Ohio Is Secretly Strange
The independent historian Shawn Wilbur has just posted a pamphlet by Ernest Crosby on one of my favorite side alleys of American history: the career of Samuel M. "Golden Rule" Jones, co-founder of the Ohio Oil Company and mayor of Toledo from 1897 to 1904. Jones is notable for trying to mix two intellectual traditions that aren't easily combined, the pacifist anarchism of Leo Tolstoy and the regulatory reformism of the Progressive Era. In Crosby's words,
Although Mayor Jones repudiated all force, he still saw in the state "the only instrument through which the people may express their love for one another." His ideal was undoubtedly a state free from all imputation of force.
In practice, this meant he passed a lot of standard-issue Progressive reforms—a minimum wage, an eight-hour day, free kindergartens—but didn't like putting people in jail. "The charter of Toledo provided that in the absence of the police justice the mayor could occupy his place," Crosby writes, "and on several occasions he did so." Those were the best days to be arrested in Toledo:
On the next court day three men were brought before him on charges of burglary and petty larceny, and two of them pleaded guilty….On the following morning before going to the court room the Mayor went to the turnkey's office, and calling the three men before him he gave them a good talk. "He reminded the Wilsons," says the newspaper reporter, "it was a crime to steal from the poor, at least that was the way his argument sounded" (but perhaps the reporter missed its full effect). "He spoke to the men at length, and then, shaking hands all round, told them to go home and be good citizens." No announcement of any decision was made in court, but on the docket the Mayor entered the words, "dismissed, sentence reserved," the meaning of which is perhaps a little hazy.
On this day another case came before him involving the misdemeanor of using a gambling device in the form of a "penny-in-the-slot" machine. The Mayor was very impatient of the time consumed by the lawyers, and apparently was not much shocked by the transgression. "The best way to dispose of this case in my opinion," he said in conclusion, "is to turn the machine over to the owner and let him stand it face to the wall….The defendant is dismissed."
After this went on for a while, Crosby reports, the state of Ohio repealed the law allowing the mayor to serve as a magistrate.
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"the only instrument through which the people may express their love for one another."
No.
If only Michigan had won the "Toledo War".
Well, at least pastors didn't get shot while trying to drive away from police officers under his watch...am I right?
I know there was a fad at the time for sobriety and a push for prohibition tied to the progressives, but why does US politics at the turn of the last century make me think that eveyone was drink or stoened all the time?
Being from Ohio, I can tell you its strangeness is no secret.
EJM,
Michigan did win the Toledo War. That is why Ohio got stuck with Toledo.
Exactly, robc.
Samuel M. Jones... Carleton S. Finkbeiner...
Not seeing a whole lot of difference...
In practice, this meant he passed a lot of standard-issue Progressive reforms -- a minimum wage, an eight-hour day, free kindergartens -- but didn't like putting people in jail.
Essentially Detroit 2009.
the Mayor went to the turnkey's office, and calling the three men before him he gave them a good talk.
This is what happens in every incident Radley Balko finds.
I love my state.
I hate your state, Warty. It is as warped and soiled as everything else you've ever touched.
Xeones, I guess we'll have to agree to disagree.
Wait, I'm sorry, that's not what I meant to say. What I meant to say is that you can go fuck your mother with a red-hot poker.
we do have what seems to be a disproportionate amount of Ohioans here. I declare Libertarian Jihad against Gov. Strickland's office. Our official uniform will be black leather jackets.
http://www.timepolls.com/hppolls/archive/poll_results_372.html
Just keep hitting next...
The (secret?) strangeness would explain the seemingly above-average amount of Ohio libertarians.
Ah, yes, the first War Between the States. Toledo wound up not being the hub of any important canal route, and Mich. got a lot more valuable U.P. land than otherwise.
On the subject of Mich. hx, I once addressed a post card for my friend Nancy in Mich. to "Upper Canada". It got thru.
If you like to learn about obscure American wars, look up the Cortina Wars. People actually got shot in those.
Ohio still has Mayor's Courts:
http://www.ua-ohio.net/resservices/mayor/default.asp
Ohio can't be all bad. the Busse Knife Company in located in Wauseon, there are more pizza places in Ohio than any other state according to Food Network, and of course the Brown and Bengals, eternal whipping boys of the almighty Steelers.
Definitely agree, Tomcat1066