fbpx
Wikipedia

Alfred Kelley

Alfred Kelley (November 7, 1789—December 2, 1859) was a banker, canal builder, lawyer, railroad executive, and state legislator in the state of Ohio in the United States. He is considered by historians to be one of the most prominent commercial, financial, and political Ohioans of the first half of the 19th century.

Alfred Kelley
Alfred Kelley
Born(1789-11-07)November 7, 1789
DiedDecember 2, 1859(1859-12-02) (aged 70)
Columbus, Ohio, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Banker, canal builder, lawyer, legislator, railroad executive
Known forBuilding the Ohio and Erie Canal;
saving Ohio from bankruptcy;
establishing the State Bank of Ohio;
Building the Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad

Kelley is known as the "Father of the Ohio and Erie Canal" for his successful legislative attempt to establish the Ohio and Erie Canal. He was one of the canal's first two "acting commissioners", and oversaw its construction and completion. He was the president of Columbus and Xenia Railroad (completed in 1850) and the Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad (completed in 1851), and pushed for a state charter for the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad (later known as the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad). For this, he is known as the architect of Ohio's rail system.

As a member of the Canal Commission Fund, he helped save Ohio from bankruptcy in 1841 and 1842. As a state legislator, he led the investigation into and secured the resignation of two Ohio State Treasurers for financial malfeasance, successfully proposed legislation abolishing imprisonment for debt, created the State Bank of Ohio, reformed the state's tax system, and successfully proposed legislation to create the first state oversight of public education.

Kelley was notably the first lawyer and prosecuting attorney in Cleveland. He became the youngest member of the Ohio General Assembly at the age of 25, and returned to the legislature numerous times, until he became the oldest serving in the assembly.

Early years Edit

 
Joshua Stow, who encouraged his nephew Alfred Kelley to emigrate to Ohio

Alfred Kelley was born in Middlefield, Connecticut, on November 7, 1789, to Daniel and Jemima (née Stow) Kelley.[1] He was the second of six children (all boys).[2] The Kelleys were of English descent,[3] having lived in Connecticut since at least 1690.[4] The Stows were an important English land-owning family which emigrated to Massachusetts in 1630 and then Connecticut in 1650.[5]

Alfred's uncle, Silas Stow, was the land agent for Nicholas Low, who owned the township that later became Lowville, New York. At the urging of Silas Stow,[6] the Kelleys moved to Lowville in the winter of 1798–1799.[7] Daniel built and operated a gristmill, and Jemima dispensed medication and medical treatment to the settlers in the area.[8] Having attended public school in Middlefield and Lowville,[9] Alfred enrolled at Fairfield Academy in Fairfield, New York, in 1804.[10] Daniel Kelley was appointed a judge of the New York Court of Common Pleas in 1805, and held various other public offices in Lowville and Oneida County.[11][a] The Kelleys became moderately wealthy.[7] In 1807, Alfred began the study of law under Jonas Pratt, a judge of the New York Supreme Court.[9]

Daniel Kelley was increasingly unhappy with the Stow family's liberal religious views, which were beginning to influence his sons.[10] Another of Alfred's uncles, Joshua Stow, was one of the original investors in the Connecticut Land Company.[12] By royal charter, the Connecticut Colony laid claim to most of the lands west of the colony between the 41st and 42nd parallels of north latitude. In 1786, Connecticut ceded all its land claims to the government of the United States[13] in exchange for cancellation of its American Revolutionary War debts.[14] Connecticut retained only those lands known as the Connecticut Western Reserve, an area bounded by Lake Erie on the north, Pennsylvania on the east, and the 41st parallel of north latitude on the south. The Western Reserve extended for exactly 120 miles (190 km) to the west, and came to an abrupt halt.[13][b] On August 3, 1795, the state of Connecticut sold the Western Reserve to the Connecticut Land Company for $1.2 million ($20,700,000 in 2022 dollars).[13] Joshua Stow was a member of the party led by Moses Cleaveland which surveyed the Western Reserve in 1796.[12] Encouraged by his uncle's descriptions of the lush lands of the Western Reserve,[12] Alfred's eldest brother, Datus, traveled to the nascent settlement of Cleveland in early 1810. Although he returned almost immediately,[15] Alfred emigrated to Cleveland in May 1810.[16] He made the journey on horseback, accompanied by Joshua Stow and a medical student, Jared Potter Kirtland.[9]

Business and legal career in Cleveland Edit

Alfred Kelley was admitted to the bar on November 7, 1810. He was the first lawyer to practice in Cleveland. The local court immediately appointed him prosecuting attorney for Cuyahoga County—a position he held until 1822.[9][c] In one of his most notable cases, he prosecuted a slave-hunter for kidnapping in 1820. He won the case.[17]

In 1811, Kelley and 16 others formed the first library association in Cuyahoga County. (It lasted about four years.)[18]

Largely through the efforts of Kelley,[19] Cleveland was incorporated as a village by the state of Ohio on December 23, 1814. The village's first elections were held on June 5, 1815, and Kelley was elected the first president of the village unanimously.[20][d] Kelley held the position only a few months, resigning on March 19, 1816.[9][21][e]

 
House built in Cleveland by Alfred Kelley about 1814.

Kelley bought several properties in and around Cleveland. In 1814, he purchased a parcel of land near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River. This property was defined by Water Street (now W. 9th Street) in the east, W. Lakeside Avenue on the south, the Cuyahoga River on the west, and Lake Erie on the north.[18] Kelley constructed a home on this land in 1816. It was only the second brick house in the village of Cleveland.[24][25] The structure was intended as a residence for his parents, but his mother died before it was completed. Kelley and his wife took up residence there instead, occupying the house until 1827.[24][f] Kelley and his brothers Datus and Irad formed a general store in January 1815.[27] They erected a brick building on Superior Avenue at the intersection with Bank Street (now W. 6th Street).[28][g] Kelley also purchased a peninsula on the west bank of the Cuyahoga River,[24] where he established a farm.[30] In 1833,[31] he sold most of this land to local merchant Joel Scranton.[24][32] The area thereafter became known as "Scranton Flats"[32] or the "Scranton Peninsula".[33]

Kelley was a major investor in and helped organize the Commercial Bank of Lake Erie (also known as the Commercial Bank of Cleveland) in August 1816.[34][35] It was the first bank in Cleveland.[36] The bank survived the Panic of 1819, but its finances were in such disarray that it was reorganized in 1820.[37][h] Kelley was named one of 11 members of the reorganized bank's board of directors,[37] and elected the bank's president in 1823.[34][35] The bank's charter expired in 1842, its affairs wound up, and its assets distributed to its investors in 1845.[37]

The same year that Kelley helped organize the Commercial Bank, he and 13 others formed the Cleveland Pier Company to build a pier into Lake Erie. This structure, located at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River, was erected on sand without pilings and storms soon destroyed it.[22]

On March 2, 1817, Kelley met with eight others in Brooklyn Township to form an Episcopal congregation named Trinity Parish.[38] Holding services in the township, Cleveland, and occasionally in the village of Euclid, it was the first Christian church formally organized in Cuyahoga County.[39]

Early legislative career Edit

In October 1814,[40] Alfred Kelley was elected to the Ohio House of Representatives.[41] He was the youngest member of the state legislature,[42] barely old enough to meet the Ohio constitution's age requirement for holding public office.[43] He was re-elected in 1815[44] and 1816.[45][i]

