part in this reunion and shake hands that have so long been separated and renew former friendships and old ac- quaintances; and I hasten to close my brief history that they may have the opportunity of -peaking the fullness of their hearts on this social oc- casion. The Poet of the day, Robt. B. Buchanan, then read the following pret- ty and appropriate poem : — 12 SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. PENNYROYAL HOLIDAYS. The blithest holidays arc those we keep With hearts like summer clouds that float in air ; With tongues that weave " the ravelled sleave of care," And gliding thoughts unchained with la- bors deep. Anniversaries fraught with richest joys, Arc those that still rekindle into flaraes, The hearthstone ashes and the sol I- day names, Of olden times when we were girls and I ii iys Like swallows singing down each wind that I. lew s, The tender mem'ries come— like fairy tales ; Soft as the gleam of white, receding sails, _ Until the dreamful days speed to their close So meet we here upon our native soil, To catch the fragrance of the by-gone days : And greet old friends who've walked in devious ways, Since we were young in dear old Penny- royal ! A strain of music or a flower's sweet breath, Or rippling water in a silent place Will sometimes turn us backward- face to face, With early scenes of childhood, home and death But to recall the early toils of those Who romped these hills with gleeful, childish bent. The Pennyroyal's aromatic scent. Is subtler than the rarest garden rose. In Oriental lands they talk in Sowers, And weave into a garland loves and cares ; Hut remix royal's expressive language bears Still mere congenial tales in native bow- ers. It was admirably read and its aptness and poetic merit were so high that it was received with considerable applause. The Secretary of the Association, John Kirkpatrick, read the follow- ing letters from absent Pennyroyalists : FROM litis. W R. WAGSTAFF Paola, Kansas, July 23, 1880 Prriident of the Pennyroyal Reunion : Allow roe to assure you that the writer regards your official station praiseworthy and honorable. Oxford and Pennyroyal, one and inseparable, Wm Borton, Esq., au- thor of " lViiiiyroyaldom," tit and appropriate. A small shipment of the pure oil of Royal herb! Dioscorides did write Of thee: and Pliny lent a gracious page, To tell thy qualities to future age, And bring thv uses into fairer light. O, Earth! thou hast not any wind that blows Which is not music; every weed of thine. Rightly pressed, (lows in aromatic wine, And virtues lurk in every plant that grows. How oft we've knelt beside the wayside spring. Where grew around the Pennyroyal wild. Perfuming earth and air with odor mild. And drank a draught of which the gods might sing. All honor to the suns who far ami wide, Have drifted o'er the land from Penny- royal ; May each remember still the gladsome oil, That Hews from hill and dales of youth- ful pride. The fathers of our kingdom, old and gray, Tike Eastern merchants freed from earthly toils, At rest — they dream of future wines and oils. And an eternal home of endless day. As each returning year revolves in time, .May each true son of childhood's hap- py home, Return from distant places where they roam. And keep a day in stories and in rhyme This royal kingdom ruled without a king, With loyal subjects to revere its name ; And loyal hearts to eke defend its fame, Will he perennial as the fabled spring. SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 13 iliis valuable herb, in tin cane to Philadelphia and there sold, will pay the expenses oi printing and bindings handsome volume entitled, " Pennyroyaldom." Oxford to be true U> her historian must not neglect it Newell Ken and Joseph Ferrell must not be forgotten by the author in his his- torical rt rd as two among the oldest living landmarks of Oxford. T. W Tipton and J O. Grimes about thirty years ago, and about ten years later Lewis W. Borton forsook the rustic pursuits of earlier days in < Ixford to seek fortune and fame in other localities, are now sin oiled by the printed call of the Pennyroyal Reunion at < rardiner's I rrove to the scenes of their earlier days and view w ith eyes dimmed with age the land of their birth. Rev David Paul from Oxford became a student in Muskingum College; Rev. David A Wallace a President and Professor in the same College. These, with many other names printed in the programme, show that the Pennyroyal 'amis, in the township of Oxford, in the county ol Guernsey, in the state of Ohio, have furnished to the world men of distinguished learning and piety, men distinguished as legislators and lawyers and ill fact honored members of all the learned professions. Gen-. Taylor, Frank Creighton, W. R Buchanan and Major Bradshaw are among the honored dead of Oxford whose peculiar characteristics in life are treasured in the memories of the living as materials for thought and recreation. When everybody sings " Auld Lang Syne." at the Pennyroyal Reunion, old acquaintances, present or absent, living or 'lead, will he brought to mind, a pleasing How of recollection will soothe and cheer the singers, and the united voices in the harmony of song will he carried on an- gels' wings from the Pennyroyal Reunion of Oxford township. With kindest regards for y*i and all my old acquaintances, I remain, with much respect, W. R. Waostaff. FROM HON HENRY KENNON. Princeton-, Ills , August hi, 1SSU. To the Pennyroyal Reunion : The invitation to your meeting, at Fairview on the 17th and 18th insts , is, as I un- derstand it, special to the natives of Oxford township, and general to all others Well I am one of the natives, and among tin- oldest now living. Though I left the township upwards of fifty-two years ago, my thoughts still frequently revert to it with a melan- choly interest. Its scenery is as vivid to my mind to-day. as on the day I left it. Out affection for the place of our birth is allied to, and perhaps originates in that of the family relation They seem to he inseparable. The interest, whether pleasant or melancholy that attaches to them both, is often the means of restraining us from evil, and keeping us in the path of rectitude. In the moment of temptation the recollection of a mother's or sister's love often comestimely to our relief. Such affections are deep- ly and securely lodged in the secret recesses of the soul, there to remain as a means by which we may he reformed in after life. This is one of the ways by which a mysterious Providence is ever laboring to effect our regeneration, requiring on our part, however, as free agents, an active co-operation But my native, my rustic home, as a component part of my great native land, what of thee? How shall I dismiss this part of my subject without being tedious? Perhaps there is no better way than by a quotation from that old familiar song called "The Bucket," by Samuel W Iworth, an American poet I adopt the sentiment Here are the first four lines of the stanza : " How dear to this heart an- the scenes of my childhood When fond recollection presents them to view ! The orchard, the meadow, the deep-tangled wild-wood. And every loved spot which my infancy knew ! " Our attachment to the place of our birth is not wholly dependent on its surround- ings A fertile soil, a splendid mansion, and lovely landscape are all desirable. But the rude loo cabin, with a sterile soil, and no land-cape to enliven the same, have nev- ertheless their attractions, and make impressions quite as lasting This subject has engaged the pen of the greatest poets, ancient and modern Tbey could not have overlooked it, aid have been poets ; and they could not have written on the subject without exciting the tenderest emotions of the heart. Scotland's two great- est co-temporary prets were Sir Walter Scott and Robert Hums. Their reputation, will last as long as there is a taste that can appreciate the beauties of poetry. On this subject, Scott, in his " Lay of the Last Minstrel," wrote 14 80UVENIJR OF PENNYROYALDOM. "O, Caledonia stern and wild, ^\f t*ct nurse for a poetic child! Land of brown beath and shaggy wood, Land of the mountain and the flood, Land of my sires! what mortal hand Can e're untie the filial band That knits me to thy ragged strand? Still, as I view each well known scene, Think what is now, and what has been, Seems, as to me, of all bereft, Sole friends, thy woods and streams are left ; And thus I love them better still, Even in extremity of ill." And Burns, in his " Cotter's Saturday Night," wrote: " Scotia! my dear, my native soil ! For whom my warmest wish to heaven is sent. Long may thy hardy sons of rustic toil, Be blessed with health, and peace, and sweet content ! And, ! may heaven their simple lives prevent From luxury's contagion, weak and vile ! Then howe'er Crowns and Coronets he rent, A virtuous populace may rise the while, And stand a wall of lire around their much loved isle." Such outbursts of fervent patriotism as here expressed by Scott and Burns must have proceeded from sincere hearts. With a country far surpassing theirs in natural scenery, and the numerous ways of obtaining the necessaries and comforts of life, we Americans should be able most cheerily to adopt their patriotic sentiments, so far as applicable to our country. In one particular at least, our civil institutions are decidedly preferable to theirs. Unlike them we have no union of Church ami State. Our con- tributions lor the support of the Church are all voluntary, and it is our own fault if not made to the Church of our own choice. But not so there. Burns hated oppression in all its forms, and no one was more ready to detect and expose oppression than himself. He drew a distinction between the love of our native homes and the government under which we live, when he speaks of the instability of Crowns and Coronets w hen opposed to the intelligent sentiment of a virtuous populace. The love of country and of its gov- ernment are not necessarily inseparable. So our forefathers thought in Revolutionary times, and so perhaps the American people think to-day, as evinced by the disturbed state of the political elements. It is now but a fair inference that either public senti- ment, or the government or its administration, will undergo a change, in due time. Providence will favor us with just such a government as our spiritual, and incidently, our material wants, demand. As we desire, so will we receive. As we become a better people we will be favored with a better administration of a government whose form necessarially requires no change. To secure that end let us be honest with ourselves, and strive honestly to discharge our whole duty to our adopted as well as to our native county, and to our God. I Will not be able to attend your reunion personally, but my heart, and this, my first Epistle, will be there. Hoping that your meeting will he a pleasant affair, and that you will adopt a per- manent organization to meet annually for the promotion of your social, literary and ma- terial interests, I subscribe myself as one of your long absent natives and in warm sym- pathy with such a movement. Henry Kennon. FROM DR. S. L HENRY. Fi lends and Acquaintances of Pennyroyal : Time in its onward flight has scattered those that once resided or were born in the limits of Pennyroyaldom. far and wide, over one-third of the States of the Union, as evinced bv the programme. To each receiving this announcement of the Reunion it will recall the sentimental words of Auld Lang Syne; with the hearts and minds re- sponse they are not forgotten the Old. the Young, the rocks and hills, the woods and trampled hills; once again the echoes come from the silence of the past of the many pleasures and pains long since forgotten, of my youthful days., And none would be more happy than I to meet those that have kept watch on my adopted heath these many years, and contribute my humble part to make this reunion an occasion never to he forgotten. Strange to think that hut yesterday many of us were school boys within (he limited space of Oxford township, and to-day we are scattered from the rising of the sun to the going down of the same SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALBOM. 15 Time has dealt gently with the inhabitants of Pennyroyaldom, and an ever protect ing ami fostering Providence has been ever mindful of their lives and wants. In scan- ning the roster of the programme nearly all of the old familiar names are thereon, yet I am sorry to notice thai here and there are vacant spaces, yet when their surviving comrades reunite, their names will none the less remembered be In the silence of the grave, memory there oft communions make,and as has been truly said " the heart feels most when the lips move not." Reunions are highly ennobling in several respects; first they are a cultivation of a social ami friendly feeling, Hie best of our nature, among friends and foes, and, as it wen-, a laying aside the passions of haste that may have burst forth as a storm t < > rend asunder the ties nf good feeling that should ever characterize all human action. The reunion is a calm, a time for thought, il time to repent at leisure, a time to meet face to face, a lime to shake hands and say in this: What ere may betide We'll all he on one side. Secondly, it helps to smooth down the troubled billows that cross the path of each and show a personal interest for each other; their happiness and pleasure, ami render the inevitable and perpetual conflict of human life from the cradle to the grave, beara- ble. Thirdly, the worldly view, the pleasures of the hour, ami finally the terrestrial re- union in feeble imitation' of the celestial. Friends of old Oxford, though distant in the sunny (dime where the orange perfumes the air, amid the land of perpetual bloom where no icicle doth come to chill perpetual summer, with its lakes and rivers on every side to cheer the eye with rapturous thought. Yet for the moment from all these the mind will turn away in memory's thought to the reunion of (lid Oxford's sons and daughters, and say, as oft has been said, "distance lends enchantment to the view," and in thought commune with those gathered in the grove hard by the village of Kairview. In your si lection of a place and name, you were certainly imbued with the fitness of things, as Darwin would say. May the pleasures of the hour he unalloyed, the asocia- tion and happiness without a shadow, and the reunion a day long to he remembered. In their flight fleeting yeais have borne away, The pleasures, the joys, the scenes of youthful days, And brought instead, stern realities and hoary locks. Amid bleak hills, bubbling brooks and mossy rocks, To learn a lesson wise in these is taught. To be to-day, to-morrow oft is not Then let this Reunion hi' to all in it engaged, What each most needs when they approach the grave. August 2d, 1880 S. L. Henry, of Louisiana. Under the management of Hon. Joseph Ferrell the roll of absent, but former natives and residents of Oxford township, was called for response. Rev. W. H. Morton, of Cincinnati, said that he was a wanderer re- turned — not one of the revolutionary settlers, but one of the royal family — pennyroyal family. There are bonds of unity between us all — home, birth place, early scenes, and associations. They are all around us. We all love our native land. There is a bond of affection that binds us together as broad as the country, wherever we wander. Wherever we may meet, in the broad plains of the Mississippi valley or on the mountains of the Pa- cific coast, we are ever ready to embrace. No matter if we have not the pass word of the Free Masons, the latch string is always out. The motives of this reunion are good. We can all, old and young, honor the pioneers of Pennyroyaldom. Honor to the memory of the dust that sleeps in Oxford! Honor to the forefathers! We desire to perpetuate