Brief Description of Collection
Title:Henry Howe Audiovisual Collection, c. 1803-1880s
Collection Number:P15
Provenance:The Ohio Historical Society acquired the Henry Howe Audiovisual Collection as a gift of Frank Howe, his son, in 1940.
Extent:.75 cubic foot (2 boxes)
Repository:
Ohio Historical Society
1982 Velma Avenue
Columbus, OH 43211
(614) 297-2510
Access:This collection is open under the rules and regulations of the Ohio Historical Society. Antique Photography (AP) items require staff assistance.
Property rights:The Ohio Historical Society owns the property rights to this collection.
Copyrights:Copyrights have not been dedicated to the public. Consideration of the requirements of copyright is the responsibility of the author and publisher.
Citation:Researchers are requested to cite collection name, collection number, and the Ohio Historical Society in all footnote and bibliographic references.
Processed by:Kathleen McIntyre, November 1983
Encoded by:Elizabeth Nelson
Henry Howe was born on October 11, 1816, in New Haven, Connecticut, where his father, Hezekiah Howe, was a bookseller and publisher, His father's financial difficulties forced Howe to leave school when he was fifteen and work in the family printing shop. He left the shop when he was eighteen and became a surveyor for the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad. Howe disliked surveying, however, and took a clerk's position in the New York banking house of Townshend and Nevins, and later in the banking house of Prime, Wards, and King.
In 1840 Howe joined with John Warner Barber to produce a history of New York state; Howe journeyed from county to county collecting data for the book and Barber made sketches for illustrations. Histories of New Jersey and Virginia followed in 1842 and 1845 respectively.
Howe began his history of Ohio in 1846. Starting in Marietta he walked and rode around the state interviewing early settlers, collecting data, and sketching points of interest. Howe returned to New Haven to arrange the material and published Historical Collections of Ohio in 1847. Eighteen thousand copies of the first edition were sold and Howe's book became the standard history of Ohio.
Howe published several travel and adventure books and the following years were successful financially. In 1856 he started work on Our Whole Country, a history of the United States based on the plan used in his state histories. The history was finished in 1861 but was a financial failure. Howe recovered financially by reprinting some of his earlier works and selling subscription books.
Howe began revising his history of Ohio in 1885. He financed the project by selling in advance 200 copies of the revised history at ten dollars each. In March 1887, he finished his travels in Ohio and began preparing the manuscript for publication. The work was larger and more costly than Howe had anticipated and he appealed to the Ohio legislature for financial aid. The legislature purchased 1200 copies of the first volume of the history for $12,000. By the time the second and third volumes of the history were printed in 1891, Howe was deeply in debt and the work was too expensive for the average person to buy. Howe died on October 14, 1893, leaving his family in debt. The Ohio legislature then bought the plates and copyrights to the book for $20,000 which relieved the family's indebtedness.
Source:Joseph P. Smith, "Henry Howe, the Historian" Ohio Archaeological and Historical Society Publications, volume 4, 977.105 Oh 3.
The Henry Howe Audiovisual Collection consists of 349 albumen prints, pencil sketches, and illustrations, and occupies three-quarters cubic foot. The majority of the photographs presumably were taken in the 1880s when Howe was working on the second edition of Historical Collections of Ohio. Twenty-five cabinet cards and three cartes-de-visite are included in the collection and Appendix I contains a list of photographers who produced them. The collection is divided into two series: Series I, Historical Collections of Ohio illustrations, and Series II, miscellaneous photographs. Captions on the verso of items were transcribed from the images' mounts; the authorship of these captions is unknown.
Detailed Description of Collection
Series I. Historical Collections of Ohio illustrations: the majority of photographs in Series I were used as illustrations in the second edition of Howe's history. [ BOX 1 || BOX 2 ]
Box 1:Folders one through sixteen contain photographs of identified places and buildings in Ohio counties. The material is arranged alphabetically by county name, then by town name within each county, with nature shots of a county placed last. Typical county scenes include views of business districts; the county courthouse; and birthplaces and homes of such people as Ulysses S. Grant, George A. Custer, and Rutherford B. Hayes. There also are photographs of the countryside and points of interest including caves, natural bridges, and rock formations.
