YS1(p AN APPEAL TO THE PUBLIC FOR Jx. BUILDING FUND FOR TIIE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF WISCONSIN. At a Special Meeting of the Executive Com- mittee of the State Historical Sucnnv Of Wisconsin, which was largely attended, held at the Society's Rooms, ICadison, August 5th, 1862, Hon. H. S. Orton was called to t lie chair. The following Communication was read by the Secretary : \l idibon, July 23d, 1862. Lyman C. Db ipbr, Esq., Sec'y Stab 8 !. 5 tiety, Dkar Sir : — I desire, through you, to present to the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, a suitable site for the erection of a proper build- ing to meet the wants of the Society. The site that I propose to donate, is forty (40) by one hundred (10U) feet, on the north-west cor- ner of block seventy-three (73) in the oity of Madison, being the corner north-east >>i the Court House. The conditions of the above donation being as follows : The possession of the ground shall remain in myself until the expiration of the leases at present upon it. Bay until the 1st day of July, 18G4, and thereafter until the Society is ready to commence the erection of a build- ing thereon, of which I shall have thirty daj • notice; and the further condition, that the Sooiety shall commence and prosecute the erec- tion of a building, so far as to get it em within five years from the date hereof. I will pay all taxes on the property until the takes possession upon the terms above stated. Respectfully submitted, SIMEON Mil: Letters urging the necessity Of a tire-proof building were read from 1 A Laphatn, the President of the Society, and (torn \ . .dents Gen, SI B Smith, and Jamee Suther- land. The irhole subject, on motion, was referred to the Committee "ii Building Lot. of whom were present, Messrs. Draper D ktwood, J. T. Clark and Tibbit*-- The Committee, after full conference, report- ed a series of resolutions, through Mr. Draper, which after Blight amendment, were unani- mously adopted as foil 1. That the Executive Committee, in behalf of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, hereby gratefully accept, with the conditions imposed, the generous tender by Gen. Simeon Mills, of a convenient, appropriate and valu- able lot in this city, forty by one hundred feet in size, upon which to erect a suitable build- ing to meet the growing wants of the Society. '1. That the Society hereby pledges its faith- ful efforts to raise a lund of not less than twenty thousand dollars, for the erection of a plain and substantial tire-proof edifice, of not less than forty by eighty feet in size, to be commenced before the close of the year ltfoG, and sufficiently completed for occupancy by the close of the year 1867; and should there be any surplus, it shall be faithfully invested for the increase, maintenance, and support of the Sooiety. 8. That pledges in the form of negotiable -.'. ithout interest if paid when due. and payable in five equal annual installments, be secured as soon as possible, by Solicit pointed by (his Board— said notes not to be valid, or of binding force, until their aggregate sum amounts to eight thousand dollars. 4. That this Board, at this meeting, elect or appoint, and the new Board in January of each year proceed to elect or appoint, five re- sponsible members of l Trustees, whose duty it shall be to take charge of the Building l'und as fast as collected, and place it on safe deposit, drawing such reasona- ble interest as they may be able to 9ecure, uu- til needed for its specific purpose — or, until by direction of the Executive Committee, it be Otherwise in contingently provided for by the next following resolution 5. That in ease the pledges and collections therefrom, should be deemed insufficient by the Executive Committee for the erection of a suitable building, the amounts collected may, by majority vote of the Committee, be vested by the Trustees, or a majority of them, in the stocks of the United States, or of the State of Wisconsin, and. with the accumulations of in- terest, be sacredly held, until the same by increment or addition shall, in the opinion of a majority of the Executive Committee, at some stated, or at a special meeting called for that purpose, be deemed and declared sufficient therefor. 6. That a pledge is hereby solemnly made in behalf of the .Society, that the money and means thus raised shall lie inviolably applied in the above manner and in no other, and that no debt shall thereby be incurred or remain against the Society: and that the Executive Committee shall take such steps, at the proper time, as shall be sufficient in the law to rest the building and estate thereby Acquired in the Trustees, to hold the same, without incum- brance, for the uses of the Society; and in case the amount raised shall prove more than sufficient for erecting the building, the surplus shall be likewise vested in the Trustees, to be inviolably held for the stated maintenance and support of the Society. 