the history of the old fathers who came to the wilderness and made the forest to blossom as the rose. Our elder brethren cast something of reflec- tion on us for not being so well dressed as those of the early days. They had buskskin trousers and flax dresses. That was to make us jealous ; but we had speckled calico and nankeen pantaloons, but they were thin — as the boys say and as the sprouts sometimes testified, it is the bad bees that go out of the hive. I suppose they stop at Cambridge for the loaves 16 80 Z71 ENIR OF 1 >ENN YROYALB OM. and fishes. They would not let int' stop, but said — like Horace Greeley — Go West, young man ! The Pennyroyal is not common to all. The Irishman lias his sham- rock, the Scotchman his thistle, and the Englishman his roses. So has Oxford her Pennyroyal. Tin- northern part of the State was settled by Yankees. A big round cheese should he their emblem. They differ with us in speech; so do those south of us, and right here in Eastern Ohio we have the purest form id' English speech and the best representative American. West the population is mixed, — it is cosmopolitan. Here we have the pre-eminent American in lineage and in language. We have pre- served the purest form of the English tongue. Rev. Samuel Forbes, of Sloan's Station, Ohio, said : Ladies the President and Executive Committee. The mo- tion was withdrawn anil the substitute adopted. On motion of Rev. \Y. II. Morton a committee was appointed to nominate officers for the ensuing year. The President named Rev. W. II. Morton, Hon. Newell Kennon, Col. J. D. Taylor, Hon. Joseph Ferrell and Wm. Borton, Esq., as the committee. The committee soon reported the following list of officers, who were duly elected: President, J. O. Grimes; Recording Secretary ami Historian, John Kirkpatrick ; Corresponding Secretary, I). D. Taylor; Assistant Sec- retary, J. C. Beckett ; Treasurer, Newell Kennon ; Executive Committee, Wm. Borton, Chairman, Joseph Ferrell, Jonathan Rose, David ('. Kennon and Thomas Smith. Mr. Grimes thanked the reunion people for the honor of re-election to the office of President of the Association. He was probably not chosen because he was the oldest man, although one gentleman wrnted to know why the old blue coat was not brought out. His wife objected because the coat was old and ragged. It did much service in the last campaign. I have a recollection which extends back for half a century. My parents resided not far from here and if any old gentleman here remembers losing some tine poplar trees it is probable that I helped to cut them for raccoons long ago. Pennyroyaldom is in blossom to-day. The plant is itself in flower. There are very many old pioneers and residents who are expected to speak and we must lie short. Rev. Dr. Paul arose and said that he wished that all who attended the old stone church during the pastorate of Rev. Hugh L. Forsythe would meet him now at a tree just back of the grounds. The Secretary then read the following letter from Senator Tipton ; SENATOR TIPTON'S LETTER Brownville, Neb., August 13, 1880. D. D- Taylor, Esq., Dear Sin : — I regret that I cannot be present at the Oxford Township Reunion, In September, 1840, having graduated at Uniontown, Pa.. I hastened to Fairview in or- der to hear that marvel of popular eloquence, Thomas Corwin, then candidate for < tov- ernor of Ohio, and reached there on Saturday before the election In Fairview I com- menced my political life and advocated the claims of Clay in 1S44, of Taylor in 1848 and Gen. Scott in 1852, for President In 1845 I was nominated and elected to the legisla- ture of Ohio, commencing my canvass on the day of the birth of my first son whom I named Thomas Corwin for political luck and personal esteem. To Oxford Township I look hack to my starting point as a temperance lecturer and could instance churches and school Imuscs in which my youthful enthusiasm hail vent, and remember many devoted men and women, among whom your venerable mother was conspicuous, who cheered me with kind words and sympathetic demonstra- tions. There, too, I commenced professional life, an 1 in magistrates' courts often met your father, who never made a parade of superior experience to damp the ardor of an aspiring youth To Oxford township I brought my young wife of thirty-eight years ago, when the households of the Rose-mans and Jefferson s and Lanes, of Fairview, were adorned with amiable and beautiful girls. There, too, rest the sacred remains of my mother and two sisters, so that by pleasant memories and sad recollections I am ever bound to Oxford township Absent in body 1 will be present in mind and enjoy by imagination your union greeting of "cousins and sisters and aunts." May unbounded enjoyment mark your sijl VEMi; of 1'ENXYROYALDOM. 19 festivities from the opening song of welcome to the grand farewell chorus of "The Sweel Bye ami Bye " Pleas mmunicate to the Reunion my hearty wishes for happiness and succi -- and believe me very truly your friend, T. W. Tipton. By request of the author, Jesse ( .'. Weir, I). D. Taylor read the follow- ing pretty poem contributed by him to the pleasures of the day : THE PENNYROYAL REUNION. In Guernsey's ({lens, with beechen boughs their dome, si t tin' bright waters of Pennyroyal land, Through Oxford's groves, with lightened footsteps, roatn Sages :uul heroes— a Pennyroyal band. They come fr north and smith, from east and west, To chat of early youth and olden time, Reason their guide and happiness their guest, To sin': old songs of melody and rhyme. Youth, buoyant with the spring of life and age, Ripe for the sickle ; here every rare In sweet oblivion east, and here assuage Their thirsting* and their pleasures All is fair- All glad from grass to sun ; and hearts that burn, From Oxford's lofty hills, with merry glee, Send forth a thousand Bhouts at thy re- turn, And bespeak for thee a day of jubilee. For every nook, and glade, and tangled dell, From its wide eirele to its leafy heart. Are all to us familiar — memories dwell Like doves among the trees ere lovers part And some are sweet, and sadder some than death ; But let them pass; and let our troubles pass As doth a day, an hour, a fleeting breath 'I he diviner morrow will eoine to every class. Blest be this sunny morning, Bweet and fair ! Blest lie the | pie of Pennyroyal land ! Ye unseen larks that Bing a mile in air, Ye waving forests, waving green and grand. We Stand afar upon the grassy hills. We see the country witli its golden slopes, And woods ami streams; and trickling rills Rundown to meet, and greet our glad- dened hopes. Not a more dear and hallowed spot among The beautiful of this spacious earth to- day ; Rich in its groves, and elitl's with foliage hung. What scenes of pleasure burst, and melt away! And we will pass away : but other men Will come and go, as comes and goes the tide; And flower and fern will pass away — but then — The grand old trees, and Pennyroyal abide ! So, sleeping or waking, or in our dreams Where'er we live, or home or foreign soil, Let's plant and make a world around which seems Of sweet airs breathed from Oxford's Pennyroyal. Cadiz, ".. Aug. 16th, 1880. William Burton read the following letter from John S. Taylor : LETTER FROM JOHN 8. TAYLOR, ESQ. West Libbkty, Iowa, August 12th, 1880. To thosi composing tin' Pennyroyal Reunion: Dear Fihesds:— I feel that I am losing a rare opportunity in life's journey of again meeting SO many good and valued friends and enjoying a good social time during your reunion ; but the situation of my affairs is such that I rind it impossible to be one among you. Since receiving your invitation, my mind has been much of the time occu- pied in "the review of mv life and the many incidents connected therewith during my sojourn with you. Thirty-two years ago, fast April, I arrived in Guernsey, intending to visit uncle Alexander's family for a Bhort time and then to resume my journey to Tennessee to join a classmate there in teaching the young bloods of the South. A fail- 20 SOUVENIR OF TENNYBOYALDOM. ure <>n the part of a friend to send me slum' money I had loaned him, seems to have en- tirely changed my course in life; and the effect tins same circumstance may have bad upon many of those, who, as 1 observe frOm your programme, are expected to be pres- ent at your entertainment, who can tell? I was then not quite twenty-one years old. During sixteen years of my life thereafter, 1 was occupied in teaching in the counties of Guernsey and Belmont. The winter previous to my arrival in Guernsey, viz: 1848, the Ohio Legislature pissed an act requiring a teacher to pass an examination in English grammar. Annalysis of sentences was understood by neither teachers nor examiners. Many of you no doubt remember how we boys, tor we were all buys together, enjoyed showing off our superior knowledge before the uninitiated teachers at the institutes or examinations. A blackboard, or such furniture as maps, charts, globes, etc, was of rare occurrence. ' rifted, skilful, carefully trained, efficient, devoted teachers were very scarce. Harvest plenteous, laborers few. About this time Lorin Andrews, A. 1». Lord, A. H. Bailey and a few others held teachers' institutes in most of the counties of the State. This was tie- beginning of a new era in the educational interests in Ohio, ami it was also a marked period in the lives of many of us. None of us were ever overbur- dened with riches, hence from necessity we early learned to practice self-denial. I be- lieve it to be generally the ease that those who earn their first dollar bv the severest toil, learn the value of money, and become the wealthiest men. A similar course is very favorable to wealth of mind. That knowledge is most highly appreciated whose rudiments are acquired through great toil and difficulty. The few books and limited means of knowledge are duly appreciated by their craving intellects, and it little mat- ters how broad the current may heroine that flows in upon their minds, they never learn to despise them. A Student of this class learns patience and industry in the pur- suits of knowledge, has fewer temptations to idleness and vicious habits, and early in life appreciates that knowledge is to him, wealth, power, fame and friends. He is identi- fied with the great mass — receives their good wishes and hearty praises, and is re- garded with genuine love and admiration by all classes I fear I may trespass upon your patience, as there are so many waiting their turn to be heard Were I with you, I imagine I would love to see all those present who have ever been my scholars, drawn up in line. Let me imagine it so What change time has wrought ! No longer girls in short dresses, nor boys with coat sleeves and pants six inches or more too short. There, Mr Junior Editor of the Guernsey Times, stand in line and toe the mark. Do not be always looking into other persons' affairs — wanted to see how many wear artifi- cial teeth and false hair, did you? Never mind, it will not be long before you will be trying to hide your own silver locks Were 1 to call on you to read I opine many of you would not observe the instructions given twenty years ago in reference to the pn iper distance the book should be held from the lace. The fact is, we are now, or soon will be ranked among the old men ami women of this age. Well, let us try to not lose youth- ful vivacity, vigor and vim, but on the contrary try to retain such perfect health, joy ous- ness and buoyancy that we may feel our spirits overflowing with healthful vitality — for acrimonious, sour, grumbling old scolds, with gray hairs and vinegar faces are very re- pulsive objects; whereas, on the contrary, we naturally seek after and enjoy the socie- ty of those who as they ripen into years' for the heavenly harvest become goodly and godly, full of justice, kindness, faith, hope and charity, with all the passions and selfish sentiments in complete subjection Wishing you all a happy, joyous reunion, I am. as ever, your friend, John S. Taylor. In the absence of Dr. J. T. McPherson, the meeting of the old pio- neers of Peunyroyaldom was oonducted by the President. So many were present that all could not have opportunity to be heard. Rev. John Abies, of Jackson township, anil Bethuel Abies, of Oxford, brothers, came for- ward by mistake together, not knowing which was called. They are the oldest living people who were born in Oxford township. Bethuel gave the floor to his brother John, who said : The herb called pennyroyal was given to man by Providence for some great uses. If this meeting grew out of it, it was for that reason alone a great and good herb. Great and good if nil their good and great recollections were renewed by it. Pennyroyal has many medical qualities not fully known or recognized. It is worthy the greeting we give it, and should make us remember the goodness of God to us. This is a great re- union, but there is to be a greater one. Let us prepare for it. This is a SO UVENIB OF PENNYBO YA LDOM. 21 two days' meeting; that one will be eternal. Hero our speech is rude and mine scarcely grammatical ; but then' we shall talk in the tongue of a new but Still a native land. Bethuel Abies said that he felt as if the Good Being had been specially good to him. You want to hear of early life. It .--hows the goodness of God. lam amongst the first residents of the township. I was horn in 1806, within a mile of this spot, amongst the wolves, Indians and snakes. Mv father died when I was six years old, a id left me the oldest of the fam- ily upon mother's hands. John, who has just spoken, was next oldest. One night he and I, as the wolves were troublesome, penned the sheep right up against the cabin. In the night the wolves came and howled and pushed about the house. The sheep were hilled and wounded. It made our little hearts quake at the danger. Once I went for my uncle, Reuben Borton, through a wheat patch for water. 