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by Lorle Porter
In the late 1700s, the Ohio Country beckoned to thousands of immigrants who longed for a piece of land and the right to live by their beliefs. The trail of their migration into this promised land is the basis for the complete story of the Scotch-Irish and their contributions to Eastern Ohio. The forging of Zane's Trace, the settlement of towns such as New Concord, Norwich, Otsego, Zanesfield, Cambridge, and Lancaster - to name a few, the building of the National Road, and the importance of the railroads play large parts in this story. Early settlers and the stamp they made on these areas are followed closely throughout the story, with special attention to pre- and post-war information. An additional historic side-trip involves the Underground Railroad stations in Eastern Ohio, as well as the people who participated in this endeavor. The author provides an excellent history of the Presbyterian Colleges in the area and their roles throughout the decades. An unusually large number of Scot
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Georgia Hunter
Aeschylus