7. That such sums as may be contributed towards the Building Fund shall be credited to such of the donors as may desire it, as BO much towards the requisite Five Hundred Dollars to constitute them Life Dibkctobs of the Society, and consequently members of the Executive Committee during their natural lives; and those who contribute not less than titty dollar-' for this purpose, shall be constituted Hohobabt Memueks, with all the privileges of the Society for life. 8. That when such pledges are paid, a com plete list ol the names and residence of the donors to the Building Fund he entered in a neatly bound book, to be permanently preserv- ed on exhibition in the Library, with a photo graph or engraving of eaob donor, with auto graph, attached ; and that such list be publish- ed, from time to time, in the public press, and in the next succeeding volume of the Bocil • 'ollections — so thai all the contributor- to this object may thus ever he held in grateful re- membrance as public benefactors. 'a That any further necessary arrange- ments with reference to a building site, secur- ing a Building Fund, or providing tor the erection of the edifice, will to- promptly made by the Executive Committee, whose -pedal duty it is, under the eleventh artielc of l lie Constitution governing ns, "to supervise and direct the financial and business ooni erni ••! the Society Eton. Simeon Mills, Hon, H 8 Orion, Hon I B. Smith .1 \lder Ellis, and John i» Qui me, irere chosen rrustees for the ourrenl in accordance with the fourth of the preceding resolutions. Soljc:- appointed for the several counties of the State, to obtain pledges for the Building Fund. Mr. Draper, from the Committee to whom the subject of site and building was referred, reported an Appeal to the Public for a Building Fum/, which was referred to Messrs. Draper. Hyer, and Durrie, with instructions to have such number printed as may be necessary, and to perfect all needful arrangements for carrying the plan of soliciting aid for the Building Fund fully into effect. Adjourned. AN APPEAL 10 lilt: PUBLIC in BEHALF OK A BUILDING It M> It is now over thirteen years since the State Historical Society of 'Wisconsin had its origin; but from its re-organization, over eight years ago, it dates, in fact, the beginning of its real growth and prosperity. Since January, 1854, the Library has increased from fifty volumes to over sixteen thousand volumes and pam- phlets — so that it now ranks, in point of size. a- the fourth or fifth in the L'niou, of a purely- Historical or Antiquarian character. While the Society, with commendable single- ness of purpose, has hitherto devoted its means and efforts exclusively to the establishment of a public Library commensurate with the wants of an intelligent and inquiring people, in a rapidly expanding country, it has, thus tar. done nothing towards securing a tire-proof ed- ifice for the preservation of its precious col- lection- of historical and scientific literature, except from time to time to call attention to the subject in its annual reports. But such ha- been the increase of the Library and col- lection- , already compactly tilling a room 4.'> by 65 feel In size, significantly admonishing us that further accommodations will soon become a prime necessity, ■ ■ and all the while exposed to loss by the accidents of lire — that we are forced to the conclusion, that a tire-proof build- ing is now the pressing want of the Society. Kindi e.l societies and similar collections have already suffered by the calamities «i' fire. — The Library and Cabinet of the [own B al and Ccological Institute, the fruit of ten rears successful and pains-taking effort, be- came a prey to the flames, in 1868—800 rol antes, several valuable tile.- of Territorial newspapers, 6,000 pamphlets, 100 maps, 20(1 manuscripts, with a splendid collection of fos- sils and other -pecimen- illustrative of the ge- ology of the State, a tine herbarium of its in digenOUS plants, with many other sj mien- atural hi-i. ter with a cabinet of about 400 Indian relic-, including the trap- • Blat i Hi-» I wei b consigned to irre traction. In Pebrnarj 1864, the splendid Parliament building o, with a portion of the Government Library and philosophical apparatus, together with all the paintings in the Council and A— einbly chain bers, were destroyed by fire originating from a furnace; while the Historical and Literary Booietl "t '.'lichee, which had room" in the Parliament buildings, lost almost the whole of 'us twenty-il'' itherings, including ite valuable Library and Museun Br alone estimated in vain* ogether with il folio \. .hi- it, .