1 was terribly afraid of snakes. I stepped in my hart' feet on two copperheads while going, and also on an old hoop which flew up and struck me. 1 jumped so high each time that I brought no water hack. My uncle found and killed the snakes. This is the way the children were brought up. There were no near neighbors; for miles around there was nothing hut paths. One day I was riding on an errand through the woods on "Kate," and suddenly a man's hand came from behind a tree on my thigh. I told of it and was informed it was a robber looking for land buyers, who had money. I escaped because I was a boy. In a few days we heard of a mur- der on the Maginnis farm. The hand of Providence Mas around us, or we oould not have lived. We suffered. I was out after the cows one day, and in crossing a creek walked on a log out into the stream and jumped to get over. I lit in the mud and went down and down, and could not get out — the more I stepped the more I became fastened. I would have been there to this day, if providentially some chips had not floated near me, and ena- bled me little by little to reach a slim branch above me. I learned the black- smith business. I made the tools to clear this country. I made the hoes, the axes, and the mattocks for the settlers as they came. I was once when a boy, about frozen, being taken from the horse insensible when coming from Gilliland's mill. I had to ride several miles after night, and it was only Providence that led Uz. Shores to save my life. I was here when there were not thirty people in the township, and had this meeting been thirty vears ago I would have seen here many people I knew in earlier and subse- quent days. I know all of Pennyroyal, and know how to make the oil, too. In the early davs we boiled it in kettles; now a four-horse load is needed to fill a "gum." It was hard work to gather Pennyroyal. It grows by "grasshopper springs." The springs near it are generally' filled with grass- hoppers, and the field with weeds, etc. You asked a man for it. He said, " Yes, you can have it if you put up the fence," and go out to find the fence all down, and hard work to get it. George Plattenburgh said: Friends, brothers and sisters of Pennyroyal, I greet you. I enjoy this occasion, and I know you do. In 180o my father and family moved out. We did not have a load of furniture, and put some sacks of salt in the bot- tom of the wagon, and sold them at Washington, Pa., for $6 a sack or $30 a barrel. He related how once a man would not let his daughter go to a party with a gallant in the early times because he brought no horse to take I- 22 SOUVENIR OF PENNYR0YAL30M. her, nor would he let his daughter walk while he had horse." of his own in the stable. So the young fellow had to walk three miles and back for horses before he could go with the girl. This illustrates the spirit of those davs. It took one and a half bushels of wheat to buy a pound of coffee then. Flour sold at New Orleans for §1.50 a barrel. It was plenty, and money scarce. I was told that somebody had one hundred barrels he could not sell, and put it out on the banks of the Ohio one night, hoping some- body would steal it, but in the morning there were two hundred barrels there. I scarcely believed the story ; but it illustrates the plenty and cheap- ness of things. I made a coat for a man that cost him twenty-seven bar- rels of flour or one hundred and thirty-live bushels of wheat. Few farm- ers of this day would be aide to stand such a coat with wheat at present prices. Timber sold at $]'! a thousand feet, and whitkey at fifteen cents a gallon, but where was the fifteen cents".' I have lived in Fairview forty-five years. I am eighty-two years old, and have a recollection of seventy-five years. Wm. Bernard — I stand before you a living monument of the mercy and goodness of the Heavenly Father. In a few days I will have passed my ninetieth year. I came to Ohio in 1 827 and brought my wife and chil- dren and a very little money. I went to work at once. I slopped first where Thos. Gardiner now lives and afterward went to Fairview where I have lived ever since. Fairview has now only parts of three houses that were there when 1 came, fifty years ago. I have lived honestly and upright- ly and brought no discredit to Pennyroyal. I have had good luck and bad luck, and have held my own right well and come out about where I began after making an honest living. I cannot work much more. Provi- dence will soon take me from these scenes. Col. John Ferguson being invited to speak said that he was glad to see joy depicted upon every countenance. It is a happy reunion, and they should be established in every county in the state. This recalls old days. It calls up old memories of people long gone either to the west or to that home to which all are to be called by Deity. I remember the old families, the Armstrongs, the Burtons and the Kirkpatricks, including Judge Kirk- patrick. This is called Guernsey county from an early colony of people from the Island of Guernsey which settled where Cambridge is now. Ox- ford township is an honored portion of the county. Her sons are every- where. They have been found in the National halls of legislation and in the legislatures of several states. I have met them. I have seen them — (Here the Colonel was overcome with tears and sat down. Directly he recovered himself.) I was about to sav that I have met your sous on the field of battle. "Win. Morton — I am afraid that I will make a poor hand before you. I will not be long with my remarks. You will have to roll back the hands of the dial sixty-four years to mark the time when I came into Oxford township. There were then but three families in it. There was here then but a wild, unbroken forest — an expanse of tree and leaf. There were not more than fifteen persons in the township in 1814 and 1815, when we came to the goodly land of Ohio. The early settlers who followed were from New Jersey, New York, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia. All went to work to carve new homes in the forest. It was not the boys, but the fathers who did the clearing. The old fathers are entitled to the SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 23 credit. The young, frisky girls could do little in this direction and the boys were tit only to pile brush. I was then ten years old. We had much to do, but still, after all, there was no small work for the boys of six, eight or ten years of age. The boys had to hunt the cows from ridge to ridge, through the woods sometimes for halt' a day, and then come at night with- out them. They braved dangers, too. The hogs in the woods, wild as thev were, were more dangerous than the bears. When cow hunting the does would scare up the hogs, the hoes would charge, in battle array, upon the dogs, the dogs would fall back upon the boys, who would have to stand the battle from great fallen trees or from the saplings. One day when myself and brothers were out we heard on a ridge above us bowlings like those of a wolf. We howled similarly in return and the dogs joined us in the howl- ing. A boy on the ridge soon took to flight thinking a pack of wolves was in reality near. This was the fun of those times. The boys had to go to mill. The milling was done by horse power until the water mills were af- terward put up. I remember once crossing a stream when the sacks on my brother's horse fell into the creek. We waded in and drew them ashore. By this time my sacks were off and they were brought in. The wheat, ex- cept for a little distance in the sacks, remained dry. We had to go a great way to find a man to help us get the sacks again on the horses. Not on the face of this globe at any place or at any time were there such beautiful woods as were here, with ridge and glade, hillock and dell, all covered with leaf and fern and flower, in the summer ; and flaming in the rich October with all the tires that ever tinge the evening sky with their glories. In these woods the pioneer erected his castle — no less his castle because built of rude logs and called a cabin. The floor was of puncheons and the roof of clap-boards held down by poles laid cross-wise. There were no nails except as made by the blacksmiths ; but at this time news of the invention of cut nails was received and we learned that they were being made at Pittsburgh. These castle-cabins were not dreary. They were made lovely by the women, who planted their little parterres of flowers about the doors and the vines trained by their lovely hands wreathed about the chimneys and clambered over the roofs — and all the houses were dwell- ing places of home happiness and of love. There are very many times as many people here to-day as there were in Oxford township, all told, in 1810, and whatever of happiness we now enjoy the foundation for it all was laid by the pioneers who toiled in the primeval forest and wrought out into destiny the victories over adversity which we to-day so fittingly celebrate. Rev. Dr. Paul was called for and said that it seemed somehow that he had acquired a reputation that is troublesome. Wherever I go I am called upon. Oh! they say, you can make a speech, and I will talk a little at the invitation of the committee. To-day I went to Fairview and saw and talked to many. I feel as if I go on, however, that I may make a tool of myself with laughter or by tailing to weeping. Now I am a light hearted boy again ; in a moment I am old. I went to school in No. 4. The teach- er lived at Robison Borton's near Fletcher church. After awhile I thought I could teach school myself. I taught at No. 4, my first school. I took the first blackboard into No. 4. It was made by Lemuel Ryan. I had read of blackboards, but did not know how to use them. We had spellings with a good deal of fun going home. One time I crooked my arm at a girl and she took it; suddenly from talkativeness I was struck dumb and could say nothing all the way home. 24 80 UVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. I went to the old grave yard this morning and went about thoold mon- uments and read the inscriptions of David Wallace and of my own mother. On her tomb above the name are the words, " Prepare to meet thv God," and it seemed to me as it' my mother was looking down from heaven upon me. "Prepare to meet thy God ! " Let this he a lesson to the old to-dav. Soon we must all die. There were also the graves of John Lemon, David Cowden, Boyd Forbes and others. You cannot tread in that grave yard without coming upon the graves of old patriarchs. I have forgotten every- thing within the last thirty years when we went to church there. By the old church was a spring and a Peace was near it — a fence three rails high — and the hoys would stand there to lift the girls over as the congregation came down to drink between the portions of the service. Rev. Hugh L. Forsythe endeared himself by kind words and manners to all. Although he may not have been the most eloquent of men, yet his memory will never be forgotten. In looking at the old ladies, I did not sec their wrinkles, but remember the old, blushing, beautiful girls, and if my wife was not here I would be tempted to put my arm about them. ' Under the direction and management of David C. Kennon, Esq., the following speeches of persons from Pennyroyaldom, who are yet residents of Guernsey county, were made : Col. J. D. Taylor — I am not here to make a .speech. You are all hap- py. Dr. Paul is happy. He wanted to hug the young women. (Dr. Paul — " Old women.") Old women. The women are all healthy and the Dr.'s wife and mine are also stout. There is nothing to bring these people together. There is no alarm of war. It seems that we meet to enjoy old memories. I took dinner with a Methodist preacher and he, like all the preachers, had much chicken and I do not feel like making a speech. Your President, I remember, said to me ouce, "Why do you remain in Guernsey county?" I said that I had seen in my wanderings no place that I am so well pleased with as with Guernsey county. I do not know why the ladies do not talk and give their exper- ience. When I see ladies who went to school to me married and mothers having children, it astonishes me ; but I get encouragement from the Pen- nyroyal line, for they live more than the three score and ten years — ten years more. I often went to the water-mills, and will remember Win. Beggs, who, whilst on my way to MeBride's mill, lifted and straightened my sacks for me when nearly falling from the horse. The schools then were not organ- ized. The teacher who had seventy-five scholars had seventy-five classes. The pupils did not keep together, and had different books. I remember the teacher named Patterson, and his whipping one of my brothers and turning him out in the woods; but the Bortons insisted that he ought to be brought back, and he was. Patterson afterward became a preacher, or tried to, and stuck on his trial sermon, and the scholars said that was the work of Prov- idence punishing his severity. Did he ever preach, Dr. Paul? (Dr. Paul — yes.) But he became a preacher. There was the first dawn of better days when John Morton taught school. We used to ride down the hill in Fer- guson's field on sleds — forty boys and fifty girls together. The building of the National Road in 1S27 was a great thing; forty, fifty or one hundred perch of stone were put on a mile. They would not permit the use of "nigger-heads," but all was of the pure, white limestone. We could see SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 25 the road away ahead on the darkest nights. It was almost as great as the Appian way. Rev. Hugh L. Forsythe's church was one of the institutions of the day. I remember the black marc he used to ride, and himself with his spectacles on, with head to one side, studying what to teach Ids people, and no man ever did so much good as he lias done. His record will not he known until the last great day. 1 look into the faces of people who have mournings for death. Their memories come crowding to me. I am glad to remember the kindness to me in this community. 1 have taught four hundred scholars in this community. I look now into the \\wr of a man who has lost sonic of those by death. In all those days I have re- ceived nothing hut kindness from all these people. 1 express now my grat- itude for it all. There were apple parings and apple cuttings. We Center hoys would go out of tin' neighborhood, and in the woods on the way would hold a convention and resolve that, sink or swim, live or die, survive or perish, we would go home with the girls that night. I tried and failed, and the hoys made fun of me ami said, " Your pole is not long enough to knock the persimmons." Mr. Morton never had such trouble. He would walk up as it' he owned all the 1'nited States and a good portion of Canada, and he was successful. I was a pennyroyal dealer. Uncle Billy Borton planted pennyroyal and we went into the business. We built a distillery. My wife does not like that name. She came from Maine, where they have a prohibi- tory law. First we boys worked for Borton for nothing, hut he would al- ways pay us more that we earned. He afterward showed me how to distill the herb. How unlike the way I was treated in a town when 1 I went into a business like one already established. The people there in the business got mad about it, and did all they could to prevent me from doing it, and will not speak to me to this day on account id' it. Not so with Billy Bor- ton. I had money enough to make my own oil, hut took some pennyroyal to make on the shares; but had hard work to get it East. Had to try at Wheeling and Baltimore to exchange hills of the old banks. The panic of 1857 came on. I tried to sell in Philadelphia and go't blue and went to New York. There I was blue, but finally sold, and before I got away here came William Borton and Bethucl Abies with a lot. I suppose they sold, but they had long feces and looked blue, too. N. H. Barber — It is apparent to me that if we all talk we will have to make short speeches. I am satisfied you could not get along without call- ing on the band stand for help. Over there we have been blowing. Over here you have been blowing and striking. Dr. Paul and Col. Taylor talk a great deal about the women. They are old and ought not to do so. We want to see at the hand stand where the money is coming from. No matter what we do, in these days it is believed there is a motive for it. There is some motive in this meeting. What is it ? We do not call these people returning prodigals. The diamond docs not know the difference between the dirt at the feet or the bosom from which it fell; but human beings rec- ognize difference in places. They remember their early homes. We recog- nize the merits of the Pennyroyalist. They have risen to places of dis- tinction. Hon. Win. Lawrence here on the stand has been in Congress. We have had a United States Senator and the legislatures of the states have had our representatives, and preachers of the gospel have gone out from us. Nothing has been said about the band. The band has been speaking. It was not here when Dr. Paul was fiirtine with the girls. Let the old people 26 SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. ever remember the old wood piles, the roses in the yards, the horses of the stables of olden times. Tlie Land played sweetly the " < >ld Log Cabin in the Lane" Hon. Win. Lawrence was called for and said, I am at a loss to know why I am called upon to address this assemblage. I am not by birth-right a member of Pennyroyaldom ; perhaps because when the crop was gath- ered in our township it was hauled away to Oxford. Dr. Paul addressed the ladies. I do not wish to be understood as addressing them. I am more accustomed to addressing popular assemblages, having done so during all my mature lite. I never addressed but one woman