A large scrapbook that once belonged to prominent Sanduskian M.F. Cowdery is preserved at the Sandusky Library Archives Research Center. The scrapbook contains a compilation of biographical sketches, engravings, poems, and religious passages, many from newspapers. Some entries are patriotic and others are written from an abolitionist perspective. Many articles and poems are sentimental in nature, bringing to mind thoughts of home and family. Below is a portion of a tribute to Dean Richmond, a former New York Central Railroad official who died in 1866.
Echoes is a poem written by Marian Ross, and originally appeared in a New York newspaper in October of 1866.
The tribute to General James McPherson, a native of Clyde, Ohio who died
during the siege of Atlanta in the Civil War, was first published in the Memphis Avalanche. The article points
out that General McPherson had been brave and gallant, even though it was
written by someone from the South.
This poem was dedicated to “the cause of truth by Datus Kelley and his wife” by Mrs. Frances D. Gage on October 23, 1861. Kelley was the namesake for Kelleys Island, where he acquired and developed land, and lived from 1836 to his death in 1866.
Marcellus F. Cowdery was superintendent of schools for Sandusky City Schools in the 1860s.
He was also associated with the Western School Supply Company, which was a forerunner of the American Crayon Company. It is interesting to see what types of articles were important to an early educator in our community in the nineteenth century.
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