Kelley did not seek office in 1817 or 1818, but was elected again to the House in 1819. He served a single term,[46] and did not run for reelection. His legislative accomplishments in this short period were numerous. Kelley successfully proposed that the Ohio House create a finance committee, and the members elected him its first chair. Within weeks, he authored a report which argued for taxation of land according to value and not use.[47] No action was taken on the report; it would not be until 1846 that the state's property tax laws were changed.[48] Kelley was also one of five members of the legislature appointed to a special committee to investigate financial malfeasance by Hiram M. Curry, the Ohio State Treasurer, and his predecessor, William McFarland, both of whom had incurred substantial deficits, embezzled funds, and exhibited incompetence.[49] Curry resigned, the first state official to do so for corruption.[50] Some of Kelley's legislative proposals were less successful. He introduced the first bill barring imprisonment for debt, but it did not pass.[25][51][52][53] He also supported a bill to allow free African Americans to testify in court against white citizens, but this also did not win enactment.[54]

Involvement with the Ohio & Erie Canal Edit

Support for a north-south canal in Ohio Edit

In 1816, the state of New York asked the state of Ohio's aid in building the Erie Canal. The request was referred to the Ohio House committee on public works, which was chaired by Kelley. He wrote a report endorsing the project, but the Ohio General Assembly did not act on New York's request.[55] Kelley and others came to believe that a canal linking the Ohio River with Lake Erie would greatly benefit Ohio. They frequently communicated with New York Governor DeWitt Clinton and those building the Erie Canal, and circulated glowing reports about construction progress and the ease with which financing was obtained. They also worked to build a coalition strong enough to overcome parochial opposition to an Ohio canal.[42]

In one of his first acts as Governor of Ohio, in December 1818 Ethan Allen Brown proposed construction of a canal between the Ohio River and Lake Erie. A financial panic occurred between March and August 1818[56] that led to a severe national recession (known as the Panic of 1819) that militated against any consideration of a major spending bill like the canal.[42] The recession finally eased in the spring of 1821.[57]

Role on the investigating commission Edit

 
Micajah Williams

Kelley was elected to the Ohio Senate in 1821[58] and again in 1822.[59] On January 31, 1822,[52] the Ohio General Assembly passed legislation authorizing the appointment of a commission to investigate the feasibility of building the canal proposed by Governor Brown. Five different routes were described in the authorization bill, and the commission was charged with assessing each of them. The seven individuals appointed to the commission[60] were Ethan Allen Brown, newly sworn in on January 3 as a U.S. Senator;[61] Ebenezer Buckingham Jr., who had surveyed much of central Ohio;[62] former Madison County judge Isaac Miner; former U.S. Senator Jeremiah Morrow;[63] former Ohio State Senator and prominent Steubenville attorney Benjamin Tappan;[64] former governor and U.S. Senator Thomas Worthington;[65] and Alfred Kelley. Morrow resigned after being elected governor of Ohio in the fall of 1822, and was replaced by Micajah Williams, a Cincinnati banker,[66] on January 27, 1823.[67]

Kelley drafted the report of the investigatory commission.[68] He grasped the need for a statewide (not regional or local) transportation network, and realized that only the state government could be the catalyst for making this improvement.[69] His expansive vision for the state was moderated by a strong commitment to careful planning and strong cost–benefit analysis.[70]

Kelley and Williams did most of the work of the investigating commission. They examined[71] and surveyed routes,[60][j] collected data, wrote economic studies, and analyzed construction techniques to determine the best means of building the canal.[68] Kelley traveled to New York to see the kind of construction technology used there,[72][73] consulted with Erie Canal construction supervisors and state officials, and procured as much information as he could on how the canal was financed.[73] Kelley purchased engineering and surveying instruments from firms on the East Coast, identified engineers available to work on the canal, and obtained a $1,400 ($34,199 in 2022 dollars) appropriation for the State Library of Ohio so it could purchase books on canal engineering and construction. This work gave Kelley critical insight into the importance of design and the mastery of detail.[74]

The investigating commission issued its report on January 21, 1824.[73] The report recommended that the northern terminus be near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River. The canal route followed the Cuyahoga from Cleveland to Akron, the Tuscarawas River from Akron through Dover to Coshocton, the Muskingum River from Coshocton to Zanesville, and the Licking River from Zanesville to Newark. The proposed route then proceeded overland from Newark south to Licking Summit Reservoir (now Buckeye Lake) and then overland again to Baltimore and Carroll before turning northwest toward Canal Winchester. Thereafter, the report recommended that the canal generally follow Big Walnut Creek to Columbus, and then the Scioto River south from Columbus through Chillicothe to Portsmouth on the Ohio River. The investigating commission also recommended simultaneous construction of the Miami and Erie Canal from Cincinnati at least as far as Dayton.[70]

Opponents of the canal accused Kelley and other investigating commissioners of recommending a route along which they already owned land, enriching themselves.[75] These accusations appear unfounded. The commission had surveyed the other routes and extensively documented their unfeasibility,[73][76] and historian Harry N. Schreiber has observed that there is no evidence in the commission's papers or Kelley's private correspondence to suggest any impropriety.[75] Nor did the report actually designate Cleveland as the northern terminus. Instead, it required the canal to be built along the route with the most water.[75][k]

To placate its critics, the investigating commission had the route between Sandusky and Columbus resurveyed by a new engineer. Once more, the investigating committee rejected this route as lacking enough water to sustain the canal.[75] The investigating commission issued its updated report on January 8, 1825.[77]

Canal commissioner Edit

 
Map of the Ohio and Erie Canal (in red)

The Ohio General Assembly approved legislation on February 4, 1825, authorizing construction of the Ohio & Erie Canal.[78] The same day, the legislature adopted a bill to reconstitute the investigating commission as the Canal Commission, with authority to oversee financing and construction of the canal. Canal Commission members included Kelley; newcomer Nathaniel Beasley, a former surveyor and soldier who had served several terms in both chambers of the General Assembly;[79] newcomer John Johnston, a former Indian agent with extensive landholdings in Miami County;[80] Miner; Tappan; Williams; and Worthington.[81][l] The Canal Commission picked two of their members, Kelley and Williams, to be "acting commissioners", individuals with direct supervision over canal construction.[82] The two men located the actual canal route, negotiated for and purchased land, wrote engineering specifications for the canal bed and locks, advertised for and awarded contracts, purchased supplies, and supervised the engineers and surveyors in the employ of the state who worked on the canal.[m] The raising of funds through the issuance of bonds and stock was the legal responsibility of a separate Canal Fund Commission, but in practice the Canal Fund Commission delegated most of its power to Kelley and Williams.[84]

Kelley and Williams accomplished two major tasks in 1825. The first was to purchase or obtain a right of way to the land needed for the canal. The Canal Commission did not formally select the northern route of the canal until May 1825, and until that happened Kelley and Williams had to solicit land along both the Black and Cuyahoga rivers. They were highly successful, and managed to have significant amount of land donated (rather than sold).[85][n] Kelley himself donated about a third of his remaining Scranton Flats land for the project.[42] Kelley and Williams also established a large, professional bureaucracy to construct and finance the canal. In the United States in the early 1800s, state governments employed only a few dozen people. Kelley and Williams made recommendations to the full commission regarding organizational structure, staffing, and the duties of each job. The commission invariably followed their guidance, and in so doing allowed Kelley and Williams to create the first large bureaucracy in Ohio history.[83]

Work on the Ohio & Erie Canal commenced on December 10, 1825.[82] Ohio was underdeveloped and starved for capital,[87][88] and there was not nearly enough private money in the state to make even a small domestic bond sale successful. Kelley and Williams had to spend money judiciously. Rather than market all or a large portion of the necessary bonds immediately, the Canal Fund Commission decided to float only $400,000 ($10,700,000 in 2022 dollars) worth of bonds. These bonds were offered at a high rate of interest to attract buyers. The hope was that, as segments of the canal became operational and substantial toll income was generated, the bonds would become more attractive and the interest rate on future offerings would necessarily fall.[89][o] Work on the Cleveland-to-Akron segment began first.[p] Kelley fought against constant pressure from politicians and the press to spread finances and workforce thin and work on all segments of the canal at the same time.[84] The "acting commissioners" also had to overcome unexpected labor shortages and contractors who abandoned their work.[84]