successfully in my lite. I remember the Scotts, Hares, Lanes, Cooneys and others. I was a beardless boy when I first came to this township as a candidate tor office. It was an old gentleman who lived on yonder hill, Wm. Armstrong, who headed the ticket. I eaihr next. We had a platform that suited everybody. It was his platform. " Equal rights and equal privileges." It was and is a strong platform — a reversible platform. He and I were eleeted upon it. I come here to-day to congratulate you and enjoy the day with you. We all come laying aside all bickerings, all politieal and religious differ- ences and to lay them there upon the altar of social equality. We have not enough of holidays in this country. I hope the day may be commem- orated in its annual return for many long years to come. Rev. J. T. Campbell — I am not at all at home in this class of speak- ers. 1 was born in Londonderry township, just over the line. I have looked over the border and smelled the oils, and came over the line. I first received education in Oxford township, at a joint district with the school house in Oxford, No. 7. Robert Estep, a resident of Pennyroyaldom, swayed the scepter. J. C. Taylor, J. B. Taylor, John Seurr and again, J. C. Taylor, all Pennyroyalists, afterward . taught us, and at the first exhibi- tion we ever held, the orator, J. D. Taylor, was to come from Pennyroyal- dom, and D. D. Taylor came over on horseback to the house for his broth- er. He now edits the Times but the D. D. is on the wrong end of the name to count in theology. We have the old customs recalled by Dr. Paul and Col. Taylor and I remember the old churches at Fairview and Antrim. One day whilst going to church in a crowd a young man was seen coming along. " Who is he '.' " we all questioned ; but he preached. He was the now Dr. Paul. J. D. Henry, of Cincinnati, was called out from the assemblage and brought upon the stage by some of his old school class-mates, amo igst them W. S. Heade, Esq., who was about to present him when suddenly Mr. Hen- ry introduced Mr. Heade, turning the tables upon the latter neatly. Mr. Heade said that he was stumped a little and that Mr. Henry ought to be heard. I have been heard so frequently in this neighborhood that he ought to relieve me and speak. This is a great occasion, made so by the hand shakings and good will. Lately, I was out in the West and in Page county, Iowa, 1 found that the landlord of the hotel at which I stopped was a Pennvroyalist, a Mr. McC'lenahan. As I talked with him, Rev. Johnson came in, who was married to a Miss Lemon on the very (arm we now stand upon. I bear greetings to you from the West from people who could not come. I have met Pennyroyalists in my profession. They are giants. I now present to you my old school-mate. SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 27 Mr. Henry was called out. J. D. Henry responded, saying: T have beard your calls for a speech ; but those calling did net know as I did that I had no speech to make. Mr. Heade 1ms made a good speech for me. I came back to the old loved Pen- nyroyal land to be tilled with the spirit of the old community and listen to the speeches of those who had not gone out from the old homes ; of those wlm remained about the old hearth-stones and had not gone out as wander- ers t<» return only upon some occasion similar to this. I have often wondered why the Oxford township boys were always suc- cessful in their business lives. It is, I have concluded, in consequence of th 3 great moral sentiment which has always prevailed in her borders and distinguished her at home. This sentiment is carried away as a part of the home ever with the hoys wherever they may go. Jt makes them men and brings them the esteem of their fellowmen and supports them in all phases and every course of life. My friend Heade should not marshal the school class by piecemeal. Col. Taylor was its preceptor ; but after all each of us is responsible for his individual course. Baker Borton was of the class. Bring Baker Borton to the stand ! He is a descendant ol the original Pennvrovalist. 1 had the honor of being born in Oxford township and want to see its sacred memories perpetuated. In Hamilton county we have Harvest Home Festivals which are held in each year. They are popular and serve a good purpose. There is more christian feeling here and on these occasions than at many religious meetings — camp meetings, etc. Keep them up ! They cultivate the higher and better feelings. I introduce Baker Borton. Baker Borton said : I am brought up here by my old class mates. I am not ready to make a speech. If I had taken time to prepare one I would have made it. I like this reunion. It should be continued. I have met many kind greetings here. D. D. Taylor — The manager of this section handed me a note a mo- ment ago, " You come next." How some preachers might use that. To some persons how dreadful it would be. They call me D. IX, and perhaps want to give me double duty, and he put on the note " Multum in Parvo." He wants it brief anil that quick, The Enquirer editor said if all the speakers announced would give the two days to pulling pennyroyal, they would eradicate it from Eastern Ohio. There is the old class. They were also members of another class, that of Peter Gardiner in the Sabbath School (peace to his ashes ! ) at Pisgah Church. I have represented others. It is easier to burlesque others than get off a speech lor myself, in any kind of style. Old Billy Borton called the plant " pennyrile." I began life in Oxford township at an early age of my existence. I lived and loved there. I was a pet then and have had a cold water range ever since. They called me " Davy Crockett, hurry up with the water ! " But Crockett or Ben. Franklin said, "Be sure you're right and go ahead." I have tried to be right. I have been going ahead. This occasion revives many old, high, grand and noble memories — mem- ories of good men who lived and died here. I have thought of a few whose names grace this occasion. I remember the Finley communions. It always rained on his sacramental days; but it rained on other days, too. Had it not been for the church it could not have been said that " Oxford sent to the West a man to feed the soul for every one she sent to feed the 28 SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. body." You have heard from the Taylors a great deal. There are a great many of them. Don't charge it to me ; I could not help it. The proceedings were closed by the singing, by the Pennyroyal Choir, of THE OLD MUSICIAN AND HIS HARP. Many years have passed away, Golden locks have turned to gray; Golden ringlets once so fair, Time- has changed to silvery hair- Yes, I'm near the river's side, Soon I'll launch upon the tide, Soon my boat with noiseless oar, Safe will pass to yon bright shore. Chorus. Bring my harp to me again, Let me sing a gentle strain, Let me hear its chords once more, Ere I pass to yon bright shore. Oh, those chords, with magic power, Take ine back to childhood's hour; To that cot beside the sea, Where I knelt at mother's knee, But that mother, she is gone, Cabs she sleeps beneath a stone, While I wander here alone, Sighing for a brighter home. Cno — Bring my harp, etc. Soon I'll be among the blest, Where the weary are at rest ; Soon I'll tread the golden shore, Singing praises evermore. Yes, my boat is on the stream, I can see the waters gleam ; Soon I'll be where angels roam, Dear old harp, I'm going home. Cho — Bring my harp, etc . 80(JYERIR OR PERRVROVaLDOm. SECDND REUNION, Jp^HE Pennyroyalists were blessed with beautiful weather for their An- fi||j Dual Reunion, held on the 10th and lltli of August, 1881, in Gardi- ner's Grove, near Fairview. On the first day nearly fifteen hundred paople were present to greet President Grimes as lie opened the exercises, the first formal act of which was the invocation of the Divine Being l>y Rev. Hollister, after which Mr. Grimes welcomed all to the full enjoyment of the occasion, and hoped the reunion would be as successful as that of last year, arid promised all in his power to make it so. The venerable John Abies,- an early resident of Oxford township, re- counted some earlv reminiscences and spoke highly of the social benefits and great good which come from the reunions of the old people and their descendants. The well-filled baskets were emptied at noon and a pleasant hour was spent in the social communion of old time friends. The afternoon's programme was opened by prayer by Rev. 1 1 1 1 o h For- sythe, who also soon after was called out by the President. Rev. Forsythe said that he began his ministry in the old Stone Church, in March, 1*4:2, and continued at the same place until February, 1801. He remembered that worshippers had to go around the house to come in, as if by the hack door. In 1848 the new (present) building was erected, and when finished was the best house in the Presbytery. A branch was estab- lished at Sand Hill, and was prosperous. This was owing to the influence of David Cowden. No monument to his memory could equal the height of g 1 deeds he did there. 1 remember the old men who employed me in 1842, John McClenahan and John Wallace. I would not know where to find other such men. When John Wallace was buried colored people came and wept. lie was the friend to the poor — black and white. Rev. Dr. Wallace, Rev. Dr. Paul, Jas. McCrea, Samuel Forbes, three McClenahans and William Johnson all went into the .Master's work from my congrega- tion. Wm. Borton : Last year I was restricted to a history of Pennyroyal ; to-day 1 am free to -ay what I will, hut have no speech. I will refer only to three circumstances ■ In 1833, when I was only seven years old, in the 30 SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. days of horse mills, people ^ot up early. My father rose early one morn- ing to go to the horse mill. He found the heavens ablaze with meteors, seemingly foiling like snow flakes, and as thick and fast. He wakened the family, and I saw the great sight, and it so impressed me thai I remember it vividly to this day. My lather went on to the mill, whilst everybody else, through alarm, stayed at home. He soon got his grinding. He ever prided himself upon the courage which made him go. The second incident was at school at Center, when Daniel Patterson announced to the astounded pupils that tli re would he a " Polemic." Yes, a " Polemic." What that horrible thing was 1 could not imagine, tor the teacher was a terror. Sam- uel F. and Robert Armstrong and William Ferrell knew something of it. It was explained. We were to debate, " Which is the most useful animal, the cow or the horse?" I was put up barefooted for the horse. My speech was, " You can go to mill on a horse, and you can't on a cow." The horse won. The other incident is as to my procuring a school certificate, in 1841*!, from Charles Armor, before the school system o( the state was reform d. I we.it with fear and trembling. ■!. < >. Grimes was in the office, with his f j et mi the table. Grimes' sole was worn. I wished him out of my sight. '• Bound Ohio," said Ar ur. I did. and told its capitol. " What is the capital of Pennsylvania '.' " he asked. I had fortunately just heard and answered. I was proud of' the beautifully printed and elegantly tilled cer- tificate he gave me. He was a pretty writer. !).('. Kennon announced General Geiger's lectures at Fairview, and made some remark to the young Pennyroyal ists. Hon. Joseph Ferrell said that when Oxford township was organized there were not enough men in it to fill the office*. It was soon settled by soldiers from the War of LSI ■}, two of whom. William Bernard and Wil- liam Richards, were still living, Mr. Bernard being here with us. The Sec- ond Regiment of Ohio in the War of 1812 was made up in this region ; the Second Regiment in the war of 1846 wa< lilted from here, and the Second Regiment in the last war had many from this neighborhood. He read a list of soldiers, judges, senators, preachers, teachers, lawyers, doctors and editors who had gone out from Pennvrovaldom. N. II. Barber said the people of to-day were as good as those of old. Nothing is said of the old people now living. This is a healthful neighbor- borhood. .lames Lucas, colored, is 90 years old. Wm, Bernard is 90; George Plattenburg, 83; Mrs. Clark, 86 ; Wilson Buchanan, Win. Gardi- ner, David West, Polly Buchanan, Peggy Gardiner, all are over 80. I know thirty-five persons about here who are over 70 years old. Mr. Barber's closing sentences were eloquent. Jonathan Rose mad ■ some remarks appropriate to the occasion. Dr. J. H. Grimes: I am the first of the medical fraternity to address the Pennyrovalists. Pennyroyal is a good medicine. It is a stimulant and diaphoretic. The old ladies used to make taa of it, and every old Oxford bov has had a dose of it. He alluded to the old schools. He named many physicians who had gone out from Oxford; hut as he did not name half of them we omit those given. Thomas Smith : I came into the township about seven years ago, and SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 31 found good schools, good churches and good people. The standard of mor- ality is highj and a more generous and hospitable people arc not to be found anywhere. Jas. McClenahan in speaking said, " Gentlemen and Mr. President," hut meant no offense to the President, for all Penny royalists were gentlemen, lit- had lived In'!-.' since 1822. Our first stop in the township was at Chris- topher Creighton's tavern, which stood in sight of these grounds. The next day we went to where I now live. The Sabbath schools have done much for us ; the preachers were good, and the day schools have grown hotter. A poi/m prepared for the occation by -]r<^- ('. Weir was read by Mr. I). D. Taylor. RETT7RNING BACK. Pweet memory! wafted by the gentle gale, Oft up the stream of time we've turned our sail To this loved spot since here, a year agone, With hearts as light as childhood's happy dawn. We counted scars, and told what deeds were done E're richly bronzed by many a Bummer's sun. Again we come with other tales to tell, And bless the scenes we loved in youth Si) Well. time mure cur souls released from hu- man strife, Smile at the little cares an I ills of life. Its lights and shades, its sunshine ami its showers. And rove the fairy haunts of long lost hours. "1'is home-felt pleasure prompts the pa- triot's sigh, And makes loin wish to live and dare to die; And as the softening hand of time en- dears The joys and sorrows of his infant years. He b ud- to meet each artless burst of joy, Forgets his age. and acts again the boy. So Oxford's hills give hack our j >vs of youth, Warm as the life, and with the mirror's truth. Here kindred objects kindred thoughts inspire. As summer clouds Hash forth the electric lire; Here not the lightest leaf, but trembling teems With golden visions and romantic dreams. Our sweetest pleasures and our holiest thoughts Cluster 'iinmg thy blue-bells and forget- me-nots, We sail the sea of life — a calm cue finds, And ime a tempest — blown about by winds, Choose Oxford's guiding star ior^beacon light- That star u ill glow and broaden in the night, If we are true tn life and dutiful, Until it hangs divine ami beautiful. This will unloose our bontls of care, Hid sorrow vanish should ii enter there; Sunbeams that round our darkened pathway play Will widen t < » a clear and boundless day. And fund remembrance all your charms restore, While, lengthening distance but endears you mure Su ye hardy sons to noble manhood reached Whii feel your leaping hearts should be unleashed And have free course to stretch and strain far down The fuming time — when beneath the for- ests brown, Filled with the wild bird's song that never tires, And on y speaks of joy the soul desires — Know ye, awhile your minds with vigor burn, A dream still whispers — ye may yet re- turn : Return, oft as the cycling year swings round, Hack tn scholastic days and classic ground, Where mice ye wandered mid these shades and Hi u ei S, Along the winding hanks and glen wood bowers. And uli ! ye venerable gray haired sin s Who cleared the fields and built forest lires. When hears and wnlvcs were want to head the chase, 32 SOUVENIR OF PENNY ROYALDOM. Plow drowning glory of the dearest love And the swift-footed reindeer lead the That breathes the perfii i thy spicy race, grove. Though schooled to suffering, Ion;; inured Like some tanned mower, as he rests from to toil, toil, Soon ye will be transplanted from this Inhales the aroma of thy 1 '<-n m \ r< iyal. Boil And near the calm and crystal spring? To a lovelier land and brighter clime — that sleep Wherefore not entreat to hurry on the Far in the murmur of the woods that tim-'.' sweep Year after year as ye your course im- ' Round shimmering landscapes, silver- prov, veined with stn ams, Return ye b ick unto '.he leafy grove Our vacant hours are charmed, until it Through which your way ye may at seems j leasure roam Breezes of love, and joy, and melody. Until ye reach at last your longed-for Blow through us as the winds blow home, through the sky. ' ', ruptured spirit of the woodland shade, O world! so few and short the yearn wa Your enchanting beautiesall my soul in- live, vade; Would fat the scanty life thai thou dost I nmetimes fancy when we leave earth's give hounds Were life like this ! Thy sorrows fall si > To vva'k or run no more its well known fast rounds, Our happiest festal hour is when, at last. These happy greetings from this old, The soul is fixed, ami on the rugged road lovi d land That leads us up t-> yonder bright abode. Will echo grandly on the heavenly strand. Joseph B. Ferguson •. I am Dot a Pennyroyalist, Imt standing here iinilcr the word "Welcome," i feel that every man, woman and child here welcomes me. This is a good-looking audience, including Jonathan Rose. [Laughter.] On the Staked Plains in Texas I heard of Pennyroyal. A fel- low was sell i ne- a "Great Poly-cure-edron." Dr. PuflstufF had certified that he had been blown up by a steam engine and scattered into a thousand frag- ments. One application had made him whole. 