■ Realm, and a large collection of historical manuBoripta. And, as i remarkable coinci- dence, on the 6th of January, 1857, about 7 o'clock in the evening, at the very hour when the annual report was being read before our ity, urging the necessity of a fire-proof building for the safety of ita collections, the State House, at Montpelier, Vermont, with in m. ii v valuable oollectiona of the natural and civil history of that State, was totally destroy- ed by tire: and, among t ho property thi rificed by the devouring element, was the large collection of newspaper files which Mr. Henry Stevens, thou President of the Vermont His- torioal Society, had been, we believe, forty or fifty years in bringing together. In I s IT. the the valuable Library of the Royal Society of Icelandic Literature, in Copenhagen, was de- stroyed by fire; the loss was peculiarly unfor- tunate, as the Library contained more than two thousand unpublished MSS., and a numerous collection of ancient Icelandic works. Only a tew years sine.-, a very large and valuable collection of Western newspaper files, and oth- er printed matter, designed for the illustration of the civil and ecolesiastiaal history of the West, patiently gathered during a period of -nine thirty years, by the late Rev. Dr. John M. Peck, wen- destroyed by tin- burning of the building, at Rock Spring, Illinois, in which they v. 'red. We should be admonished by the destruction in whole, or in part, by tire, of public ar- chives in this country on repeated occasions : — in New Hampshire in 1736; in Massachusetts in 17 17. besides having been damaged by three previous fires ; in New York in 1740-41, and in 177o; in New Jersey in 1686; in North Carolina in 1881 : in South Carolina in 1698; the Capitol building, with the Territorial Li- brary of Oregon, in 185"); the Capitol, public offices, and records, at Williamsburg, Virginia, in 1746; the Capitol of Kentucky, with many public records, several years since ; — all of which were accidental: and in Virginia in 1781, by the British army under the fratricide Ar- nold. In 184'.», the Parliament buildings at Quebec were fired by the torch of a furious mob, when the Government Library — esteemed one of the very best in North America — and a large portion of the archives of the Province, were destroyed : and these public buildings had scarcely been rebuilt, and a now Library col- lected, when by accident, in 1851, the devour- ing element again laid them wai ral times have the National archives Buf- fered by conflagration — in 18U0, when the buildings of the War Department were de- stroyed, and twice subsequently more or less injured; in 1814, when the British burned the public buildings, and destroyed the National Library of 3,000 volumes, as well as many of the public arohives ; in 1833, when the ! ury buildings were burned ; in 1836, when the Genera' I I "lice were H<- | by fire, with almost their entire con tents including 7.">" l > models of patents, 163 ilio volumes of records, 26 large port folio-, containing 9,000 drawings, many of them beautifully executed and very valuable, and in, ihim original descriptions of inventions, with iii:iii\ other documents ; and lastly, in 1861, when the Congressional Library was burned, ooc isioned by the timbers, which form- ed the alcoves being inserted in the chimney- fines, destroying 35,000 volumes of books, to- gether with many valuable paintings, medals, and statuary. It is a significant fact, and ev- idence in point of the utility of fire-proof offi- ces, that the valuable public records and documents in the two tire-proof rooms of the War Department in 1814, and those in the fire- proof rooms of the Treasury Department in 1883, were all saved, while most of the others were consumed. Other public institutions and public Libra- ries have not escaped the devouring element. In 17<>">. the building, together with the Li- brary and philosophical apparatus, of the College of William and Mary, at Williamsburg, Ya.. which had their origin in 1692, were de- stroyed by fire; and in Feb., 1859, the College buildings. College Library of 9,000 volumes, which had been one hundred and fifty-four year- in collecting, together with the Labora- tory, and a Society Library, wero totally con- sumed. In 1758, the Providence Library, which bad been nearly eighty years in collect- ing, was entirely consumed, except aoout seventy volumes loaned out ; while the Charles- ton Library Society, out of Let ween five and six thousand volumes, saved only one hundred and eighty-five from the flames of a disastrous fire in 177s, and many of these were volumes of mutilated sets. In 1866, the building of the Medical Department of the University of Louisville was destroyed bj fire, and portions only of the Library and chemical apparatus \ el. In our own State, only a few years -ince. the building of the Platteville Academy, with its valuable Library, was de- stroyed by tire. Intelligence just reaches us from aorosa the Atlantic, of the conflagration of the City Mall of Bordeaux, and perishing in its flames documentary evidence exhibiting eight hundred years of Gascon history, con- tained in many thousand autograph letters of kings, emperors, prinoes, governors, mayors, archbishops, and military commanders, relat- ing to oommeroe, war, art, science, letters and navigation, for the past eight eventful centu- ries — together with a complete collection of the \fotliteur newspaper, established as the or- gan of the- French Government over one hun- dred years ago. Well may historical students