 
Kelley's topographical map of Ohio

Through his hands-on work on the canal, Kelley became so well acquainted with the geography of Ohio that he authored the first comprehensive topographical map of the state in 1826. The other canal commissioners agreed to allow it to be published. Kelley tried to have the map published by a printer in the state of Delaware, but was embarrassed to discover that the Ohio General Assembly claimed copyright of his document.[91]

The Cleveland-to-Akron portion of the canal opened in July 1827, ahead of schedule. The high quality work, lack of corruption, and budget-conscious construction impressed investors, making it easier to sell canal bonds in the future.[84] The responsibility for setting toll rates on the new canal also fell to Kelley and Williams.[92] Impressed with the efficiency and speed of Ohio canal construction, the federal government agreed donate public land to the state with the stipulation that this land be sold to aid canal construction. Almost 421,400 acres (1,705 km2) were donated along the route of the Miami Extension Canal,[q] almost 292,700 acres (1,185 km2) along the Wabash and Erie Canal, and another 500,000 acres (2,000 km2) throughout the state for other canals.[94]

In 1832, the Ohio & Erie Canal was finished, except for the final lock at Portsmouth. Work on the Miami and Erie Canal was also complete, except for the lock connecting the Great Miami and Ohio Rivers at Cincinnati.[95] Kelley contracted malaria in his first years of work on the canal,[96] and in 1832 his health was so poor that canal commission meetings had to be held at his home.[97] In their 1832 annual report to the state legislature, Kelley and Williams proposed that the Canal Commission be abolished and a new commission, consisting entirely of politically neutral engineers, be established to oversee future construction and operation. This was one of only a handful of recommendations the two made which the General Assembly refused to adopt.[98]

With work on both canals completed in 1833,[84] and in poor health,[25] Kelley resigned from the Canal Commission on January 24, 1834 (effective March 1).[99] For his role in authorizing and construction the Ohio and Erie Canal, the press and civic leaders in Ohio lauded him as the "father of the Ohio and Erie Canal".[100]

Return to the state legislature Edit

 
The Alfred Kelley mansion in 1958, a few years before it was demolished.

In October 1830, Alfred Kelley relocated from Cleveland to Columbus[34][101] after his wife, Mary, pleaded with him to move the family so they could spend more time together.[102] Kelley, one of the wealthiest men in Columbus,[103] purchased 18 acres (73,000 m2) of land on E. Broad Street. Beginning in 1837, he began construction on a large Greek Revival home at 282 East Broad Street, known as the Alfred Kelley mansion.[102]

Kelley also made large real estate purchases in Franklin County and in Cleveland after leaving the Canal Commission.[104] Kelley, Moylen Northrup, and John Kerr purchased a large parcel in what became downtown Columbus. This land was platted and subdivided in 1838 and incorporated into the city of Columbus, making Kelley a substantial profit.[105]

Becoming a Whig Edit

In the early 1830s, Kelley left the Democratic-Republican Party and joined the Whig Party.[98] This switch in political affiliations began in the mid-1810s when Kelley became a supporter of Henry Clay,[98] the Democratic-Republican Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. Clay had proposed the "American System", an economic program consisting of high tariffs, strong banking regulation, and federal subsidies for infrastructure improvements like roads and canals.[106] The Democratic-Republican Party was deeply divided over these proposals, however. One faction, led by Andrew Jackson, harbored a deep suspicion of the federal government. These "Jacksonians" viewed strong government as a threat to individual freedom, favored the farmer over the businessman, and believed that government programs (such as banking reform and regulation, infrastructure development, public education, and high tariffs) benefited the rich at the expense of the common man.[107] The other faction, led by Clay and John Quincy Adams, favored high tariffs, believing they would prevent specie from going overseas and thus allow banks to expand capital and credit. Coupled with a strong and activist central government and system of federally-financed infrastructure improvement, these "National Republicans" hoped to expand the economy, empower producers (businessmen and farmers), and bring new and improved products to markets (consumers).[108]

Clay ran against Jackson for the presidency in 1824, but John Quincy Adams won the nation's highest office after the election was thrown into the House for resolution.[109] The Democratic-Republican Party collapsed, with Jackson forming a new Democratic Party in 1828.[110] Rejecting the label "National Republican" as too closely tied to northeastern business interests, Clay formed the Whig Party in 1834.[111] Neither the national Democratic Party (which dismissed state intervention in the economy and a stronger banking system) nor the Ohio Democratic Party (which rejected prioritization of canal construction projects, distrusted the opinions of professionals and experts, and wished to retain a politicized canal board) held any interest for Kelley.[112]

Kelley was elected chairman of the Whig State Central Committee of Ohio in 1840.[25][34] His prominence in the party made him a frequent target of political invective.[113]

Return to the Ohio House Edit

Kelley sought and won election to the Ohio House again in 1836.[114] Columbus and Franklin County were Democratic strongholds, however,[34] and Democratic-controlled newspapers accused Kelley of making immorally high profits from his banking business, speculating on real estate, and enriching himself by ensuring that the Ohio & Erie Canal passed near his land. As evidence of his wealth, the newspapers pointed to the "palace" Kelley was building in Columbus.[113] These attacks were largely ignored by voters, who elected Kelley by a wide margin even though he was now a Whig.[34] During the 1836-1837 legislative term, Kelley sponsored a resolution instructing the House Committee on Schools and School Lands to report a bill authorizing appointment of a state school commissioner. The resolution passed and the reported bill became law, creating the modern Ohio public school system.[101]

Kelley sought and won re-election to the Ohio House in 1837.[115] The previous session, the Ohio General Assembly had enacted legislation (known colloquially as the "Loan Law") which required the state to match, on a dollar-for-dollar basis, any private investment in canals, railroads, or turnpikes so long as these ventures met certain requirements.[116] The state was rapidly issuing bonds to comply with the law, despite the ill-considered or parochial nature of these projects.[117] Kelley's bill to repeal the Loan Law failed. He was successful on another front, when his 17-year legislative effort to abolish imprisonment for debt finally won the approval of the legislature.[53][118]

Bank investor and executive Edit

Using the canal fund to build banking relationships Edit

Kelley built extensive business and personal relationships with bankers in Ohio and New York City while a Canal Commissioner.[92] To help Ohio banks, Kelley required that canal workers be paid in bank scrip. This ensured that bank scrip circulated more widely, helping to expand a bank's market and making each bank's scrip more widely accepted by the public.[92][r]

Banking roles Edit

Kelley's close association with the banks made him a leading figure in the Ohio banking community by the mid-1830s.[92] In April 1832, Kelley and eight others sought additional investment to help expand the Commercial Bank of Lake Erie.[123] Most of the capital was provided by Henry W. Dwight and his wealthy family of bankers and investors.[124][125][s] The Commercial Bank of Lake Erie was Cleveland's only bank from 1832 to 1834, and afterward only one of two. Until the expiration of its charter in 1843, it provided most of the scrip and bills of credit in northern Ohio, provided the underpinning for nearly all of Cleveland's business community, and was one of only a few major banks where the state and federal government deposited specie.[126] Kelley pushed the bank to become involved with the Ohio & Erie Canal. It received specie payments from Eastern bond investors and disbursed scrip and specie on behalf of the Canal Fund Commission.[104] Kelley also became a major investor in the Franklin Bank of Columbus[127] (probably no later than June 1836).[128] This institution, founded in 1816,[129] became a depository for canal funds and disbursed specie and scrip on behalf of the Canal Commission,[104] and Kelley was later elected to the bank's board of directors.[127] Through Micajah Williams, Kelley also became a stockholder in the Franklin Bank of Cincinnati.[130]

 
Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Co. banknote from 1839 or 1840