1 asked the fellow what the medicine really was, and he told me that it was Pennyroyal nil. Rev. Minter: I came here to learn about Pennyroyaldom. I can't (111 so large a space as Captain Ferguson, who, like me, was put up to lill tin interval. I have been here hut a little while ; but find an intelligent, wealthy, generous, handsome and Christian people. Rev. Samuel Forbes gave an account of the old school houses, with their windows running lengthwise at the side, and large pins in the walls for boards to write on. The test of a good teacher was the making of a ■rood quill pen. lie talked of the old school day play — " Ring Around Rosey." Of all his schoolmates, hut John C. Woodburn remained yet in the township. Hon. Thomas .1. Abies, J. 1). Henry and others were all gone away ; and John Kirkpatrick and Rhoda Brown I was always glad to sec and greet them. The grammars of to-day are not as good as Kirk- ham's of those days — it is yet the be>t. I taught at Center, ami going by there to-day told my daughter so. She said it made her feel old, and I said I felt old ; but I am really young. My pupils then of 21 years ago I meet now bearded so that I do not know them, and when I do they are all Jims and .Iocs and Johns to m ■ — ao misters. May we all so live as to be found in the great happy reunion of the hereafter. The dav's ceremonies closed with tha benediction bv Rev. Minter. SOUVEVIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 33 The day was pleasantly passed. At night Gen. Joseph Geiger Lectured at Fairview, and the young pennyroyalists tripped lightly in the mazy dance at a hotel there. A feature of the day was the playing of "Old Grimes,"by the Fairview hand in deserved but humorous recognition of the President James O. Grimes, Esq. lSLBHTHj SECOND DAY'S PROCEEDINGS. The meeting was called to order by President Grimes. There were probably four thousand people on the ground. Rev. Samuel Forbes offered prayer, after which the Quaker City Band gave a series of pieces in its ex- cellent manner. The Fairview Rand played the " Pennyroyal Grand March," composed for the occasion by Prof. Lee. Rev. W. H. Morton moved the appointment of a committee to select officers for the ensuing year. He did not want to see Cambridge holding all the offices, and Oxford men doing all the work. W. PI. Morton, J. A. Buchanan, John Scott, James McClenahan and John Morton were appoint- ed. They reported the following : President, John Kirkpatrick ; Vice President, Joseph Ferrell; Secretary, D. D. Taylor; Treasurer, Newell Kennon ; Historian and Biographer, W. S. Heade ; Executive Committee, Win. Borton, Jonathan Rose, John Scott, D. C. Kennon and M. D. Ro- decker. Mr. Kirkpatrick was called out and returned thanks for the hon- or, after which a vote of thanks was tendered to the retiring officers. The secretary read letters, as follows : Princeton, Ills., August 8, 1881 Tii the Pennyroyal Reunion : As your second reunion may be composed of all ages, a variety of tastes, and of every degree of intelligence, it might supply a want, and not be inappropriate to the oc- casion, for me to furnish a historical account of the causes which led to the construction of your National Turnpike Road, and the resources used for that purpose Our long struggle for independence had a depressing influence on the wants and spirits of the people. While the husband anil father was in the army, Ids labors at home frequently devolved on his wife, and she encumbered with helpless children. The paternal duty in such cases came in severe conflict with the feelings of patriotism. The almost worthless continental money afforded to the soldier a meagre means of sup- plying the wants of his family. His principal compensation consisted in the hope of a free country — governed by freemen. To secure that end, he was ready and willing to make great sacrifices. But the country at large was in honor and interest bound" to otter substantial inducements to the citizen to become asoldier Hence the Continental Congress made the pledge that thesoldier should be suitably rewarded for his military services by a donation of land, or the proceeds of the sale thereof. Though Congress neither owned nor had control of an acre of land at that time, yet vacant, unoccupied lands were abundant in the colonies, and it was believed that in some way the great heart of the American people would respond to the pledge of Congress, and that it would be fulfilled. So it was, ami without unnecessary delay. The definite treaty of peace, whereby our independence was secured, was ratified by Congress January 14th, 178-t On the first of .March following, Virginia, after making some reservations to meet her engagements to her own soldiers, ceded to Congress the remainder of her interest in the lands north-west of the Ohio river New York, Massachusetts and Con- necticut had claims in the same territory, which at different times before and after the cession by Virginia were ceded to Congress. Thus the Continental Congress acquired 34 SOUVENIR OF PENNY ROYALDOM. full and exclusive control (the Indian title excepted) of all the Ian Is north-wet of t'io ( ih in river, and east of the Mississippi, with th • exceptions af nvsaid, and also except- ing the Connecticut Western lieserve. Thus the means were acquired by Congress of redeeming her pledges to the soldier and of constructing your National Turnpike lioad. According to t lie census preceding lier application for adinissi in, Ohi i had bn" 45.- 000 'I he Ordinance of 1787 required a po ulatnn of 6 ',0 before a state should be a Indited into the Union. But a sharp co troversy arose between the advocate* of a '] eirilorhd and State governm nt, in which the latter had a majority Congress took advantage of that authority and agreed to ad nil < Ihio as a state into the Union without the requisite population, on conditions, one of which was that the lands of her pur- chasers shond be exempt fr in 1 1 ation for five years after the purchase. As a cunsid- ciation lor that exemption, a per cent of thd salin was t > ba ap;>liel "to the laying out and making turnpikes ami other road i leading fro n the navigable water- emptying into the Atlanti •, to the Ohio," etc The result of that arrangement was the creation of what is known as Ihe ";hree per eent. fond." *\ ith this t in 1 the turnpike was c nn- ineneed ai Cumberland, in the Sate ■ f Maryland, on the Potomac river After passing iliroigh pa'l of that Stat .and par; of Pennsylvania, it entered Ohio, without touching the tate of Virginia, except for a few miles through Ihe Pan-handle, east of Wheeling. After the road was made through Ohio to Dayton, on the Miami canal, the work w,.s disci ntinued. For many years after Ihe construction of the road, it was of considerable impor- tance to the people of Central Ohio, and to those living west of its western terminus, as affording a convenient way for travel, > no for Ihe transportation of produce and mer- chandize ; but i.s use ulne.-s has been long and much impaired by the building of rail- roads. The time may not be very distant when its toll-gates will be removed, and it kepi in repa r like the oher roads of the county. The road, at b st, was a trifling com- pensation to ihe Sta'e at large for the surrender of her right of taxation. Had he appl cation been deferred till the population had reached 611,00', Ohio- would have been admitted into the Union without conditions. In that case she would undoubtedly have had the right a once to tax all the landa in the State, whether owned hv ihe I'ni ed S ates or individuals. The deed of cession provided that the States to he formed out of the territory "should have the same rights of sovereignty, freedom and iudi'i endence as ihe other States." Other States of course could tax all property within their limits without regardjfco ownership Ohio, without ex ressly relinquish- ing that right, could have done likew ise. notwithstanding the act that 'no tax shall be impost d on lands, the property of the United states." '1 hat prohibitory act was passed Pv the Continental Congr bs in 1787. was in c inflict with the Constitution of the United States afterwards adopted, under which the State was admitted i ito the Union, and in plain violation of Virginia's deed of cession, whi h required the new -ta'e- to be ad- mitted .ui an equality with the old. IIuxuy Kknnon. Clyde, Cloud Co., Kansas, August 10th, 1881. To Mi/ Fr 1 1- mli of PennyroyaJdom : It i-i impossib'e to be with you in the flesh, but T am with you in spirit nt \-our grand re-uni n to-day There ean he no passion, no emotion any pu er than that « Inch hears us i ack 10 the spot which was the cradle of our childhood, the play- ground of our boyhood, the theatre of our manhood. Has th" Holy Book a pa-sage more deeply touch ns than that w I ieh pictures to us the daughters of a captive race, in their desolation of s at!, weeping by the waters of Babylon when they remembered theii lost homes and il e vanished towers of Zionr I as profane verse a line more ex- quisitely eloquent than that which tells us of the brave young Greek — beautiful and radiant as his native 1 nd— bleeding and dying on the plains c.f Latum, wiih his darkening eyes fixed on » ireece? I las political history a grainier incident than th it of ' alien I lastingH, the dictator of India, in the midst of all his ambitious schemes, all through his struggles, his triumphs, his chins and splendors, over and always cherishing in his purer heart the hope and purpose of once more returning to his am e trnl honi" and spending there in calmness and goodness ihe evening of ids stoimy 1 f, '.' And so it is to-dav with all the IVllliVroyalists who are out of Penuvroyaldoin. •'.n our minds," w. ar-allt eie with you at the r, -union. We all lande i ihere this morning, in the exact spot where we were best acquainted— on the spot iiiom endeared to us, and which the dust of our people for generations has sanctified Yes. we are all with von to-day. We are V siting aivund among the old patriarchs and their posterity. We a-e at the Dillons, Marlows, Fw/usons, Mortons, Heades, Wh- rrvs, Moores. Cranstons, Taylors, Andersons, Kenoons, Ableses, Likeses, Fair- view, Middletown, Bunk-r Hill, on the "Pike," on the "old Wheeling road." We are in nr visi nis and iirnno. ies. riding down young hi :kory trees hv the old Center school house, carrying water from the "cool spring-s." going to spelling sch ols, playing "blackmail" with the Taylors, Scurrs, Marlows, Merrymans, Mortons, Fergusons and SOUVENIR OF PENNYRO YALDOM. .% Wherrys, all boys together, having a general good time. V7e are planting mini and tobacco, pulling pennyroyal, hoeing corn, climbing cherry trees, borrowing water- melons from neighbors on the sly, distilling worm seed, going to apple cuttings and debates, running off to "Putney," occasionally to a dance. ~ The old chestnut trees, bee trees, coon trees, and the greaj oaks, which to us boys were held in as greal esteem as were the sacred oaks of Dodona by the Grecians, in the rust ling of whose leaven the voice "f the supreme divinity was believed to be heard. It is astonishing how we have scattered from our native Pennyrovaldom . From the field to the forum, to pulpits, to senates, to gold fields and to foreign lands. How many of OUT playmates have fallen in battle? How many have faced the mouths of belching cannon, and whose blood has crimsoned the limpid waters of our fair land from the rock-ribbed slopes of the Cumberland Mountains to the blood-stained fields of Chickamauga, who have been roused a thousand times from their midnight slumbers oil the tented Held by the long-roll and sprang to anus to meet the foe in defense of their own loved country, and to-day they wear crowns that, like the Iannis of Tiberius, shall be forever green, defiant of lime and imperishable. How many young scholars in Fennyroyaldoui to-day, fresh from their hooks, with the lire of sunny Attica in their brains, pant and burn to one day lling the glory of their hit Meet o er all the country, ami with their eloquence launch it into ecstacies and lead it captive. The public displays of these young chanters o( the psans of the nation swell the glowing current of each one's glorious career, and are bo many waves that lift him from thestr nds of private life, carrying him with flying colors under a full press of shining sail, out upon the broad sea, where all ' the land beholds him with delight and cheers him on his venture. Honinathat tries" re-unionl may be kept alive until I can attend one in person, I .tin your old schoolmate and friend, Lewis \V. BoRTON. Cincinnati. August 9th, 1881. J. 0. ': "''icv, Esq. Pren : dent "Pennyoyal Puffers:" Your elaborate programme for the re-union, although carefully prepared, omits one thing -a temperance lecture, or a "temperance plank in the platform," at least — not for the P< ■nnyrovalists themselves, who are temperate in all things save austerity. Temperance lectures, like sermons, lit only that large class of persons known as "other pe pie," and you should have a temperance speech or temperance plank, and put it in all the pp-rs for the benefit of outsiders and to protect the good name, fame and reputation of all Pennyrovaldom I am moved to say all this becau e, while on the cars of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad last summer, just after your re-union, I heard a gentleman comment on your re-union. He expressed him- self freely on the subject, and his views and opinions were as positive as his lack of information was large His idea was that "that pennyroyal country was a sort of scrub oak and huckleberry