Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH)

 - Class of 1925

Page 15 of 248

 

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 15 of 248
Page 15 of 248



Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 14
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Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

9 fb will W 'fs 1Ze1b?!liff'.L92 25 Mm 1lf4.5?ifW1l'1vfff, qifsfa' s at 1 9' 1-f-13'11g+w-fwa.4.ff',a11lfll'!0l iw-'Axis - c Ti ff -14 1-. --r-aft. :ge-f'zf Mr'?l 1- 1-1131--M -11-wazg422 i21fZi:1l15I1Zill, ,yi H, Q QM illfh 1-,rlf:??6:WffqZfQZ28,fi--,Eli ' 6 'QW lllii s. 1 ' 1?iy:w ?!1lWf'l1 5' i- 'fif 1ls1l.l1lZ,f' K if a ria - -- fm1.e11lE?l! TWA A --s,a,,f .I V N if 1- 'vim' Jews' 11- :fe .A,. S '1 if 1 X L if. - 12.11 1 , 'qw' 11,1 X JJ, ,fee f as ,ffm 1. 1 ' ,jf gififff ,yy be , fiwtvlieffl, fl' .fe .1 ffm W N .,l,,!11 ' 1 WY OLD SETTLEFTS CABIN hIiami, which he judged to be too strong for at- tack, and he built Fort Industry. The site of the blockhouse is now at Summit and Monroe Streets. By this time, immigration began to pour into northwestern Ohio, covered wagons were a common sight. Among these settlers were Peter Navarre, famous trapper, and scout, Louis Burdo, and others. Navarre found the Ottawa Indians occupying the east side of the river, one of their villages being built where VVaite High School now stands. The Bowl, well-known in Rock. The battle of Fallen Timbers, as the engagement is called, was so destructive to the red men that they were compelled to accept the enerny's terms, which included the surrender of tracts of land for trading posts, and the right of way between them. Une of these tracts is in the heart of Toledo's downtown district. After routing the Indians, General VVayne drifted down the river past the British Fort 9 f 4 ,V Lf , K Q jf ff' ITWMLZ Mg' .1 V11 ,Qc -. Z . ,kg ,feb 3 11 r V- 062 J -if M! '11 10 ,110 1. X 4 31111 .1 51' 112 f l I 'Al f f 1, 11t f1 1 illllf if 1 f LDEANjw1:,:3,,I,1,,11,:1 11 ,I 1 U 'ar Q lit-1 I 1 -Q, I W- 914' XT' T3'r1a1fI4 1 ff f 'l:, ,M XP X '1 ,,', I lfsfuif 'Q ,V ,jii,'f t-fi' J 1 ' ' , ii .x-sf I,,,.,xX.f?ir, ,VI ,, va, 1 2 'f,f'., 'A-NM. ,ral ' ' ,1 114 itxviwg f fo o t b a l l ,I ,, ,, , . . - 1' 1. 1-M, 24: I 1,',. 5-P1 ' , gt 2 , H, l1 1 s 1 o r y , ,,, 1fgA134,l 1, if w a s a 'W -11' if 11.fl Q?'1flXlf'1'1 MP4,-g 1' ML it 1 My 1.-31 W . I -+1?y1i'w,1f4 . 54,1 st ' . . G 'W 4 1 'ilww FIM' , d I C .l I ,, ,aj .14 141.1 1,3 t ...U ' V l 'Wil' ' s w ll 111 p. M W' i t l1 ' '1'-'A' ' W it 1. s' l s 5 1' I R Fe' il' E if 21 l We 1 Jil ,wt X Q -. ,1 V X,1..1:I ' ffm ,. y ., .,,. f' 1-1 s '- - 1 we--ff -' 1. ,,,a..4Q X, ,221-'nfs 57- Tj! , 1-1 s-.l ,,.,,.1-51,61 -S as -..sts 1 1 ' - 15' 1 ' 1' , N in I KI , fl 1 it il! - by 11 ,l, ,,3g i,- -I rea- 'e eeee e i1 v-..q.ffv be 1 U Sw- Y ' ' ' f ni Muir 4 VVAITE EOVVL the YVar of PETER NAVARRE I 1812 came another Indian uprising in the region around the Great Lakes. At the RIaumee rapids, General Harrison took per- sonal command of the army of the North- west. The massacre at the Raisin River, the two sieges of Fort KIeigs, and other his- toric conHicts show that this territory was saved to civilization through a pathway of blood. Fort Nfeigs was the rallying poi11t for troops, the storehouse for supplies, tl1e Gibraltar of the Maumee. lt rolled back British invasion while Perry was building his fleet on the shores of Lake lirie. It was

Page 14 text:

W., 'fflvzfiir 4? ' wwf? Wald ,, ii 74 ,- 71: 5 fi 'iJ4gg-' if 2 M ': J' ff.-'.. 1 , 4' ,-ftk ---'-' -X 'Xa---J if-ff' ' 41' - lt ., 5. 411 ' A .,.:.. af: ' 'Q' f 'f M Mis ' fa V M541 5 ni, ng ',4g:mN.iqv--I-A-1, K vi-V .- ' aw, .,,,,f ' Kiln- -' f 57311 y In p f-4jT,, ,fy,wf,N f- . 4 ' f ' 'Q 31 1, ,mf lun., lvl, W ,lj ' 'Y ' fgb' f ll l ' l i T t - ' l P 1121? , -ffrfww' iw - y- iff iii, 'l . . , , , 1 Trologue It is a matter of history that even before the landing of the Pilgrims, the region of the Great Lakes had been visited by French explorers and traders. These early voyagers were followed by Lasalle, who built a stockade at the Mau- mee rapids, and passed the winter there. From this time on, both French and English pioneers established trading posts, and claimed the region east of the Mississippi in the name of their king. Then followed nearly one hundred years of warfare and massacre between the two rival nations, aided by the Indians. This stage of the turmoil was closed by a treaty of peace, in which all the land east of the Nlississippi passed into the hands of the English. After the Revolutionary War, the invasion of the Nlaumee valley by the white man was so rapid that the Indians, seeing their land disappear by unfair means, formed a secret alliance to exterminate their foe. Affairs became so bad that President Vlfashington sent General Anthony Wayne to protect the frontier and put down these Indian attacks. The little army of Americans bravely began the subjugation of the valley. At Roche-de-Boeuf, now the site of Wvaterville, they adopted a plan of procedure, after a last attempt at a peace council had failed. Slowly General YVayne ad- vanced down the Maumee until the lndians, under Chief Turkeyfoot, made at last stand at a spot where a recent storm had felled many of the forest trees. Today the scene of the encounter is marked by the historic boulder, Turkeyfoot FWL, a N A - 33- , 1 lf,pfvf.5 .f ,. w'1f 'YfP'T..e?2. 1-.Zia-'ff ' A l ' -'sf - 'fart ,' ' ,V '-74- r -fliliwf-1' ' ' weak - 19?4'TQ'il15iit1WWf'f.:s4: '42'-'f-2l 't-fn. -ff: 1' we Ce ff - e ' e ' ,itfiwcb '1-ef f . 1- :def ,-My 4 - . W. 4. -'rt-.W eldlgtfiqfiw N .0 ,, ' luliex- L'2-'TQ L ' - f -T T 2 51 4-. . . ' Y-- - . ' ' -- , , K W -,Q-ef rwfg a-tq.f,Q-.L. TigQf. - -Q f -15,3-1: if :fr vt -'a T Q, 'Ti-'T??1 ' ' '--- ' ., ' 22555275 ' 1 ' ifhaffl' :.. , ',,. Y-, f er.?i-52'-??g?i3tfa-Qi' i -f T Agf? .q f'T' l?-1: L- ' '- - ,E 4-1-frf:i:gg2?1 ' ' ' 45-,Y 1 5' I ' '1 i-.?.?- Q' ' B . V ::+iTY1-ei FxoeHE-Ds- BOEUF



Page 16 text:

to General Harrison at Fort hfeigs E that Commodore Perry sent his world- ' 5' f famed dispatch when the British ','v lowered their colors at Put-in-Bay: C, We have met the enemy and they ,my -T T are oursll' All honor to old Fort Meigs! , h .- lf :dv . lg M- ' m f, A 1, 1d.Aftertthe. depgatrlatltion of peace, , ,l,5,1?fL!fff -I ,lvl so iers re Ll.I'11Htg f Heir gornes gavs fT,,,j,,f, -. gowing accoun s o e eauty an ' ll! ,fgwfl Ma. fertility of the hfaumee Valley, its CANNON FROM PERRY5 FLAGSH' P forests, and its game, so that immigra- tion to the region increased steadily. The history of transportation in the Valley centers about the development of trade on natural and artificial waterways. To make one's way through north- western Ohio in the early part of the nineteenth century was extremely hazardous. Besides the danger of encountering hostile Indians, swamps and almost un- broken forests obstructed travel. River and lake shipping was made easily possible by the abundance of timber both for building purposes and for fuel. It was only to be expected that the pioneers should take advantage of natural resources, to establish and maintain communication with the rest of the country. The first craft to ply the Maumee for commercial purposes was the schooner Black Snake, Jacob Wilkinson, master. She sailed up the river, landing a number of immigrant families at Fort lyfeigs. The first steamboat on the Great Lakes was built to run between Buffalo and the foot of the lhfaumee rapids. Launched in 1818, the W'alk-in-the-Wlater attempted to navigate the Maumee river, but was unable to get farther than the mouth of Swan Creek because of the shallowness of the water. This proved a great disappointment to ' her owners who had purchased a tract of land V , below Perrysburg, and had laid out a town which was to have become a great commercial 4 ' metropolis. V, X, The history of shipbuilding in the valley ' . begins when the sloop hfiami was launched at 'A , I, K Perrysburg. The town, for years afterward, g f ' A ' was important as a shipbuilding center. The X, launching of the hffiami was the beginning of a j ' Y ' great industry which reached its climax during if the World VVar, when the Toledo Shipbuilding Company took the lead in building Lake ,f Type vessels for the emergency fleet. The Nliami would appear like a toy beside one of the leviathans of our inland seas. f Until the completion of the hliami and , ,,n,-, l IWEQQ Erie Canal, Toledo was little more than a te .J ,Ji malaria-breeding impoverished town. The fi ,, - . 1 i AF - f , ff,,f,. V415 , , 7 . fl vp waterway rapidly developed into a great M -TJ- ' --,'-' - - W thoroughfare of travel, as many as 4,000 boats FORT M965 MONUMENT clearing Toledo in one year. hffillions of dol-

Suggestions in the Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) collection:

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Waite High School - Warrior Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928


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