Kelley's biggest role as a banker was his participation as an organizer and trustee of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company.[127] The Trust Co., as it was more commonly known, was conceived by Connecticut and New York financier Isaac Bronson, his son Arthur Bronson, and New York lawyer and prominent Jacksonian Charles Butler (brother of U.S. Attorney General Benjamin Franklin Butler). They had previously incorporated the New York Life Insurance and Trust Company, which gave wealthy Easterners the chance to invest in a bank whose sole business was to make real estate mortgages in western New York. It made large profits. They now conceived of a similar organization for Ohio, and gathered a secretive group of initial investors ("the associates").[t] At this period in American history, nearly all states refused to allow "foreign" (out-of-state) corporations to do business within their borders.[132] The associates recruited Elisha Whittlesey[u] and Micajah T. Williams to be "front men" for them, so that the project would appear to be conceived by and for the benefit of Ohioans.[133] The Bronsons and a few of the other associates wrote the Trust Co. charter.[88] Although Democrats attacked the Trust Co. as a "moneyed monster",[104] a majority of Ohio state legislators were deeply concerned that a capital liquidity crisis was about to emerge in Ohio.[134][v] To alleviate the problem, on February 12, 1834,[137] the Ohio General Assembly chartered 10 new private banks with total a capitalization of $4.4 million ($129,000,000 in 2022 dollars). Among them was the Trust Co., which accounted for $2 million ($5,900,000 in 2022 dollars) of that capital.[136]

Although Trust Co. stock was supposed to be sold to the public, the associates ensured that all the stock was sold in advance to their most trusted friends and business partners. Fully 75 percent of the stock was owned by wealthy New Englanders and large New York City investment companies.[138][w] The remaining stock was sold to prominent Ohioans such as Jacob Burnet, David T. Disney, John H. Groesbeck, Simon Perkins, Elisha Whittlesey, Micajah Williams,[142] and Alfred Kelley.[133] The Bronsons, who secured a large majority of shares via proxy from the eastern shareholders, hand-picked the board of directors,[143] who were elected on September 30, 1834.[137] The charter required that at least two-thirds of the board be Ohioans, which required great care on the part of the Bronsons to ensure that the board did not include risk-takers or self-dealers. Among the Ohioans on the board were Jacob Burnet,[137] David T. Disney,[143] Calvin Pease,[137] Simon Perkins,[143] Benjamin Tappan, Allen Trimble, Joseph Vance,[137] Elisha Whittlesey, Micajah Williams,[143] and Alfred Kelley.[137][143]

Dilemma of 1839 Edit

The Trust Co. was highly respected at the outset. As expected, it served as a depository institution for the state of Ohio, receiving and disbursing scrip and specie. It also did a large amount of business with private banks in addition to its real estate mortgage business.[144]

The Panic of 1837 significantly damaged the financial standing of the Trust Co. In October 1839, the company stopped making payment in specie.[145][146] This placed its charter at risk, for state law allowed the company to suspend payment of specie only for 30 days.[147] As a director of the bank, Kelley faced a dilemma:[148] The Trust Co. held more than $1 million ($27,500,000 in 2022 dollars) in canal and state bonds.[149] The only way the company could survive was if it sold these bonds. However, this risked driving down the price of the bonds the Canal Fund Commission was trying to sell at the same time and could imperil work on the many Ohio & Erie branch canals under construction as well as other state-backed canals.[150][x]

Kelley decided to risk further work on the canal system and advocated saving the bank by placing the bonds on the market. He believed that the Trust Co. was "too big to fail"; there was no way state legislature would retaliate by rescinding the bank's charter because this would cause too much damage to Ohio's economy. Disaster was averted when the bond market, recovering from the Panic of 1837, absorbed the sale of bonds sold by the Trust Co. and the Canal Fund.[150]

Canal Fund Commission and the Panic of 1837 Edit

Kelley returned to state employment when he was appointed a Canal Fund Commissioner on March 30, 1841.[151] He did not relinquish his seat on the Trust Co. board of directors.[104]

Kelley became a commissioner as the Canal Fund and Ohio state finances were in crisis.[150]

Causes of the Canal Fund crisis Edit

 
A political cartoon caricatures Andrew Jackson and others for starving the American economy of cash, causing the Panic of 1837

One distal cause of the financial crisis was the extensive amount of canal construction the state had embarked on beginning in 1833. The General Assembly authorized construction of the Miami Canal Extension (from Dayton to Lake Erie) in 1833,[152] construction of the Wabash and Erie Canal in 1834,[153] and more than 15 feeder and branch canals and sidecuts.[154][y][z] Unlike the prioritized building program adopted by Kelley and Williams, the state pursued all these construction projects simultaneously. This greatly increased the Canal Fund Commission's need to raise money.[159] Moreover, while the cost of these projects was originally estimated at $4.5 million ($136,500,000 in 2022 dollars),[160] actual costs were much closer to $10 million ($258,600,000 in 2022 dollars).[117]

Another distal cause of the crisis was the Loan Law of 1837.[116] By 1839, state debt had soared to $12 million ($329,800,000 in 2022 dollars), of which $2.5 million was Loan Law debt and $8.5 million was attributable to work on the six new feeder and branch canals. The debt reached $14.8 million ($433,800,000 in 2022 dollars) in 1840,[161] and another $2.5 million was needed to complete the work.[161][162] The debt reached $17 million ($482,300,000 in 2022 dollars) in 1841.[163]

The proximate cause of the financial crisis was the Panic of 1837. The Canal Fund had great difficulty selling bonds in 1837, and had so little money on hand that (except for those working on the Wabash & Erie Canal) it stopped paying contractors in December 1837.[164] Additionally, canal revenues were not high enough to pay the interest on canal construction debt. In order to make interest payments in early 1838, the Canal Fund floated even more bonds and sought loans from banks.[165][aa] By early 1840, there was talk in the state legislature and among politicians and other civic leaders of repudiating a portion of the state debt.[163] The Canal Fund was able to make its $281,000 ($8,200,000 in 2022 dollars) interest payment in June 1840 only after the state (in March) approved $300,000 in new borrowing expressly to meet the interest payment.[162] The Canal Fund was nearly out of cash again by November 1840. The fund commissioners asked the Ohio State Auditor for an advance of $200,000 ($5,900,000 in 2022 dollars), which was refused.[166]

Canal Fund financial crisis of 1841 Edit

In early 1841, the State Auditor warned the commissioners that $400,000 ($11,300,000 in 2022 dollars) would be needed pay the January 1842 interest payment. Instead of taking action to put the Canal Fund on a sound financial footing, the General Assembly asked the Canal Commission to expand construction and seek temporary loans to pay contractors and interest.[167][ab]

Kelley and the other Canal Fund commissioners declined to borrow the money.[167] Kelley discovered that New York City banks were unwilling to loan the Canal Fund Commission any money except on a short-term basis, and bonds could be sold only at a steep 25 percent discount of the par value and at high guaranteed interest rate (6 percent).[168]

The Canal Fund Commission decided to seek loans from Ohio banks instead. Despite advertising widely, only two banks responded in April 1841.[168] The first of these was the Bank of Chillicothe, which agreed to lend the Canal Fund $581,000 ($16,500,000 in 2022 dollars) at 6 percent interest.[169][ac] The Bank of Franklin, on whose board of directors Kelley still sat, agreed to loan the Canal Fund $500,000 ($14,200,000 in 2022 dollars) at 6 percent interest.[170][ad] The loans were dispersed in banknotes, paper money similar to scrip but which was redeemed by the bank's own specie (rather than federal specie on deposit). Contractors, suppliers, and others accepted these banknotes only at a discount, and even then many doubted they could be redeemed. But the commissioners had no choice.[171] Later in 1841, a third institution, the Bank of Wooster, agreed to loan the Canal Fund $199,355 ($5,700,000 in 2022 dollars) at 6 percent, the entire principal due in one year. These loans were not enough to cover essential costs, however, and the Canal Fund was forced to borrow $275,000 ($7,800,000 in 2022 dollars) in high-interest, very short-term loans from New York City banks.[172]