region," where the natives spent their summers in pulling pennyroyal and distilling— actually dwlilling—irom it some kind of intoxicating bever- age; and, as a matter of course, at these re-unions the natives spent their time in compounding from the weed some kind of intoxicating "witches' broth," and indulged in wild orgies and bacchanalian revelry. That is about what outsiders may think of your Pennyroyal country and Pennyroyal re-union -i. Now. won't you adopt a temperance plank ? If you don't, how can that tem- perance apo=tle(ess omitted), Mattie and here's a bow to her), explain to the outside world her attending the re-union, even if it be to speak on the most charming of subjects: "The Oxford Girls? " Or how ran David ; 1 1 u ■ younger, to distinguish him from the man who carried a sling) — David who is to address the "Oxford Beys," those pennvroyal pullers, the young Racchuses — how, I ask, can David justify his conduct to the next Loveand camp-meeting-pnlitieal-temperance-convention. Verily, you must give some relief or "Tho-so who s iw to day in joy may reap again in tears." — New V rsion. The gentleman who expressed thos«i anti-pennyroyal views on the car* wore clerical :'irs, in fact, was a minister, and perhaps knew the names and properties of all the herb- and bush- s mentioned in the P.ible, but was ignorant of the properties of the humble little plant which grew and bloomed about bis boyhood's feet— the emblem on the pennyroyal banner, and whose warmth and pervading fragrance so fitly bet ken the friendly greetings and enjoyment at these re-unions. Though absent, I send this sprig in memory of the occasion, with greetings to all. J D. Henry. MlDDLEBOURXE, July 11th, 1881. To J. ft Grimes President of Pennyroyal: " What sought they thus afar'.' " Our pioneer fathers mostly were possessed of large and increasing families. For instance, Benjamin Masters' sons and daughters in all numbered eighteen, and his 3<3 80 1 r VENIR OF PENNYRO YALDOM. brother Richard's about twelve. Several of the Mcl'eek families were large, so with ] Isiviil Smith's ami the Valentines, ami in ny more could he named as having many children. They sought land, that they and tin ir children might he independent, own- ing their own homesteads ml having no use for the landlord and tenant laws, that their children instead of savin,' in the future, "the land I now hold on yonr honor's estate is the same t at my grandfather lilled," they could say "I own this happy home by my own labor; " or, "I inherit it from my ancestors." Free homes could he enjoyed hy those who had moiiey to buy them in the older States, but in Ohio I ml was so cheap that men of slender me< , July 20th, 1881. My Dear Father: The Times and Jkkff.ksonian, ever welcome visitors, arrived by yesterday's mail. 1 see in them a notice of a re-union of the old citizens of I'ennyrovaldom. ami as I r ad over the names of some of those expected there on that joyous occasion my heart was strangely stirred within me 1 cannot tell you here — 'twould take too long — of the happy scenes which came quickly crowding my memory, ami tears tilled my eyes when I thought of all the friends of my girh ood days who would there meet and clasp glad hands, and I so far away. The happiest days of my life— freest from trouble and care — were spent in Oxford township, of all the world the dearest place hy far to me It seems so short a time since I was associated with many whose names I see in the paper, and yet how we are scattered ! I often read their names in different papers, telling somewhat of their movements in life, ever rejoicing in their prosperity and sympathiz- ing when sol row reaches them. I hope you will he there and have a good time, and give ray kindest regards and a "Ood liless you" to all my old friends and schoolmates, and tell them for me that I hope to meet them all at that last grand re-union in the "Beautiful Evermore." Maggie M. Anderson. Rochester, N. Y., August 2, 1SS1. Dear Friend Taylor: I shall have to deny myself the joy of meeting and greeting many of the loved and not- forgotten friends of my school days. The "Pennyroyal" township is the mother of many children of whom she may well be proud, as they are "royal" in every part cular. I come very near being scented with pennyroyal myself, as I first saw the light of day "just on tlie line," in Londonderry township. Next to "Derry" (excuse the exception) SO UVENIB OF PENNYROYALDOM. 37 I don't believe there is a township in America that has produced better men and women than old Pennyroyal. Give the dear old boys and girls my wannest greetings, and assure them my prayer is that the best blessings of the Master may be theirs to enjoy. J. P. Saxkey." Mr. D I> Taylor : I hope yon will have a good time, and that you will sueceed in brightening the chain which binds together all the loyal children' of Pennyroyal. D. Paul W. N. Cowdeu, for the members of the old stone church, presented in a happy speech, an elegant Bible to Rev. Hugh Forsythe, for many years pastor of the church. The Bible was bound in morocco, and on its back in gold letters was the inscription; "Old Stone Church. Rev. Hugh For- sythe. An affectionate remembrance by those who waited on your min- istry." He also presented a scrap book containing the autographs of as many of the members as could be procured, with many warm letters from absent ones. Mr. Cowdeu's speech was as follows: SPEECH OF HON W. N. COWDEN— PRESENTATION. Last year when the Pennyroyalists met on these grounds to exchange friendly greetings, to recount their joys and sorrows, their trials and triumps it was natural that the uniform successes achieved by the citizens of this township in the various walks of life should lead to the inquiry : "Why have our citizens been so uniformly successful ? What cause, or causes, have produced this result'.'" It was agreed by all the speakers that the cause was to be found in the good schools and churches that were early planted all over this township. Very frequent reference was made to one particular church — the Old Stone Church, that long stood on yonder hill, and to the in- fluence it had exerted on the township. It was found that many who had achieved success in various avocations of life had received their early moral and religions training in that church ; it was found that an uncounted number of teachers had gone out from that church, many of them eminent, and some pre-eminent, to preach the gospel to a lost world. Accordingly, it was proposed that this year at there-union a public acknowledgment of your services as the pastor of that old church, and as the only living pastor, should be made. A committee was appointed to ask the autographs and a small amount of money from each one who had waited on your ministry there. The enterprise met with a hearty response. Let- ters and money came from all over the East and West, many of the donors expressing joy at the privilege of contributing to such a worthy object. The money has been invested in a beautiful family Bible, which as the rep- resentative of the committee and as the representative of those who attended your ministry, I have the honor and pleasure of presenting to you as a token of our respect for you, and as a memento, a memorial of those early associa- tions — to remind you that your labors there are not forgotten and never CD be frtgotten. They will be recollected and cherished down to the last syllable of recorded time and onward through a vast eternity of unrecorded time. With this Bible we also present a scrap book containing the autographs of the donors and the letters to which they were affixed, if you have ever felt that you have lived in vain; if you have ever felt that you have accom- plished little for God and humanity, I beg to assure you that these letters will dispel any such feeling. Here are letters from representative men of 38 SOUVENIR OF PENNY ROYALDOM. the great West, who say that, next to the influence of home, they owe all that they are or ever hope to be to you. Here are ministers who have but few peers in eloquence and theological attainments, who say they would probably never have entered the ministry had it not been for your instruct- ion and encouragement. No, sir; you have not lived in vain. You have started streams of influence that have widened and deepened and that will widen and deepen until time is too short to record all you have accom- plished. Eternity alone is long enough and vast enough to record all. Two feelings are struggling for the mastery in my heart to-day. One of joy, another of sadness — one of pleasure, another of pain. Joy, when I recollect that I enjoyed the privilege of attending that Old Stone Church. Joy, when I think of the cherished youthful friendships made and cemented there. Joy, when I recollect that there, from your lips, I fir t heard the of- ficial invitation of the Gospel. Oh, that Old Stone Church! most sacred spot on memory's page. I see it yet, as it stands surrounded by its stately trees. I see the old oak that stood at its threshold. I see the pews with their closed doors. I see the reverent worshippers as they tread the sacred aisles. I hear the solemn tones of Rev. Forsythe as he announces a psalm, reads a chapter or implores the Throne of Grace. Memory will not let die such pleasing recollections. But the picture is shaded when I look around and inquire where are those worshippers to-day. A few, a very few, of the original band remain. Their names we will not mention. But where are the McClenahans, the Wallaces, the Wherrys, the Lemons, the Pauls, the Campbells, the Forbeses, the Hutchisons, the Armstrongs, tlu •McKees, the McCreas, the Daughertys, the Thompsons, the Tracys and others. Here and there may be found a single representative of some of these families, and some of them are not represented here at all. Some have gone to the East, many have gone to the West, and at least two congregations have been or- ganized out of the original band. And many others — oh, how many others — of those who went and those who stayed have fallen in life's conflict. Some in youth, some in middle life and many in old age, gathered as a shock of corn fully ripe. Of all these, may we not indulge the hope that to-day they are "summering high in glory." As a memorial of these recollections ami associations, we beg you to accept this Bible, and be assured that it comes to you freighted with affections as pure as any known to the human heart. Rev. Forsythe responded feelingly and at length as follows: RESPONSE OF REV. HUGH FORSYTHE. Rev. Forsythe said he was placed in such a position that he could hardly say how grateful he was. He could not feel that he had deserved it. He had endeavored to do his duty, and he was thankful for the elegant gift. A more appropriate or more precious gift could not be given. It has been well said that the Bible has God for its author, salvation for its end, and truth for its matter. Like the pillar of cloud and fire, it was not given to man for his amusement, but for his guide. It contains God's thoughts. He valued the gift for itself far above gold and silver, and still more for the motives of the donors. His church was not sectarian here. This was a Methodist commu- nitv, and he liked the Methodists because they are a working church. He spoke of his friendship with Revs. Davidson, Shire, Harris aud others, and SOUVENIR OF PENNYRO YALDOM. 39 his old friend, John Duncan, a Presbyterian, and dosed by saying he would ever hold in grateful remembrance the friends who had made this gift. Rev. W. II. Morton was glad to be present at this second reunion where we retrospect the past and enjoy the present and talk about the future. He could not tell about hunting deer like D. D. Taylor and Kirkpatrick, though he had done sonic dear hunting; neither had he ever killed an Indian — they left when they heard he was coming. Our ancestors are passing awav; they lived in historical times, and were themselves part of history. It is not too late to gather the history of Eastern Ohio. He then gave an account of the formation of Ohio, of Guernsey county, and of Oxford township, and closed with a tribute to the women of Oxford, who bore their part as nobly as the sterner sex. The speech of Mrs. Mattic McClelland Brown was the speech of the day. Though she was down on the programme for a formal speech, she did not make one. But said would rather take all present by the hand and look into the dear faces that greeted her twenty years ago. She did not feel like a stran- ger. It seemed as if she had just awakened from a Rip Van Winkle sleep to look upon the same hills and valleys and streams and into the same faces that she knew so well in years agone. The name of Oxford she thought good. There was a premonition in it — a prophecy of that intellectual power of which we see only the beginning. The origin of this intellectual force is the stalwart Christianity of the early days — the puritanical teachings of Calvanism and the emotional Armenianism. The emotional is a grand feature. There is no greatness without it; and when controlled by intellect it is a source of the greatest power. She congratulated herself that as an or- phan she had been placed among these forces. She was not old, yet there men here with full whiskers and gray hairs who were her schoolmates. There was D. C. Kennon, who was known as "the sweet white headed little boy;" then there was one of the secretaries, who was so like the father of his country that he would not tell a lie — not even about kissing the girls. But he has fallen and is now editor of the Times. The girls that were are not. Eliza Kennon, Mary Plattenburg and others have their identity merged in some one else. With natural modesty, girls of the present day cared only to be known as the sister of some man. The Marys and Marthas succeed about as well as the Georges and Davids. She was glad women did not have to be politicians, for now they can say what they think. The promotion of women by education she regarded as one of the grandest features of the world. We have a right to be proud of the women, as well as the men, of Ohio. Long ago men did not want to hear women speak in public. She had been told that she had better be at home attending to her children. She had sometimes taken these grumblers with her and showed them that her children were as well cared for as theirs, and were a good deal better looking. She had been six years on the platform working for temperance when the great crusade came. Then scores of women came to the front and relieved her. This is not the last of Oxford township — it is but the beginning. The girls are coming forward, receiving inspirations as of old. What good they may accomplish in the world none but the infinite know-. The forests have been cloven, the fields have been cleared, and they are now sowing the seed, 40 son 'ex in of penny r o yald om. that shall be reaped Id the years to come. The work of de- veloping the people is in their hands. You are making history now, per- haps more grand than in the past. The great aim of civilization is devel- opment of character. She did not like the old canting expression, that we are all worms of the dust; we are human beings. Let us dwell more on the possibilities of our being, that future generations may thank God that we live to-day. The meeting adjourned for dinner. Most of those present brought baskets. It would have been hard to gather up twelve baskets full of frag- ments after dinner. The same crowd gathered around the stage in the afternoon. Mrs. Sarah Taylor was called out and responded. She could only say amen to the address of Mrs. Brown. She spoke of the schools of the olden time taught at Center and other districts, and remembered when school ex- hibitions were given in the woods by the light of lanterns. She hoped edu- cation might increase in the