deplore such stupendous and irreparable losses : and hence the pertinent question, more easily asked, however, than answered— Why was not better care taken of such inestimable collections ? The same inquiry may, with equal proprie- ty, be propounded to us, with reference to the Library and collections of tho State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Look upon its shelves, and behold the priceless treasures there gath- ered together — the noble Gallery of Art, num- bering nearly sixty oil paintings, of our bat- tle fields, national heroes, statesmen, jurists, men of science and of letters, and our own State pioneers, many of them painted perior artists, and of the most of the tures no copies exist, — of the venerable news- paper files, nearly eight hundred in number, the oldest printed in 1680, and altogether cov- ering almost the entire eventful period of over a century past, including a file of nearly nine years of the old Pennsylvania Gazette, publish- ed by Dr. Franklin, from 17-V> to the close of 17tj-i — be set of the Transactions of the Eoy: . London, beginning with its commencement in 1665, embracing one hundred ami twelve volumes- —works from the private libraries of Franklin, Clinton, Clay, and oth- ers — volumes of the original Jesuit Relations, and other French works on the North-West, published two centuries ago — curious maps and ancient pamphlets of the Great West of the last century — manuscripts of Sir William Johnson, at whose command a hundred years ago thousands of dusky warriors, Borne even from the then far-off regions of Wisconsin, would Hock to the si mdard of King Ceorge — manuscripts of "the accursed Brant," of "Washington, (ircene, Schuyler. Jefferson, old Put, Ethan Allen, and Molly Stark, and many others — narratives of our own Wisconsin pio- neers — historical curiosities from both word — many trophies of our own Wisconsin soldiers, and relics from the battle fields of the Southern rebellion — these, and many more, are every mo- ment more or le d to the danger of fire. Five Historical and Antiquarian Societies of the country have Beoured safe and commo- dious buildings for their libraries and collec- tions, viz : 1. In L819, at the ] I Isaiah Thomas, the munificent founder of the Ameri- can Antiquarian Society, a brick building was erected, at an expense of $10,000, for thi of that Institution. It was W by ■•> feet in size, two stories high, with two ioh20 by 28 feet. After t nirtj upancy of this building, finding thai the Location pro- duce. i ..I tint enlarged accommo- dations were greatly nee. led, the Society made arrangement* for a new building, which was completed in 1858, at a cost of SIS. ODD— of which its President, lion. Stephen Salisbury, contributed (5,000, and the site for the build- ing. It il 60 by 80 feet in size, with a base- ment and main -tory. forty-two feet from the ground to the eaves. The Library numbers 26, • 000 volumes, and ample provision by alcoves and galleries is made for its future increase. 2. The New York Historical Society, the second institution of the kind founded in the country, was without a permanent abode of its own for over fifty years after its organization, its treasures subjected to frequent removals, and liable at all times, in their insecure places of deposit, to be destroyed by fire — and once meeting with a very narrow escape. " In is 17." observes its President, Hon. Luther Bradish, " the New York Historical Society, then comparatively few in numbers, and fee- ble in pecuuiary resources, but deeply impress- ed with the great and increasing value of its Library and collections, and with the danger to which they were exposed, took the incipient steps for the erection of a new fire-proof edi- fice, for the reception and preservation of that Library and those collections, and for the gen- eral accommodation of the Society. This en- terprise, under the circumstances, might well, as it did, to the timid and even prudent, seem hardy. It was indeed bold. For the Society resolved upon an undertaking of great magni- tude and importance, involving a large expen- diture of money, without having in its treasu- ry a single dollar for its achievment. But the Society relied upon the intelligence and known liberality of New York, in the confident belief that her public spirit would not permit an ob- ject of such conceded merit and of so great public concernment, to fail for want of the ne- cessary means for its accomplishment. It was, therefore, determined that au appeal, accom- panied by a statement of facts, should be made to the public generally, and to the friends of historical literature in particular, for aid in the accomplishment of this great object of gen- eral interest. Most nobly did the public of New York respond to this appeal." A noble fire-proof edifice was, in due time, erected, the foundation fund for which was the generous bequest of five thousand dollars by Miss Eliz- abeth DeMilt, a benevolent maiden lady of that city. The total cost of the building alone iras about $70,000, and the