All of these loans proved critical to helping the Canal Fund survive. The Canal Fund was able to make its interest payments[173] and pay contractors about $580,000 ($16,500,000 in 2022 dollars).[172] Without them, the canal fund would have had been all but bankrupt and would have stopped paying contractors for the entire year.[170][ae]

The overall financial situation was still poor, however. The Canal Fund's total debt rose to $15.573 million ($441,800,000 in 2022 dollars) in 1841, and there was $1.6 million ($45,400,000 in 2022 dollars) in non-contractor current and accumulated liabilities. The Canal Fund commissioners were able to eliminate some of the current and accumulated liability by selling $1.3 million ($36,900,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds at an average discount of about one-third (netting just $858,000).[175]

By November 1841, the Canal Fund had a balance of $1,393 ($39,516 in 2022 dollars), with interest due in January 1842 of $400,000 ($12,100,000 in 2022 dollars) and a $300,000 ($9,100,000 in 2022 dollars) temporary loan due shortly thereafter.[176] When General Assembly's legislative session opened in early December, there was immense pressure to repudiate all or a portion of the state's debt.[177] To help prevent this, Kelley used his influence with the Ohio Life and Trust Co. (on whose board he still sat). Although it had no authorization to do so, the commission gave the Trust Co. $300,000 ($8,500,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds in late 1841 and early 1842 as collateral for a $200,000 ($6,100,000 in 2022 dollars) loan.[178] (The commission received the loan funds in March 1842.)[172] Kelley and the other fund commissioners also illegally withdrew in late 1841 several large sums from the general tax fund of the Ohio State Treasury so that the Canal Fund Commission could make bond interest payments in January 1842. Although the Ohio State Auditor accused the Canal Fund Commission of fraud, their actions avoided certain default.[178] According to historian Harry N. Scheiber, Kelley likely approved the highly irregular advances because he was convinced that revenues from the soon-to-be-finished canals would bring in substantial revenues a few months later that would allow these advances to be repaid swiftly.[178]

Canal Fund financial crisis of 1842 Edit

 
A Canal Fund Commission stock certificate issued in 1842

The Canal Fund's financial crisis continued through 1842, even though the depression was lifting[179] and the Hocking Canal, Walhonding Canal, Warren County Canal, and the Muskingum Improvement (a branch canal and a series of locks and dams designed to improve navigability on the Muskingum River) were all completed (which not only meant the need for less borrowing but the beginning of tax and toll revenues from these works).[180] Canal contractors were owed $1.4 million ($42,500,000 in 2022 dollars) by February 1842, but only two payments were made to them during following 10 months. Beginning in March 1842, the Canal Fund began issuing checks to non-contractor businesses to which it owed money. The checks were redeemable only in state bonds, and were rarely cashed because banks and businesses discounted them 30 to 50 percent below par.[174]

Completion of these four canals was possible because work did not actually stop, despite the lack of payment to contractors. Some contractors declared bankruptcy and quit working, but the unfinished canals could not be abandoned because rain, snow, floods, and other factors would damage them. To complete the works and leave them in a state where they could be left idle, the Canal Commission was forced to hire new contractors at much higher rates of pay. Some contractors avoided bankruptcy by taking out loans from banks in Michigan. These banks paid in banknotes which proved nearly worthless, but in many cases it was enough to keep the contractor solvent. Other contractors kept working without pay. They believed the state would eventually meet its obligations and perhaps even compensate them extra for being patient.[164]

Putting the Canal Fund Commission on a solid financial footing was paramount, and Kelley and the other Canal Fund commissioners heavily lobbied the Ohio General Assembly to act. It finally did so in March 1842 by repealing the Loan Law.[181] With the Canal Fund still in deficit, the legislation also authorized the commissioners to sell more than $500,000 ($15,200,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds so the fund could repay the Chillicothe and Franklin banks[175][af] and to issue $500,000 in scrip so that contractors could be paid at least a portion of what they were owed. To ensure that this scrip was accepted, the legislature used its Wabash and Erie Canal lands as collateral. Notably, the law required the Canal Fund to issue scrip only in $100 ($3,032 in 2022 dollars) denominations.[182] Kelley and the other fund commissioners, however, turned a blind eye when Ohio banks issued scrip in smaller denominations to meet the needs of contractors and workers.[178]

The General Assembly also adopted legislation that suspended work on all branch and feeder canals and sidecuts, except for final work on the Wabash and Erie Canal and on those canals already under contract. About $1.5 million ($45,500,000 in 2022 dollars) was needed to fund this work. In the past, Canal Fund commissioners themselves traveled around the state and to New York City to sell these bonds. Now, however, the legislature required these bonds to be sold through brokers. The sale was successful, although the bonds had to pay 7 percent interest.[183][ag][ah]

The General Assembly also agreed to the Canal Fund Commission's proposal to sell canal lands. The sale of these lands had essentially ceased in 1836.[ai] A new law, adopted on March 8, 1842, permitted the sale of canal land at $2.50 ($76 in 2022 dollars) an acre or its appraised value, whichever was higher. The value of some Miami Extension Canal lands, which had sharply risen in value, was reduced by law to $4.00 ($110 in 2022 dollars) an acre. The law required that land be purchased only in "cash", which meant specie, banknotes from specie-paying banks, or state-issued scrip[189] (essentially allowing contractors, paid in state-issued scrip, to redeem the scrip for valuable land).

Bonds still needed to be sold to raise revenue for the rest of 1842 and early 1843, and in April 1842 Kelley went to New York City to sell the bonds authorized by the legislature. Initially, he met with agents of overseas bond-holders to see if they were interested. They were not. Kelley then offered to insure the interest payments on the bonds, with his personal real estate as collateral for the insurance. When the agents still hesitated, Kelley signed a note in which he personally agreed to pay $10,000 ($300,000 in 2022 dollars) of the July 1842 interest payment.[178] The agents accepted the note, bought the insurance, and agreed to purchase the bonds he was selling.[190] To further boost confidence, Kelley also offered to accept canal bonds at par value in payment for any property he had for sale. Since the state's bonds were selling well below par value at the time, Kelley took considerable risk in making the offer.[191] Kelley was forced to conceal how he had personally guaranteed the bonds and bond interest payments. If word had gotten out, it might have induced panic selling of canal fund bonds.[190][aj] Kelley also secured a $250,000 ($7,600,000 in 2022 dollars) loan from New York City banks, but once more only after personally guaranteeing the payment of interest.[185]

Kelley traveled to the United Kingdom in the spring of 1842[193] to sell canal bonds to cover the July 1842 and January 1843 interest payments on existing bonds. Kelley personally conducted negotiations with Baring Brothers & Co. in attempt to sell bonds. Through the Ohio Life and Trust Co., Kelley had a pre-existing relationship with Barings: Baring Brothers had sold canal bonds on behalf of the Trust Company in Europe, and Barings itself owned some canal bonds. Kelley sold Baring Brothers $400,000 ($12,100,000 in 2022 dollars) of canal bonds at a 40 percent discount, netting $240,000 ($7,300,000 in 2022 dollars). When word of the bond sale became known in Ohio, Kelley's political opponents accused him of selling out the state in order to enrich his wealthy British business associates.[191]

End of the Canal Fund financial crisis Edit

In February 1843, Kelley once more relied on his banking friends and colleagues to secure the canal fund's solvency.[178] Kelley and the other canal fund commissioners traveled to New York City to sell $1.5 million ($47,100,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds.[183] They were unable to sell the bonds at first, as investors expected Ohio to default on its debt. The commissioners then wrote and jointly published a statement outlining the state's financial situation, the financial status of the canal fund, and the progress on the Canal Commission's public works.[194] By once more pledging the 1836 surplus and raising the interest rate on the bonds from 6 to 7 percent, they were able to sell all the securities.[195]