years to come as it had doue in the past. Mrs. Brown said: I am glad, although few of you can hear what Mother Taylor has said, to see you loaning forward that you may hear. You have given her recognition, and she has given you sons who can make themselves heard. I have always looked upon her as a model mother and one of the representative women of Oxford township. John A. Buchanan said that ten years ago he left Pennyroyaldom to try his fortune on the sea of life. To-day he returned to greet old friends. Many new faces had come on the scene and many familiar ones are gone. Every community has its characteristics; that oi Oxford is its intellectuality. Our ancestors were not satisfied with a common school education. The township had produced a man who had sat on the Supreme Bench of Ohio, and it had produced divines who were known throughout the country and the world. The chair introduced a man who, he said, had the D. D. to the wrong end of his name, but who was generally a success. D. D. Taylor said the Chair did him honor over-much. He was glad to meet with the Pennyroyalists — and their sisters and their cousins and their aunts. He was on the programme for a speech on the "Boys of Oxford." He supposed he was put on the platform because was a boy. He wished he wasn't — he had no business to lie a boy. He knew where he got his D. D.'s; but he never knew till yesterday that he had been to college. He graduated at Center. He was a man of experience, and had heard some of the greatest orators, but had never before heard such a speech as that of Mattie McClelland Brown, of Oxford, of Ohio, of United States. The boys of Oxford and the girls of Oxford were twin subjects. If they had not been twin subjects thirty or forty years ago, this audience would have been mighty slim to-day. Where are the hoys of fifty years, thirty years, twenty years aj_o'? All gone; and in their places are bald-headed and wrinkled men. Look at Dr. Hawthorne. Pennyroyal is an emblem; it is what we make it mean. For us it means a renewal of acquaintance and a strengthening of fellowship. It was at Center school house that the improved methods of education were first adopted. He alluded in feeling terms to his mother, who had supplied with teachers almost every school between Wheeling and Zanesville. Oxford township had a full quota of representatives in every honorable profession — but mighty few in the penitentiary. iOUYBRIR OR PBRRVROY-OLDOm, THIRD REUNIDN, 'HE rains full and the prospects were dull for a brilliant Reunion on (the 22nd of August, 1882. But in the afternoon the clouds were dis- persed and the sun beamed down benignantly upon the fifteen hun- dred heads that braved the frowning elements, and, through storm and mud, gathered in the grove of majestic oaks that surrounds old Center school house in Oxford township. On the second day the weather was favor- able. The dust was laid, the sun shed its warmest beams, and all were happy. At the least calculation four thousand people assembled under the wide-reaching branches of the Center oaks, and renewed old acquaintances, anil lived over again those happy hours spent in the old log school house that has been recently replaced by a building of more modern structure. We are unable to present all the pi lasant features of this reunion. The types are too weak to pretend to give even a suggestion of the joyousness that pervaded the pure atmosphere of that shrine of Pennyroyaldom; nor can we reproduce to our readers those magnetic thrills that tingled the nerves of the old-time residents and natives of Pennyroyaldom as they clasped the hands of the long absent friends and recalled the recollections of by-gone years. We are unable to reproduce the emotions that pierce the breast oftriends long severed upon their first joyous meeting, or to give adequate expression to the sentiments that swell the hearts of men when they return to the scenes — the sacred scenes — of their early childhood. The following is a correct, but condensed, report of the proceedings: FIRST DAY. After music by the Washington band, and an opening song by the choir. Rev. John Allies, an aged father, led in prayer. The address of wel- come was delivered by J. Baker Borton, who said that he had been enlisted in the cause of Pennyroyaldom for a good many years, and had experi- enced its toils and fortunes, its pains and pleasures; and when 1 say "wel- come," I say it in no individual sense. The word expresses the feeding of old Oxford as a whole, and particularly to those from a distance do we ex- 42 SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. tend a full and hearty greeting. Many persons and objects here to-day will recall pleasant reminiscences of the past and bring to mind old associations which the flying wheels of Time have been unable to efface. These grand oaks, monuments of by-gone days, could they speak, would say "welcome." And when you depart and return to your homes, we wish you to possess an increased feeling of love and affection for the <>ld homes and old friends here, knowing and realizing that we feel deeply interested in your future welfare- Hoping your stay with us may be pleasant, to one and all, we repeat' "Welcome!" J. O. Grimes, Esq., the retiring President, responded as follows: My Friends: I believe this welcome to be heartfelt and sincere. To what are we welcome? What are we here for? The meeting has nothing to do with agriculture, science, politics, education or religion. There is something back of all this. There is a principle planted in the nature of man that I feel proud of. It is sociability. We come here to commingle our feelings, our hearts and our voices; to make our enemies, if we have any, our friends; to greet with affection those from whom we have beenseparated, and a touch of whose hands sends our thoughts fleeing back to by-gone years when we sported in childhood's innocent glee. This beautiful country, upon which we now look with pride, was once a howling wilder- ness, infested with wild animals and wilder men. You have all heard of the hardships of our forefathers, and I need not recount them here; but thev en- joyed life and made money. I remember the old English Reader, Mur- ray's Speller and Kirkham's Grammar, although I am not such an old man yet. Still some folks speak of me as Old Grimes. (A voice, "Old feather Grimes.") Some of those old books had in them good moral lessons. Many have stuck to me through life. Many influential men who are to- day to be found in the pulpit, at the forum, in Congress and occupying other high positions, have gone out from Pennyroyaldom. I do not know how this little plant became an inhabitant of this township. It flourished when the wdiite man first came here. Commissioner Morton used to tell me that when all other resources failed the early settlers in raising money, they used to go to picking pennyroyal and distilled it, in this way raising money to pay taxes and other expenses. One good thing, there is nothing like it, nothing made with hands can compare to it, and that is the pride I feel in stating the feet that I have the honor of being born in the little state of Oxford. John Kirkpatriek, the president elect, delivered his inaugural address. He began with an apology by saying that he had been traveling for the past two days constantly, to reach this Pennyroyal reunion and that he was experiencing a feeling of fatigue and weariness. He here presented a very beautiful and neatly arranged boquet of choice flowers, presented and sent with him by Miss Nannie McClenahan, of Clinton county, Iowa, and daughter of Robert MeClenahan, formerly of this township. He spoke of the great number of Penny royalists who are scattered all over this land in honest pursuits and holding high positions; that we should not have a re- union to-day with the living but also with the dead, and brought to mind those old patriots in the work who had passed over the mystic river since the last meeting one year ago. He deemed it expedient to notice the financial Souvenir of pennyroyaldom. 43 standing of the association, and thought that each year should pay its own way. And as a means to procuring some funds suggested that certificates of membership be printed neatly and attractively, designed t<> be framed and used as parlor ornaments, and that all the members be obliged to pur- chaseoncat a small cost. He would be proud of one thing, that each true Pennyroyalist could look bach on old Oxford as a little republic in itself, one of love and affection in which the ruling law was truth, honesty and in- tegrity. There is not a spot six miles square on the face of the globe which has produced as many useful and important men and as great workers as this old township. And in connection with this republic idea I would sug- gest that a suitable committee be delegated to devise a banner and that this be called the Pennyroyal flag, and around it all the subjects of this little kingdom rally with one heart and voice. And as the brawny Egyptians unite in holding sacred and true the little dirty rag that floats over their creed and principles, or the patriotic Irishman, who around the green flag with the sunburst crowning it, sends up pure national feelings of his in- most soul, so I would have our Hag held in the mind of every true hearted Pennyroyalist and in all processions and on every gala day let the Hag float side by side with the old stars and stripes. On motion of Win. Borton, the President's suggestions were adopted. Col. J. D. Taylor and Hon. Win. Borton were on the programme to speak on the "Recollections of Old Center." The former was absent, but the latter re- sponded as follows. I do not consider myself a very old man, and to give me this subject is not a compliment to a man of my looks and age; but after thinking the mat- ter over, I find that I can go back pretty far in the past. And to do so we must leave these green fields, these present improvements — leave the mow- ing machine and the threshing machim — and we find ourselves in imagina- tion in an unbroken forest, where the tinkle of the cowbells, the sharp crack of the hunter's rifle or the heavy stroke of the woodman's axe are the only sounds to break the solemn stillness. And to come to old Center: The original house was burned down, and one erected near the present site of hewed logs. My first teacher's name was Anguish, and I thought that the man's name and nature corresponded, for he did put more anguish into his administration than I thought to be proper. He taught a loud school, where every scholar studied out loud, and the noise produced was a perfect bedlam. Here he gave a specimen of reading: "A hungry bear in walking mood, came from a leafy neighboring wood," etc. Then a man named Pat- terson taught for a number of years. Oh, those long, dreary years, to me, at least. I went into the room a little late my first morning and began out loud to get my lesson, when both teacher and scholars commenced laughing. The custom had been changed. I remember of going to the old Pisgah Church to hear Rev. Keil, who is still living, and it was before the floor was laid. Strangely enough I can still remember the text to this day: "For as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sons of God." Col. Jake Kemple, of Wheeling, entertained the audience with one of his characteristic humorous addresses. Hon. Jos. Ferrell, Rev. John Abies, and Dr. J. H. Grimes made short addresses, after which the proceedings were adjourned until ten o'clock Thursday morning. 44 SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. SECOND DAY. By ten o'clock the beautiful grove was alive with happy-faced, holiday- attired humanity. On the outskirts of the woods were hundreds of vehicles of all shapes and styles, from the old fashioned farm wagon and carryall to the modern barouche and fancy phaeton. Refreshment stands were numer- ous, and the stentorian tones of the dispensers of mild lemonade could be heard in every direction, while every tree seemed to conceal behind its trunk a modest peanut vender ready and only too willing to pounce upon the first unlucky youth who sought rest under its umbrageous branches. A shooting gallery and other innocent resorts offered amusement and re- creation to those so inclined. The crowd was not to be compared with any of like proportions we have ever seen. There was no disorder, there was no boisterous behavior, but this vast gathering was as orderly as any company in a lady's parlor. Not only was this a marked characteristic, but a stranger could discern at a glance the air of superior intelligence and refinement that pervaded and distinguished thehappy throng from almost any other crowd of like size. Promptly at ten o'clock the President announced the opening of the. exercises. The Washington Band played, with good effect, that sweet hymn, "Nearer My God to Thee," after which Rev. Samuel Forbes offered prayer. The band then played a quick march. The President announced that there was some business to attend to, and that now was a proper time to do so. J. O. Grimes moved that the Chairman appoint a Committee of seven members to nominate officers and committemen for the ensuing year. Car- ried. The chair named the following gentlemen as members of that com- mittee: J. O. Grimes, Hon. Newell Kennon, Jonathan Rose, Esq., Hon. Wm. Borton, Hon. Joseph Terrell, D. D. Taylor, Esq., Dr. J. H. Grimes. On account of the rain the programme of the day before was incom- plete, and Col. J. D. Taylor being present to-day, he was called upon to speak, being down on the programme of Wednesday to give some "recol- lections of Old ('enter." Col. Taylor, alter a few preliminary remarks, spoke as follows: Thirty or forty years ago — yes more than forty years ago — I played tinder these trees; and, this morning, I thought of the old log that used to lie some place near here. I never whipped but one boy while teaching in yonder school house, but I whipped him in dead earnest. He was a self- willed, spirited child, and after 1 whipped him I took him by the hand and led him to the old log, and, sitting there, pointed out to him the folly and wickedness of his course. After that I never had any more trouble with him. I was afraid the punishment I gave him would involve me in a law- suit, but his father soon after told in ! tli • boy was better than he had ever been. Hence I think of that old log. Over there to the west I used to help Uncle Billy Borton plant mint. But where are the boys that were here? I have met some of them on the far Pacific slops; the graves ofsome of them are in southern lands, and unmarked and unknown. So it is, the SOUVENIR OF PENNYBOYALDOM. 