site and furniture $15,000 more. It was appropriately dedicated Nov. 8d, 1857, when the historian Bancroft and others took part in the interesting exer- cises. The Library numbers 25,000 volumes. :;. The Mas-aehu*eit* Historical Society, the venerable pioneer of its kind, founded in 1791, pun based, in 1886, the upper portion of a large stone building, about do by s| feet, and completed the purchase of the entire building in 1856, at a cost of $36,000, and has fitted it up tor it* Library, (iallery, and collections — including ■ separate apartment for the splend- id Dowse Library, the free-will gift of the late Thomas Dowse, numbering some. 3, U00 volumes of the choicest editions of the most desirable stand ird works in tho English language. The Society and Dowse Libraries together number 18,000 volume*, •_', 000 unbound pamphlets, and a ( iallery of 7o portraits, mostly of New Eng- land worthies. I. The Maryland Historical Society, found- ed in 1843. erected, in 184S, in conjunction with two other Library societies, ono of which has since transferred its book collections to the Historical Society, an elegant and commo- dious building, at a cost of over $28,000. The Library proper of the Society in 1854 contain- ed 2,123 volumes, of which over 300 were vol- umes of Gazettes, but the Baltimore Library, a miscellaneous collection, has since been transferred to the Society, bringing up the number of its Library to 15,000 volumes, with many manuscripts, and a Gallery of Fine Arts. The rooms of the Society arc furnished in an elegant manner, with solid oak book-cases, ta- bles, and chairs — the furniture alone being valued at $8,000. 5. The Rhode Island Historical Society was founded in 1S22. The State having made a grant of $500, and having had a suitable lot donated for a building site, the Society was stimulated to raise a building fund which, aft- er a few years, was increased to several thou- sand dollars, when, in 1844, a suitable stone edifice. 30J by 50$ feet, was erected for the Society's Library and collections. The Libra- ry numbers 3,000 volumes, including many manuscripts, and valuable files of Rhode Is- land newspapers. Other Historical Societies are moving in the same direction. That of Maine has received from the Legislature of that State a donation of land, which has been sold for $6,000; to aid in the erection of a permanent edifice; the New Jersey Historical Society, founded in 1845, and having about 3,000 volumes, has commenced raising funds for a building; while the Minnesota Historical Society, founded a few months later than ours, has purchased a lot, and commenced securing pledges for the erection of a suitable edifice. With such incentives before us — and several of them by institutions possessing less valua- ble collections than ours — ought we not to feel impelled to make an earnest effort to provide early and safe accommodations for the invalu- able treasures committed to our charge, and which are imperiled every moment until a fire- proof building is secured for their preserva- tion ? If these were once destroyed, no labor or wealth of man could replace a tithe of them. And though we may estimate the total value of our Library and collections, in round num- bers, ai fifty thousand dollars, yet it is a diffi- cult matter to properly estimate such collec- tions hy dollars and cents, when we bear in mind that many of the works could never be duplicated at any price. Some of the volumes have cost as high as sixty dollars, others twen- ty-five, and others twenty, while others, still, have not cost as many cents. Averaging such things, so totally unlike in value, should nev- er be thought of: and estimating the value of a Library by the number of its volumes, would be about as correct as it would bo to estimate its worth by its weight. Milton has left us a suggestive admonition: " As good almost kill a man, as kill » good book: who kills a man, kills a reasonable crea- ture — God's image ; but he who destroys a good book, kills reason itself, kills the image of God, as it were, in the eye.'' If the de- struction of a single good book involves such a loss, what should be thought of our crimi- nality, if by our negligence, our niggardliness, or love of ease, we should permit a whole Li- brary — the largest, with two exceptions, in the entire North West — to be constantly exposed to the dangers and vicissitudes of partial or wholesale destruction by fire? - A Library,'' says Beecher, "is not a luxury, but one of the necessaries of life." As we feel it our incum- bent duty to provide for the comfort, the health, and the safety of ourselves and loved ones, so should we make liberal provision for the safety and usefulness of our public libra- ries. They exert a silent but mighty influence upon the destinies of our race. There are some who, without duly consider- ing what is really needed to meet the present and prospective requirements of a Society like this, imagine that some suitable room in the new Capitol building might be secured for the purpose. The two