The 1843 bond sale greatly stabilized the finances of the Canal Fund Commission and the state of Ohio.[174][195] Canal Fund Commission checks, which were trading (but still not being cashed) at a 40 to 50 percent discount, now rose almost to par.[195] Contractors began to be paid in specie-paying bank notes.[174][ak]

With the crisis over, the Ohio General Assembly reorganized the Canal Fund Commission in March 1843, and Kelley resigned from the board after the law passed.[196] Despite the attacks on Kelley during the crisis, conservative Democrats joined with Whigs in the General Assembly to pass a resolution retroactively approving every measure he had taken to avoid default by the Canal Fund Commission.[197] He was widely known as "savior of the state honor" for successfully helping the state to avoid default.[25] According to historian Harry N. Scheiber, it is highly doubtful that Ohio would have avoided default and bankruptcy had Kelley and the other canal fund commissioners not had exceptionally close ties to Ohio and New York bankers.[197][al]

Second return to the state legislature Edit

Kelley's role in the Canal Fund Commission financial crisis left him with strong views about the state's banking system. His experience on the fund commission had not changed his belief in strong, centralized state government. However, rather than heavily regulate Ohio's banks, he now sought to strengthen state incentives for banks to engage in better decision-making.[199] Like-minded individuals persuaded him to run for Ohio Senate in 1844 in order to pass banking reform legislation.[200] Kelley ran for and won office to the state senate in 1844[201] and 1845.[202]

During the 1844-1845 legislative session, Kelley was elected chairman of Ohio Senate's committee on currency[203] and was a member of its committee on finance.[204] On January 7, 1845, he introduced a bill to establish a State Bank of Ohio. The state bank was authorized to establish branches throughout the state to provide new capital to local banks and the public. The capital provided to local banks carried with it new requirements designed to strengthen and reform financial practices, thus lessening the likelihood of future bank failures. This, in turn, would encourage outside investment in Ohio. The second part of the bill concerned the issuance of new bank charters and the re-issuing of charters to banks whose charters expired. All state-chartered banks henceforth would be required to participate in a form of deposit insurance, limits were set on the rate of interest which could be charged (to avoid usury), and the size of loans given to any individual or firm were restricted (to help rein in risk-taking and reduce the likelihood that a single large loan default could ruin the bank).[197]

Although strongly attacked by Democrats,[205] Kelley's banking bill was adopted by the legislature almost unchanged.[206] The Kelley bank bill ended much banking chaos and confusion in Ohio.[207] As predicted, the banking legislation increased capital in Ohio at a time when it was sorely needed,[205] and helped end much of the conflict of interest and mismanagement in the state's private banks.[199]

Kelley also sought to reform the state tax code.[208] He authored a comprehensive report on the tax system which the finance committee submitted to the Ohio Senate on February 17, 1845.[209] As he had 26 years earlier, Kelley proposed taxing property according to its value, not its use. This time he was successful: The bill passed the General Assembly on March 2, 1846,[48] and the parameters of the bill governed Ohio's tax code for more than a century.[208]

Early involvement with railroads Edit

Even as Kelley was at work on the Ohio and Erie Canal, railroads were beginning to be built in Ohio. The first of these was the Erie and Kalamazoo Railroad[210] on April 22, 1833.[211] It was chartered by the Michigan Territory at a time when the border between the states of Michigan and Ohio was not settled. A portion of the railroad ended up within the borders of Ohio after the settlement of the Toledo War in 1836.[210] Interest in railroads increased significantly after the Panic of 1837 ended. The state canal system was nearly overwhelmed with traffic, and investors saw railroads as a means of augmenting the canal system.[212] Eastern investors were particularly interested in creating a system of integrated railroads that would extend from the Iowa Territory to the Atlantic Ocean.[213]

Kelley first became involved with a railroad in 1836 when the Muskingum and Columbus Railroad was chartered by the Ohio General Assembly.[214][215] This company intended to build a 55-mile (89 km) line from Zanesville west through the Licking Valley to Columbus. One of nine original incorporators of the company,[216] Kelley became involved with the scheme because of the extensive construction management and financial knowledge he had gained while building the Ohio & Erie Canal.[217] As with many early railroads, this one was never built.[218]

Columbus and Xenia Railroad Edit

 
A Columbus & Xenia Railroad stock certificate issued in 1849, bearing Alfred Kelley's signature

The Columbus and Xenia Railroad (C&X) was chartered by the state of Ohio on March 12, 1844.[219] The Little Miami Railroad, chartered some years earlier, was already under construction and would like Cincinnati and Xenia, Ohio, in 1845.[220] The C&X would link Xenia to Columbus—creating the first rail link between Ohio's two largest cities.[221] The incorporators of the C&X had difficulty raising funds and initiating construction,[222] and no survey of the route had been made by February 1847.[223]

Kelley agreed to become president of the railroad in 1847[224] at a salary of $500 ($15,704 in 2022 dollars) a year.[222] With private investors unwilling to take a risk on the line, Kelley convinced city and county governments along the route to sell bonds and use the money to invest in the C&X. With this money in hand, Kelley was able to convince East Coast financiers that the railroad was a sound investment.[225] He personally went to New York City to sell C&X bonds, and raised enough money to not only complete construction of the railroad but also to buy locomotives and rolling stock to equip it.[226] Kelley also accompanied engineer Sylvester Medbery[227] as he traveled the line's likely routes, the two men essentially surveying them together. Kelley then personally approved the route of the C&X.[226] For the track, Kelley traveled to the United Kingdom[225] and contracted with Sir John Guest & Co. of Wales for T rails.[228] The C&X was one of the first railroads in Ohio to use T rails instead of strap rails.[226] The 200 short tons (180 t) of rails[229] did not arrive in Cleveland until July 1849,[228] delaying the laying of track until the fall.[229]

Work on the road began in October 1847,[230] just months after Kelley assumed the line's presidency. The laying of track was complete on either February 19[231] or February 21, 1850,[232] and regular service began on February 27.[231][233] The C&X began generating substantial profits, and Kelley personally negotiated an agreement with the Little Miami Railroad which ensured an excellent working relationship between the two lines for many years.[225]

Kelley stepped down as the C&X's president some time between May 4, 1852 and April 21, 1853.[234][235]

Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad Edit

Election as president of the line Edit

The Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad (CC&C) was chartered by the state of Ohio on March 14, 1836,[236] and authorized to construct a railroad from Cleveland to Cincinnati, passing through the cities of Columbus and Wilmington.[237] Fundraising failed, no construction occurred, and the charter lapsed.[238][239] In 1845, a group of Cleveland business and civic leaders[240] succeeded in persuading the Ohio General Assembly to revive the charter on March 12, 1845.[237] Once more, the company failed to raise funds for the venture[241][242]

Financier Edmund Dwight, representing the wealthy Dwight family of Massachusetts and New York,[88] visited the city in August 1847. The Dwights and Kelleys had invested in the Commercial Bank of Lake Erie,[124] and the Dwight family was strongly interested in Ohio railroads.[104] Edmund Dwight told the board that improved investor confidence was needed to raise funds, and this required that the board seek a new leader who could ensure the efficient and timely construction of a well-built railroad.[240] The president of the CC&C resigned[243] and Alfred Kelley and Leonard Case Jr. were elected to the board of directors.[244] Kelley was appointed president on August 13.[244][243][245][am]

Raising funds and constructing the road Edit

Kelley immediately began speaking with his colleagues in the banking and finance fields, and by early September 1847 indicated to the board that a favorable response had been found among investors in New York City.[246] Kelley ordered construction of 10 miles (16 km) of track near Cleveland to test new construction methods and railroad technology.[247] To ensure that the new charter did not lapse, on September 30, 1847, Kelley and other members of the board of directors went to Cleveland's Scranton Flats and ceremoniously filled a wheelbarrow with earth to symbolize the start of construction. The company hired an old man to work five days a week, continuously digging this trench, in order to prove to the state that construction was "ongoing".[243][248][249]