45 old and middle-aged and young, arc gone, and gone foreverj and these facta should admonish us that we, too, must soon pass off the stage of action. Even many of these majestic oaks that I knew so well have been removed and new ones are taking their places. I am proud ofthis reunion. Would have been here last year, hut was a thousand miles away. There is no place I would rather be than in old Center. I say this is a great reunion — a reunion of fathers and mothers and sisters and brothers. We are apt to become sordid and neglect to cultivate the social faculties, and I know these reunions do me good. These changes I have spoken of are very rapid — even in my own family. Last year I read in your journals that my mother was here; and a brother whom, in recollection, 1 see a little white headed boy, picking blackberries, running races, hoeing corn and climbing up the big apple tree to get me the best and biggest apple — and he, too, is gone. There is not a family here but has had these experiences. I see a lady before me whose little boy was my dearest friend — but he sickened and died. It appears as if I could stand before you all day and recount a thousand recollections of old Center, and crowd out all these gentlemen; but some dav 1 expect to gather all the records together and form a history. I thank you for your attention, and will not consume the time further. N. H. Barber made a few eloquent remarks, in which he asserted that Oxford township had turned out more able men to its acres than any other spot on God's footstool. A letter from George S. Graham was read by W. S. Heade, as follows: LETTER FROM GEO S. GRAHAM. Kansas City, Mo., August 1st, 1882. ,/. Kirhpatrich, Esq., President Pennyroyal Reunion: Dear Sir : Seeing rav name in the list of those expected to make speeches at the coming Reunion, to be held at eld "Center," as I shall not this year have the pleasure of being with you in person, though I will be with you in spirit, I send greetings by letter to all the old friends and childhood playmates of my native land. Though but a boy when, several years ago, I left Pennyroyaldom with my father's family, soon to launch out for myself to try the boundless west, the t where the old one stood, with the Rev. J. H. Hollister as their pastor, who is a man that is governed by his own thoughts and is a good sermonizer. For near seventy years the pulpits of Fairview have been filled by a 50 SO UVENIR OF PENNY R YA LD OM. faithful and intelligent ministry — men who felt the responsibility of the place they occupied — felt their mission to be to publish "Glad tidings of peace" to the people and teach them in their great doctrines of Christianity. It was mostly to the teachings of this ministry and the schoolmaster which pointed the minds of so many ot our young Pennyroyalists in the right direction that they went forth to fight the battles of life with a lighted can- dle in their hand, and have still kept it burning, giving light to all that are in the house. Some of them are here to-day to renew their vows of friend- ship with their former associates; others are not here, but send their con- gratulations in song and in poetry. W. S. Heade read a paper by J. D. Henry, Esq., of Cincinnati, on Pen- nyroyal Lawyers. PENNYROYAL LAWYERS. BY JAS. D. HENRY. I know not the number embraced in the title, and have but little knowledge of their renown. Those who survive and pursue theircalling on their "native heath," need no endorsement to place them among your best fmblic-spirited citizens. Those who have migrated to other fields, doubt- ess can stand an equal test of full inquiry, and have not forfeited their Pennyroyal birthright nor tarnished their inherited good names. But this ' theme is broader than the local issue, for the Pennvroval members are but a sample of the fraternity — a fraternity whose influence can be traced, nay, is prominent in the history of the progression, development and civilization of the human race. There has been a fashion of speaking flippantly of the honor and honesty of the profession; but this fashion has been adopted and followed by those who have but seldom, if ever, had cause in which they desired the services ot honorable lawyers. It there have been, and still are, rogues of lawyers, it is because there have been, and still are, rogues of clients with roguish causes and roguish defenses, and it is but another instance of the supply following the demand — a rule which obtains and controls in so so much of human affairs. But the same sentiment and lack of knowledge and reason which condemn the whole profession because of a few perverted examples, also berates the profession of medicine because of a few quack doctors and denounces the ministry because a few villians have masked themselves in sacerdotal robes. It is not the attorneys who give the testimony, whether true or false, in a cause, but the clients and their witnesses; and any attorney of experience can tell you truly that a majority of clients are too ready to paint their own cause in roseate hues of rightand draw their opponents in shadows of falsehood and wrong-. And the nnst difficult task is that of discovering; the truth ot the testimony in a cause; and if, at times, justice is perverted and the cause of right delayed, it is only by aid and connivance of that distinguished body of your fellow-citizens, "the intelligent and impartial jury," and with the consent of "the Honorable Court." But it is largely outside of the court-room that the wide and beneficial influences of the profession is felt. The doctor treats his patient without re- straint and free from unfriendly comment, except of the neighborhood gos- sip, and ministers select their own texts and discourse at their own sweet SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 51 wills, so long as within the bounds of their own church dogmas and the limits of their own church creeds; but not so with lawyers. The causes they must present and discuss are previously made by the acts of the parties, sub- ject to the laws of the land, and those causes they must present in the pres- ence of alert opponents and subject to the decision of the final arbiter, the court. And so, of necessity, the profession became liberal minded — liberal minded enough to recognize the fact that questions have two sides, and that others have rights, and a study of the history of jurisprudence is but a Study of the development of human rights from a state of barbarism up through many varying stages to the height of constitutional government, founded on individual right, freedom of thought and liberty of conscience, and through all these progressive changes, the rights of man, the cause of human development, whether discussed on the stump, in the court room, in legislative halls, in the courts of kings, or on the battle-field,, have found their staunchest friends and strongest advocates in members of the bar. And notwithstanding all carping criticism, the profession may point with pride to the monument History erects to their predecessors, for lawyers have written and upheld the charters of freedom for the world. The subject appointed to \V. S. Heade, was "Pennyroyal Lawyers." He spoke as follows: As I grasp the hands of friends I have not met for years, I think, "can it be true that there is any neeessity for the avocation of the lawyer?" But when we consider the various relations of men, producing so many relations in life, we find it does become necessary to have some system of jurispru- dence. Wherever we find courts, we find attorneys necessary, not only to assist clients, but to assist the court. I refute the charge that the profes- sion of attorney is not as honorable as other avocations. Because some members of the bar are dishonorable, is no reason for the condemnation of the entire profession. You might as well condemn Christianity because a man may creep into the pulpit and steal the livery of heaven to serve the devil in. Mr. Heade continued his remarks at some length, and, after music by the band, was followed by T. W. Ogier, who delivered an address on "Penny- royal Editors." D. D. Taylor came next. His speech was of historical value. Once upon a time, he said, thirty-three years or more ago, there were before the Ohio Legislature, bills proposing to erect several new counties in Ohio. One of those proposed was Cumberland county, with county seat at Fair- view. Henry Duulap, now of the Government Printing office at Washing- ton, and Col. James Taylor, now also in the government employ, came to Fairview at that time and started newspapers. Dunlap's paper was called the Independent Buckeye, and Taylor's the Cumberland County Gazette. These men were the original Pennyroyal editors. There are here upon this occasion Pennyroyal editors to the third generation. The first lady editor from Pennyroyaldom was Mrs. Mattie McClelland Brown, who was the first lady editor of a secular paper in this country. The chairmam of the Pro- gramme committee, when this programme was being formed, said that about this time of day we would want something funny. I haven't been in a very funny mood to-day. Since I was here last some young faces have grown old, and some middle aged have grown older, and some of the old have 52 SO V VEN1R OF PENNYROi ALDOM. passed away. These trees, these stones, as well as these faces, tell me tales of the past. They tell me of the loved ones of the loug ago, and I have not been funny to-day. Tears have fallen from my eyes as they havetrom yours. But why be sad".' The past lies behind us, the future before. Hon. \V. N. Cowden sent the following paper. PENNYROYAL FARMERS. Ladies and gentlemen of Pennyroyaldom: — One year ago by your courtesy, I was permitted to appear on this platform and make what some might call a "sectarian" speech, but this year the subject you assign me is catholic, and will not be to one Pen.iyrovalist of Oxford township, but to all the farmers of the township. If I had been permitted to make my own choice of a subject, I could not have chosen a more congenial one than the one you have assigned me; but had I choice of my time, I would be present at the Reunion to say "my piece" and enjoy the festivities of the occasion, instead of being away out here preparing for the holding of the greatest fair west of the Allegheny mountain?. You have asked m> to talk about a class with whom I have long been familiar. My earliest and most vivid recollections, aside from home and its associations, are of weekly journeys across Oxtord township to the "Old Stone Church," and almost every day of my life, I have been in sight of it. But what can we say of Pennyroyal farmers? 1st. They are an industrious class of men. "They rise up early and sit up late and eat the bread of carefulness." They are seldom seen at the "corner grocery," and have no time to sit on the store-box to hear the latest news from "Stump-town, or to listen to the recital of the latest gos- sip about the beaux of farmer B. And as for the "greatest shows" and the "fat women" and the "big snakes," time is too precious to be thus spent. 2d. The Pennyroyal Fanner is a careful man. He is careful of the soil he cultivates. Careful to apply the right kind of manure at the right time and in the right quantity. Careful, too, of the tools with which he cul- tivates his soil. His plows and harrows and wagons and machines are never seen standing in the suns of summer or rains and snows of winter. His stock in winter, instead of finding sh slter on the the sunny side of the mullein stalk, are carefully and cosily sheltered like himself. 3d. The Pennyroyal Farmer is an intelligent man. The very soil he cultivates compels him to farm intelligently, otherwise he will get no re- turn for his labor. The Great Husbandman has not given you a soil that will, like the rich prairies of the West, produce a harvest with any kind of cultivation. Here among the hills we have to study, think, experiment, read, analyze and observe, and before we know it, and in spite of ourselves, we have acquired a large amount of knowledge. Hence it is that the ma- jority of leading men in the world of thought in this and all other countries have come from the hills. These intelligent men of course, married in- telligent wives, who bore them intelligent sons in too great numbers for the paternal acres, and hence it is that Oxford township has produced more lawyers, teachers, doctors and preachers to the square acre than any other township in Ohio. 4th. The Pennyroyal Farmer is honest. He dare not cheat his soil, else he soon learns it will give him no return. He learns, too, it will not pay to cheat his neighbor. The Pennyroyal Fanner is too honest to take SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 53 thewrongside of a case and defend a man he knows to be guilty, or cheat the gallows out of its dues. The Pennyroyal Farmer when he goes to the Legislature (and many ofthem have gone to the Legislature of this and otherStates, more of them will go, and still more arc competent to go). I say when the Pennyroyal Farmer goes to the Legislature, he does oot make laws that it takes a learned judge and two or three Philadelphia law- yers to understand. The Pennyroyal Fanner is too honest to pay one hundred cents for a long, dry sermon not worth 1-A cents. The Penny- royal Farmer never prescribes < 1 < n i l:' 1 1 pills to cure imaginary ills, nor gives medicine to make another sick, in order to "to run a liill" on a good custo- mer; nor does he ever turn ghoul ami rob your graveyards and cemeteries. With him a yard is just 36 inches, and he never waters his sugar. He is tun honest for the three-card-monte man. and he never takes eggs to market that have been "-it on" more than one week. 5th. The Pennyroyal Farmer is a successful man. The former who, u Wednesday, the first day of the feast, more strangers were present than at the opening of any preceding reunion. The Quaker City Band was present, and, at intervals, enlivened the exercises with some fine music. At 11 o'clock a. m., Vice-President, Hon. Joseph Fcrrell, gave the signal for the opening of the exercise.-, and called upon Rev. John Abies to Lead in prayer, after which Mr. Fcrrell delivered a neat address of welcome. giving a number of pioneer incidents, and referring in feeling terms to the recent death of Bethuel Abies, the first white child born in the township. Upon request, Rev. John Able-, probably the second male child born in the township, made some interesting remarks. Arecess was then taken for dinner. AFTERNOON. After music by the Quaker City band John Kirkpatrick, president of the association, made his introductory address. He reported that all the financial obligations of the society had been met, and its attains were generally in a healthy and satisfactory condition. He recommended that some suitable provision be made for the record and preservation of such historic incidents as might be brought out by these reunion meetings of pioneer Pennyroyalists who are fast passing oft" the stage of action. SOUVENIR OF PENNYROYALDOM. 55 Capt. W. M. Farrar followed with some valuable historical remarks. He said he was not an original Pennyroyaler, not having been so for- tunate as tn l>c born upon this productive soil, but having been born some- where else he iliil the nrxt best thing he could and came t< > Pennyroyal for a wife. The old pioneers as had been said by the President are passing away and every year some one is reported no more. Tlii.s time it is Betliut-I Abies whose plain speech told in his own plain way three years ago will be remembered by many now present; how he made a long trip during very rough weather away over into Belmont county to get some grinding done to feed mother and the children and would have perished with cold but for the kindness of James Gilliland whom he remembered .so grate- fully; of his amusing race from the Pennyroyal spring where he stepped with with his barefoot upon a snake and in his fright ran to the house; and this fact ought to show the necessity of gathering up and preserving in .some more permanent form such old recollections as become more precious as the years go by. That it would now be interesting to know how Oxford township got its name, a fact which he believed could not be determined. That it was organized on the 23d day of April, 1810, at the very first Board of Com- missioners ever held in Guernsey county — James Dillon, Win. Dement and Absalom Martin, being present and in session, as their journal shows, made the following orders: Ordered, "that this county be divided into five dis- tinct townships, towit: Oxford, Seneca, Wills, Cambridge and Westland. Thus although Oxford was the first township named in the county, it is the only name for which we are unable to account, all the others take their names either from well known persons or places in history or their particular loca- tion. That he held in his hand a copy of the map of the township as it was in 1816, which showed the Zane trace; as it passed through sections 1, 7, 1^, 18, 23, 24, -!