Folder 1:
Allen County (3 items)
Ashtabula County (3 items)
Belmont County (5 items)
Brown County (3 items)
Folder 2:
Clark County (1 item)
Defiance County (3 items)
Erie County (5 items)
Fairfield County (3 items)
Folder 3:
Franklin County (13 items) (see also OVS 499 Ohio Statehouse, Columbus, [ca. 1860s])
Geauga County (2 items) (see also AP 159 Tintype view of "Judge Peter Hit[ch]cock's Homestead near Burton, Geauga Co. on Chardin Road, [188-], 11 x 17 cm.)
Greene County (1 item)
Folder 4: includes illustrations from the Cincinnati Illustrated Business Directory Hamilton County (20 items)
Folder 5:
Hancock County (7 items)
Harrison County (4 items)
Henry County (2 items)
Folder 6:
Highland County (9 items)
Hocking County (9 items)
Folder 7:
Holmes County (3 items)
Huron County (5 items)
Jackson County (6 items)
Folder 8: contains pen and pencil sketches in addition to photographs.
Jefferson County (5 items)
Knox County (7 items)
Lake County (1 item)
Folder 9:
Lawrence County (6 items)
Licking County (5 items)
Logan County (2 items)
Folder 10: contains pen and pencil sketches in addition to photographs.
Lorain County (15 items)
Folder 11:
Lucas County (2 items)
Madison County (3 items)
Mahoning County (4 items)
Medina County (2 items)
Meigs County (1 item)
Mercer County (1 item)
Folder 12:
Miami County (6 items)
Monroe County (1 item)
Montgomery County (2 items)
Morgan County (2 items)
Muskingum County (6 items)
Folder 13:
Noble County (1 item)
Ottawa County (3 items)
Paulding County (3 items)
Pickaway County (4 items)
Pike County (2 items)
Portage County (4 items)
Folder 14:
Preble County (3 items)
Putnam County (1 item)
Richland County (4 items)
Sandusky County (6 items)
Folder 15:
Seneca County (2 items)
Shelby County (2 items)
Stark County (4 items)
Summit County (5 items)
Folder 16:
Trumbull County (2 items)
Tuscarawas County (3 items)
Union County (4 items)
Van Wert County (1 item)
Vinton County (3 items)
Warren County (3 items)
Folder 17:
Washington County (8 items)
Wayne County (2 items)
Williams County (2 items)
Wood County (1 item)
Wyandot County (3 items)
Folder 18:
Unidentified county scenes (11 items) Folder 19:
Unidentified county scenes (19 items)
Folder 1: portraits, A-K (15 items)
Platt Benedict
Roeliff Brinkerhoff
James Brownlee
R. P. Buckland
Philender Chase
Otway Curry
Ephraim Cutler
Manasseh Cutler
Daniel Drake
James B. Findlay
Charles Francis Hall
Rutherford B. Hayes
Mrs. Rutherford B. Hayes
Folder 2: portraits, L-Z (12 items)
Nicholas Longworth
Stanley Matthews
Duncan McArthur
Charles P. McIvaine
Robert Patterson
George Hunt Pendleton
Achilles Pugh
I. R. Sherwood
James Barrett Steedman
Alphonso Taft
Durbin Ward
David Zeigler
Box 2:
Folder 3 (16 items):
Connecticut
Virginia
West Virginia
Folder 4:
Henry Howe and family (6 items)
Folder 5:
Miscellaneous sketches, a miniature photograph of a Ulysses S. Grant letter and a ground plan of the old Harrison Mansion at North Bend, Ohio.(18 items)
M. J. Appleton, Dayton, Ohio
Appleton and Hollinger, Dayton, Ohio
J. D. Cadwallader, Marietta, Ohio
Campbell and Camp, Mansfield, Ohio
H. Davis, Cadiz, Ohio
R. Grob, Fremont, Ohio
Ross Hall, Millersburg, Ohio
F. B. Hay, Findlay, Ohio
McKecknie and Oswald, Toledo, Ohio
J. J. Milliken, Bellefontaine, Ohio
Morrison, Bowling Green, Ohio
H. M. Platt, Oberlin, Ohio
Ryder's, Cleveland, Ohio
Falor V. Smedley, Oberlin, Ohio
Walt A. Smith, Newark, Ohio
Teeple, Wooster, Ohio
E. Wetherell, McConnelsville, Ohio
Wickenden, Upper Sandusky, Ohio
For questions on the Audiovisual Collections, email audiovisual@ohiohistory.org