Kelley also began to raise substantial funds. He began his tenure as president by urging the board of directors (composed of wealthy Ohioans) to show faith in the business by purchasing company bonds. By September 15, 1847, the board had invested $100,000 ($3,100,000 in 2022 dollars) in the CC&C.[250] Kelley heavily promoted the railroad in Cleveland and by April 15, 1848, investors there had purchased $100,000 ($3,400,000 in 2022 dollars) in company bonds with pledges to purchase another $100,000 when the company asked.[251] Kelley traveled to Cleveland in early August 1848, delivering a rousing one-hour speech which led listeners to purchase $73,000 ($2,500,000 in 2022 dollars) more in stock.[252]

Kelley ordered the railroad's route resurveyed, a process which began in October 1847 and concluded about the end of January 1848.[253] Engineers issued a new report to the board on August 19, 1848.[254] The contract for construction was awarded to the firm of Stone, Harbach, and Witt on November 1.[255] Harbach was one of the two engineers who had resurveyed the line in late 1847 and early 1848. Amasa Stone had worked with Harbach and another railroad engineer, Stillman Witt,[256] while building railroad bridges in New England,[257] and Kelley knew Stone well from his visits selling bonds back east.[257] Kelley reached out to Stone, Harbach, and Witt, and asked them to build the railroad.[258] The three men formed a company in late 1848 to do so,[248] and agreed to take a portion of their pay in the form of railroad stock.[258]

Kelley personally traveled to the United Kingdom[255][259][260] in 1848 where he again contracted with Sir John Guest & Co. for T rails.[228][an] The 7,000 short tons (6,400 t) of rail purchased was sufficient to lay half the road.[262][263] Some 3,000 to 4,000 men were at work on the line at the end of July, completing the grading, constructing the track bed, and beginning to lay rail. With the cost of the main line appearing to hold steady at $2.5 million ($87,900,000 in 2022 dollars), Kelley personally went to New York City in July 1849 and sold another $400,000 ($14,100,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds to keep the work going.[264] He sold another $100,000 ($14,100,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds to Ohio investors the same month.[265]

The first 35 miles (56 km) of CC&C track, between Cleveland and Wellington, Ohio, opened about September 1, 1849.[264] A train carrying Kelley and several board members toured the completed 15 miles (24 km) of track in mid-March 1850.[266] Alfred Kelley was reelected president of the Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad in January 1850.[267] With the company in need of more rail, Kelley traveled to New York City in late May, where he sold enough bonds to pay for the necessary iron.[268] He then made a second trip to Britain to purchase more rail.[259] He returned in mid-June[269] having purchased another 5,000 short tons (4,500 t) of rail.[268] The CC&C reached Shelby, Ohio, on November 12, 1850.[255][270]

Celebratory completion trip Edit

The Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad was completed on February 18, 1851. At 7 A.M. on February 18, Alfred Kelley and a party consisting of the railroad's directors, Columbus mayor Lorenzo English, and a number of other business and civic leaders departed on a special northbound train from Columbus.[271] Kelley and Mayor English each laid a final rail on the line,[272] and then Kelley drove the last spike at noon.[271][273] The party reboarded the train and, after a salutary cannonade, proceeded to Cleveland.[272] The train gave three whistles as it entered the city, which was returned by a three-cannon salute.[271]

The CC&C began freight and passenger operations on February 21, 1851.[274] To celebrate the event, Kelley invited Ohio Governor Reuben Wood, the entire Ohio General Assembly, the mayors and city councils of Cincinnati and Columbus, and numerous other local politicians and business leaders[275] to travel at the railroad's expense on a four-day excursion trip from Columbus to Cleveland and back. The excursion train and its 425 passengers left Columbus on February 21.[276] The following day, the excursionists watched a parade in Cleveland's Public Square. Although several politicians and local leaders spoke,[277] Kelley declined to address the crowd.[277] The excursion train returned to Columbus on February 24.[278]

The completion of the Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad created the first direct rail link between Cleveland and Cincinnati.[279]

Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad Edit

Election as first president of the railroad Edit

In 1847, a group of businessmen from Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, and Lake counties undertook an effort to build Cleveland's railroad link to the east,[280] and on February 18, 1848, they received a state charter for the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad (CP&A). The line had authority to build a railroad from Cleveland to some point on the Ohio-Pennsylvania border.[281][282] The stockholders met for the first time on August 1, 1849, and elected Herman B. Ely, George G. Gillett, Alfred Kelley, Tappan Lake, David R. Paige, Peleg P. Sanford, and Samuel L. Selden to the initial board of directors. Kelley was elected president, but due to other pressing business had to temporarily step aside. Herman Ely was named acting president until such time as Kelley could take up his duties.[283]

Frederick Harbach surveyed the route for the CP&A in late 1849 and early 1850. In his report, issued at end of March 1850,[284] he proposed two routes.[285] Kelley reviewed both and chose the northern route.[286] To construct the road, Kelley once more turned to the firm of Harbach, Stone & Witt, which won the CP&A construction contract on July 26, 1850.[287] Financing for the road was never an issue, and construction proceeded swiftly. Regular trains began running on the 71-mile (114 km) line[288] on November 20, 1851.[289]

Role in creating the Franklin Canal Company railroad Edit

The CP&A did not have the legal authority to build a railroad in Pennsylvania.[290] The railroad soon discovered that the Franklin Canal Company (FCC) had been empowered by the Pennsylvania state legislature to build a railroad in April 1849.[291] Railroad historian Anthony Churella says the CP&A's New York City-based financial backers first realized the value of the FCC's charter.[290] However, Kelley biographer James L. Bates and Cleveland historian Harland Hatcher both claim it was Alfred Kelley who did so.[292][293]

On July 5, 1849, the FCC issued $500,000 ($17,600,000 in 2022 dollars) in stock,[294][295] with the CP&A purchasing $448,500 of it.[289][296]

In addition to building north to the city of Erie, Pennsylvania, the FCC also intended to build a 25.5-mile (41.0 km) branch line along the shore of Lake Erie from Erie west to the Ohio-Pennsylvania border.[297] Completion of this branch line (the "Lake Shore Division") would connect the CP&A with the Erie and North East Railroad (E&NE) and bring the FCC significant income with which to build its main line.[298]

On January 10, 1850, Kelley agreed to connect the CP&A with the FCC at the Ohio-Pennsylvania border.[299] This was superseded by a new agreement on August 26, 1850, under which the CP&A not only committed to connecting with the FCC but also to building and operating its lakeshore line.[300] Kelley was able to commit to these agreements because the CC&C was generating large revenues. Kelley used these revenues to subsidize the construction of other important railroads in Ohio, which in turn gave him leverage to forge operating agreements with the CC&C once they opened.[225]

The CC&C was completed in February 1851,[271] and Alfred Kelley took up the CP&A presidency the following month.[301] As the cost of building the FCC rose, the canal company decided to sell bonds to raise the necessary funds. Kelley offered to have the CP&A guarantee the bonds.[302][303] The CP&A began construction on the Lake Shore Division shortly after November 1851[289] and the line was completed 12 months later.[294][304][305]

Role in the Erie Gauge War Edit

People in Pennsylvania were angry that the FCC's track gauge was the same as that of connecting railroads in New York and Ohio. This meant passengers and freight did not have to be transshipped at Erie,[306] and threatened to allow the railroads to largely bypass Erie.[307][308] The Erie Gauge War erupted, in which state and local authorities as well as mobs attempted to prevent completion of the Lake Shore Division. The Attorney General of Pennsylvania filed suit on October 12, 1852, to enjoin the Franklin Canal Company from opening its nearly-completed railroad.[309] This threatened the CP&A's investment, as construction had only reached as far west as Crooked Creek.[295] Although the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania overturned the injunction in January 1853, the court interpreted the FCC's charter to preclude the construction of any railroad within 5.5 miles (8.9 km) of the Ohio border.[310][311][312][313]

