Friday, November 22, 2019

The Pioneers




Unfortunately I missed the opportunity to hear David McCullough speak about his new book in Louisville.  It was just one of those occasions when I wimped out at the last minute and didn't make the drive.  However, I am enjoying the book a lot.  It is a part of history that I didn't know much about.  Many of the original settlers coming into the new Northwest territory were from New England.  And the first settlement was at Marietta....on the Muskingum River.

Marietta is a city in, and the county seat of, Washington County, Ohio, United States. During 1788, pioneers to the Ohio Country established Marietta as the first permanent settlement of the new United States in the Territory Northwest of the River Ohio. Wikipedia



The Old Northwest became U.S. territory in 1783 by the Treaty of Paris ending the Revolution and soon was one of the most pressing problems before the U.S. Congress. The four so-called landed states—Virginia, Massachusetts, New York, and Connecticut—claimed portions of the Old Northwest, while states with no western land claims, especially Maryland, argued that if the claims of the landed states were recognized, the wealth and population of the other states would be attracted to the western lands. The final solution was the cession of all the lands to the U.S. government, which was thus greatly strengthened; New York made its cession in 1780, Virginia in 1784, Massachusetts in 1785, and Connecticut in 1786. Two reserves were kept, the Virginia Military District and the Connecticut Western Reserve in Ohio. The Ordinance of 1785 established the Township System for surveying, which used a rectangular grid system in order to divide the land. 


On July 13, 1787, the Confederation Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance. The act created the Northwest Territory. It also established a form of government and specified how the various parts of the Northwest Territory could become states. The Northwest Ordinance required the creation of at least three but not more than five states from the Northwest Territory. The first state to be formed from the Northwest Territory was Ohio, the seventeenth state of the United States of America. While the United States government had now established how the Northwest Territory would be governed, American Indians living in the area did not consent to American control of the region. From the Northwest Territory's creation in 1787 until well after Ohio statehood in 1803, bloodshed between white settlers and the American Indians already in residence in the region continued in the American Northwest.


The first group of these early American pioneers to the Northwest Territory is sometimes referred to as "the forty-eight" or the "first forty-eight", and also as the "founders of Ohio".[3][4] These first forty-eight men were carefully chosen and vetted by several of the co-founders of the Ohio Company of Associates, Rufus Putnam and Manasseh Cutler, to ensure not only men of high character and bravery, but also men with proven skills necessary to build a settlement in the wilderness


Right now I am reading about the fact that there was a scam early in the settlement of the Northwest Territory.  French settlers arrived in Marietta only to find that the money they had paid was not used to buy land for them.  These settlers moved on down the ohio River and established Galipolis....I will put a date and more information here when I get a chance.

But then I decided I wanted to put a few names to remember into this blog post....and while looking for the names I found the following and didn't want to loose these thoughts:



So it is Manasseh Cutler's son ....hmmm....Elijah is wrong....Elisha is wrong ...but it does start with an E.  Manasseh did not move to Ohio.  But his son did.  And what I was reading today said that there was a point at which there was an election and a group was trying to slide slavery back into Ohio.  And this son was fighting it with everything he had.  And he got sick....and was so sick he could not get out of bed the day of the vote.  But his friends carried him to the site....and he mustered what little he could to speak....and the vote passed by only one vote to prohibit slavery in Ohio.  I will make this better when I get time....but I didn't want to loose the thought.

While Manasseh Cutler never moved, Rufus Putnam did move to Ohio and played a prominent part in the early history.

Friday, November 15, 2019

The Testaments



I liked this sequel to The Handmaiden.  I had forgotten that The Handmaiden was not a new book....but one discovered for the big screen recently.  Again as with the Handmaiden, I liked the fact that the author ended the book with remarks from the far future in which there is a symposium discussing the particular time in history in which this story took place.  There is no doubt that I agree that life does seem to go on even when governments cease to govern.  And that we are all but a speck in the over all story of mankind.

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Convenience Store Woman




I would not say that this was my favorite book ever.  It actually did not entice me as some of the others have.  But I did finish it.  And at the end, I thought that it absolutely said something about society.  I liked the fact that the main character found that she was entirely OK with who she was.  There was a part of me that wanted someone to "find her" and promote her to some sort of job overseeing other convenience stores.  She would have been perfect for that!

But it was Ok that she would just look for a job in some convenience store.  She would get back to living once she found that job.  She would be content to be exactly that person.

Here is the review from Amazon:


Winner of Japan’s prestigious Akutagawa Prize, Convenience Store Woman is the incomparable story of Keiko Furukura, a thirty-six-year-old Tokyo resident who has been working at the Hiiromachi “Smile Mart” for the past eighteen years. Keiko has never fit in, neither in her family, nor in school, but in her convenience store, she is able to find peace and purpose with rules clearly delineated clearly by the store’s manual, and copying her colleagues’ dress, mannerisms, and speech. She plays the part of a “normal person” excellently―more or less. Keiko is very happy, but those close to her pressure her to find a husband and a proper career, prompting her to take desperate action.

Friday, August 9, 2019

Where the Crawdads Sing



I think it was Mitzi who suggested this book for me.  Oh, my gosh.  It is crazy good.  The first night I reached the part where the brother who was closest to Kya's age told her he was leaving.  He couldn't stay.  Everyone had run off except for Pa.  And her brother told Kya (who was six) that he had to leave.  And his advice was to hide from everyone when they came around.  And that she might need to hide from Pa, too.

I couldn't read more.   I called Mitzi to ask what to expect so that I could turn it back on.  And Mitzi reassured me.  This child breaks my heart.  But with Mitzi's reassurance I am continuing to read.






I finished the book last night.  In one way I am disappointed that the author made what was such an amazing book into a murder mystery.  On the other hand the way that Delia made the details unravel was extremely inventive and absolutely ingenious.  I do recommend this book.  It is a very good read.

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Educated


I resisted reading this book.  First I resisted buying the audio version ...or any version for that matter.  Then I resisted starting the book.  And then I found myself unable to turn it on.  And even quit reading at all for a while as I didn't seem to want to start another book nor did I want to listen to this one.

But then all of a sudden I found myself listening for hours.  One could never make up all of the craziness in this book...I guess one could only live it.  The bipolar father who let his children take terrible risks in the scrap yard and on his construction sites....the mother who is damaged but becomes strong.....the family  that stays on Bucks Mountain as "over the top" Mormons.

I will finish the book.  I do find it to be an exceptional book.

So I finished the book today.  It is hard to imagine that Tara is only 28 years old when her memoir is finished.  WOW!  I say prayers for Tara and her family.