wings — one completed, and the other soon to be so — oan offer no spare room for this object; nor is there any pros- pect of other portions of the edifice being built within a reasonable timfl to meet our growing wants — and even if aire ,dy erected, they could not afford rooms of stillicient capacity to ac- commodate the Society. When only eight years have transpired since the efficient re-or- ganization of the Society, the rooms now so well filled, and which cover a space of 45 by 66 feet, with alcove accommodations, are al- ready too limited for shelf-room, picture galle- ry, maps, and cabinet of curiosites, to say no- thing nf much needed rooms for Society meet- ings, for package and storage, and fuel and heating purposes. Besides, we need to be ad- monished by the destruction of the Quebec Historical Society, in consequence of the burn- ing of the Canadian Parliament buildings, and of the newspaper and historical gatherings of Henry Stevens, by the burning of the Ver- mont State House, that such a collection as ours should have a building exclusively by it- self, fire-proof throughout, and not rely upon Government buildings for cramped and uncer- tain quarters. Pertinent to the subject under discussion, is the following extract of a letter from Hon. Henry S. Randall, formerly Secretary of State of New York, and author of a valuable and extended Life <>/ Jtfferton, and who. a few years since, presented our Society with one hundred rare and precious manuscript letters of the great chiefs of the Revolution, and pro- posed to make the Society the residuary lega- tee of a still larger collection of historical au- tographs : "But is one all-important thing attended to ? Are you safe from fire ? If not, some unpropitious day will leave your Society 6 and State plundered of these things which eon never btnplacedl If any member of your Bo ciety thinks it an easy thing to pick up these interesting remains of thepastin the highway, let him go 1o work, and see how long it will take him to gel together ncrain only the one hundred letters I sent yon! The chanoes are two to one, that lie will fail, with all the time he chooses to take. It would be B work of the merest chance, to get them together again. — By all manner of mean- have a fireproof building. Don't now look at rize and splendor — but safety. A brick house in an isolated position, with iron shutters and shelves, could be constructed at a very moderate cost, if you will "iily let the fancy work go, and let fancy wait till the next generation. It can't be but your Legislature would make the necessary appropriation. If not, appeal to the public- spirited citizens of your State to raise the ne- cessary means by subscription." "1 am greatly pleased,'' writes Gen. Wm. R. Smith, the venerable historian of Wiscon- sin, " to learn of the late acquisitions to the Society's Library. We daily feel the absolute necessity of a fire-proof building. Our valu- able properties arc now always exposed to ac- cident, and we are never free from absolute danger. How desirable it is that we should be in a condition of safety! Perhaps now is the appointed time, and the generous offer of Gen- -Mills will be the precursor of happy events for our much cherished Historical Soci- ety." " 1 am glad to learn,'' writes our worthy President, I. A. Lapham, "that our Society is making such good progress in filling the Libra- ry with such valuable books and papers. Our collections are now certainly worthy of a bet- ter and more secure place of deposit. I hope the project to erect a fire-proof building may be carried out fully; and the thanks of the Society are due to Gen, Mills for his very libe- ral offer of a lot on whicli to erect it." Hon. Cyrus Woodman, one of the Society's earliest and most Bteadfast friends, writes: "I am much pleased to hear that you are making an effort to secure the necessary means for the erection of a fire-proof building for the Wisconsin Historical Society. The Society has already a collection which is exceeded in value but by few similar collections in the country; and it is altogether too valuable to be exposed, as it now is, to destruction by fire, and the value is every year increasing." "I should regard the loss of the Society's collections," writes Gen. James Sutherland, of Janesville, "as a calamity equal to that of the loss of all the State archives in the Capitol. It has occurred to me, that the State should do something, at least, towards this object; if not, let us, as soon as practicable, commence the erection of a building for that purpose." And in past years, such men as Timothy 0. Howe, John B. Martin, Henry S. Baird, A. A. Towns- end, and C. A. Stevens, have substantially said: 'Such a collection as that of our His torir.nl Society, deserves a fire-proof edifice, and when the Society moves in the matter, we will gladly contribute towards = o desirable an The urgent necessity for a fire-proof edifice is sufficiently patent to all. The real question i- not, therefore, whether such a building is needed, but whether adequate pledges for a Building Fund can be secured in such trying iii as these, when the anxieties of all classes completely absorbed in the herculean efforts to quell the great Southern rebellion? A generous citizen of Madison, — and one of its pioneer settlers — Gen. Simeon Mills, has teudere'i the Society a valuable and suitable corner lot for a building site, provided the So- ciety will erect thereon and enclose a proper building to meet its wants within five years: which offer has been gratefully accepted on the part of the Society, pledging its faithful efforts to raise the needful amount, in the form of notes, without interest, payable in five equal annual installments, and to commence the erection of the building before the close of 1866. It is peculiarly creditable to a country and people to be willing and ready to make sacri- fices for the public good in times of great national distress and calamity. Look at the sacrifices of Prussia! "Prussia," says Ban- croft, "in the hour of its sufferings and its greatest calamities, renovated its existence partly by the establishment of schools." Prom 1808 until 1812, while at the mercy of Napo- leon, the nation was stripped of its revenues, and even robbed of the income of the endow- ments of its literary and benevolent institu- tions, and the whole country literally oppressed and impoverished by its conquerors — yet it is the pride of Prussia, that at the time of her greatest humiliation and distress, her educa- tional advancement, the founding of universi- ties, seminaries, and other public institutions, never flagged for a single moment — the Gov- ernment proclaiming, that they were "con- vinced that liberation from extraordinary ca- lamities is fruitless, and only to be effected by a thorough improvement of the people's edu- cation." Similar sacrifices were freely made by our Revolutionary fathers all through their perilous contest with the mother country. In the month of December, 1770, at one of the gloom- iest and most critical periods of the war, when Philadelphia was threatened by the British, and just before Washington and his little band re-crossed the Delaware to attack the enemy at Trenton, the Pennsylvania Council of Safety. then assembled at Philadelphia, while almost literally in session day and night, meeting at U o'clock in the morning, providing arms, am- munition, blankets, clothing and provisions for the winter campaign, and hurrying forward new levies of troops — at this time, as the Council of Safety justly termed it, of "eminent public danger, " and a tunc too of tho direst poverty of the people, they unanimously resolved to open the public schools, declaring that "the education of youth should bo carried on as usual." Such were the bright examples of the self- sacrificing spirit of our patriotic forefathers — examples all the more honorable as they shone forth so conspicuously at a period of such universal public gloom, and amid the wide-spread poverty and sufferings of a strug- gling people. It would seem, that in such times of great public calamity, men lose much of their ordinary selfish and sordid love of property, — perhaps, because, in part, of the precarious tenure by which it is held, but more particularly because of the powerful ap- peals the very times and circumstances make to their latent generous impulses — and thus, while liberally providing for the wants of i heir struggling country, they also provide for the education of their children, and the found- ing and maintenance of needful public institu- tions. Wealth and means thus consecrated, cannot but prove in a high degree beneficial to a grateful and appreciative people. We now appeal to the friends of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin for pledges for the building fund. Precious treasures have been committed to our charge, and the heroic devotion of the sons of Wisconsin on the bat- tle-fields of the pending contest, are constant- ly bringing new additions to these historic stores, in the shape of narratives and trophies ; and we arc responsible to our predecessors, to the present generation, and to those who suc- ceod us, for the faithful preservation of these priceless collections. "Trustees for the Past and Future, let us in the Present secure the records of the first for the instruction of the [ait. I. A. Laphah, .Milwaukee, Wm. It. Smith. Mineral Point, IIknkv S. Baied, Green Bay, Jambs Sitthbblahd, Janesville. <; i 0BO1 Q U.B, (ialesville, Chablxb Dubxbx, Kenosha, (i. W. Hazleton, Columbus, Lyhah C. Dbapbb, Madison, I'rANK H. FlRMIN, 0. M. COHOVBB, Daniel S. DiRRir.. II. S. Orton, Simeon Mills, Gfao. H. Smith, David At wood, James D. Butleh. Gborce Hter, Horace Rublee, .Jons' Y. Smith, Gbo. P. Dblaplaihb, J. Alder Ellis, F. G. Tibbits, < '. l'>. Chapman, S. ('•. Benedict, D. J. Powers, S. V. Shi p.man, John D. Gurnee, II. W. Tenney, Executive < "iimmiil K . M IDISON, Sept. 15, 1862, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 016 097 927 6 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 016 097 927 6