Alarmed that the Lake Shore Division might not reach the state border, Alfred Kelley personally purchased the 5.5-mile (8.9 km) right of way.[295][314][ao] Pennsylvania law permitted private individuals to construct "lateral railroads" to connect their factories, farms, mines, or other real estate to state-chartered railroads.[ap] Kelley initially proposed that several less-prominent directors of and investors in the CP&A and FCC purchase the land and build this lateral railroad with funds provided by the CP&A, but none were willing to take the risk. Kelley went forward with the project on his own, using funds secretly provided by the CP&A.[319] Kelley personally visited landowners along the route, making friends with them and buying the land he needed. In some cases, he was required to purchase entire farms. He also won passage of local ordinances permitting his lateral railroad to cross public roads.[320] Kelley then had the line graded and constructed, and conveyed the lateral railroad to the FCC.[27][295]

Kelley's actions did not end the Gauge War. By April 1853, the situation had so deteriorated that Kelley considered bypassing Erie altogether and connecting the CP&A to existing railroad lines which routed traffic through Pittsburgh.[321] The people of Erie were further alarmed when the CP&A took over operation of the FCC's Lake Shore Division on December 1, 1853.[295] On December 7,[322] mobs tore up the FCC's track, demolished several of its bridges, and assaulted railroad officials.[323][324][325] Kelley threatened to raise a private militia to protect FCC property if the state could or would not do so.[326] Rioters tore up railroad track again in January 1854.[327]

Tensions died down considerably when, on January 28, 1854, the Pennsylvania General Assembly enacted legislation repealing the FCC's charter.[291][328] Pennsylvania Governor William Bigler seized the FCC on January 30, and appointed William F. Packer as the company's superintendent.[329] The CP&A continued to operate the FCC on behalf of the state, forwarding 47 percent of all revenues generated by the Lake Shore Division to the state treasury.[330]

Resignation Edit

To further placate certain Pennsylvanians, Kelley resigned as president of the CP&A in February 1854, and was replaced by William Case.[331] The state of Pennsylvania had no interest in running a railroad,[329] and in May 1854 the Pennsylvania General Assembly enacted new legislation permitting the CP&A to build a line from the Ohio-Pennsylvania border east to Erie.[332][333] The law allowed the CP&A to purchase the FCC, provided that the CP&A invested in a nearby Pennsylvania railroad.[332] The CP&A, which already owned the FCC, assumed title to the Lake Shore Division.[334]

With the CP&A link between Cleveland and Erie (and the east coast) complete, Kelley negotiated a contract under which the CC&C and CP&A jointly operated the CP&A's line.[335]

Third return to the state legislature Edit

Health problems Edit

Kelley took a leave of absence from the CC&C presidency in early October 1851.[336] He resigned his position at the railroad about May 24, 1853, and was replaced by Henry Payne (who had unofficially been acting president for some time already).[337] Kelley retained his directorships on the CC&C and CP&A until his death.[338]

Having long suffered from malaria contracted while working on canal system,[96] Kelley was in extremely poor health after six years leading three railroads. After stepping down as CP&A president, he went to Europe for an extended vacation, not returning until early May 1854.[339]

Final legislative term Edit

 
Grave of Alfred Kelley at Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus, Ohio

After returning from Europe, Kelley was offered the presidency of several railroads on Ohio. He declined all opportunities, feeling that these railroads were parochial efforts that would not benefit the state was a whole.[340]

The deteriorating national political situation led Kelley to re-enter politics. The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argument in the case of Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393 (1857), in February 1856. Deeply alarmed by the worsening political discourse concerning slavery and worried by Ohio's deteriorating state finances, Kelley once more decided to seek election to the Ohio General Assembly.[341] He sought and won a seat in the Ohio Senate in 1856,[342] becoming the oldest legislator in either branch of the General Assembly in the 1856–1857 term.[343]

Kelley led an investigation into whether Ohio could impose due process requirements on the federal Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, but this led to no legislation being introduced. As chair of the Senate finance committee, he forced an investigation into Ohio State Treasurer William Harvey Gibson. Extensive evidence of check kiting, conflict of interest, embezzlement, and fraud were uncovered,[344] and Gibson resigned in disgrace.[345] Kelley sponsored two successful bills which placed tighter controls on the state treasurer,[346] but had few other legislative accomplishments that term.[217]

Personal life Edit

Kelley married Mary Seymour Welles of Lowville, New York, on either August 25[347] or August 27, 1816.[25][348] He purchased a one-horse chaise in Lowville,[25] and drove to Buffalo in it. Their schooner for Cleveland was not yet ready to sail, so they traveled to Niagara Falls. Upon their return, they discovered the ship had sailed, so they rode in the chaise from Buffalo to Cleveland.[349] Theirs was the first carriage ever seen in Cleveland.[25][348]

The Kelleys had had 11 children:[25][24] Maria (1818-1887), Jane (1820-1897), Charlotte (1822-1828), Edward (1824-1825), Adelaide (June–September 1826), Henry (1828-1830), Helen (April 3, 1831), Frank (1834-1838), Annie (1836-1888), Alfred (1839-1909), and Katherine (1841-1918).[350]

Death and legacy Edit

For portions of 1856, Kelley was severely ill and confined to home.[343] His health noticeably declined during his last term in the state legislature,[351] and he was once more confined to his home several times in 1857.[343]

Physicians could not determine the nature of Kelley's illness, even as he lost weight and his energy declined.[351] From 1857 to 1859, he became increasingly paralyzed.[352] He was feeble for the last few months before his death,[353] and fell into a coma on November 28.[354] He died at his home in Columbus on December 2, 1859.[338][355] Kelley was interred at Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus, Ohio.[356] His estate was worth $250,000 ($8,100,000 in 2022 dollars).[357]

Historians consider Kelley one of the most dominant commercial, financial, and political people in the state of Ohio in the first half of the 1800s.[27] He is widely considered the "architect" of Ohio's canal and railroad systems.[335]

References Edit

Notes
  1. ^ Oneida County was later split into several new counties. Lowville is now in Lewis County.[6]
  2. ^ Connecticut later abandoned its claim to 500,000 acres (2,000 km2) of land on the western end of the Western Reserve, turning these areas over to certain coastal towns in the state as reparations for damages suffered during the Revolutionary War.[13]
  3. ^ The rest of the Kelley family followed Alfred to Cleveland over the next few years.[15] Daniel Kelley made the move to Cleveland in 1814. He was the village's second president (mayor) and first postmaster, and played an important in the early history of Cleveland.[1]
  4. ^ There were 12 voters.[20]
  5. ^ Daniel Kelley was appointed his successor,[22] and held the office until 1819.[23]
  6. ^ Jemima Kelley died in September 1815.[26] Daniel Kelley died on August 7, 1831.[26]
  7. ^ This building later served as a hotel. Irad Kelley demolished it in 1850 and built a much larger structure, known as the Kelley Block, on the site. The first floor of the Kelley Block contained retail, but the second floor was a ballroom known as Kelley's Hall. Some of the most important concerts, public dances, and lectures of the mid-1800s in Cleveland took place there. The Athenaeum Theater later took over the Kelley Block, and became an important stage and later movie theater in Cleveland.[29]
  8. ^ Financier George Bancroft invested $200,000 ($4,200,000 in 2022 dollars) in the bank to aid the reorganization. This was one of Kelley's earliest links to important East Coast financiers.[37]
  9. ^ Members of the Ohio House of Representatives at this time served one-year terms. The House began meeting about December 1 of the year of election. It adjourned in mid-February in 1815 and 1816, and January 28 in 1817.
  10. ^ Kelley even accompanied engineer James Geddes in 1822 as he made the initial surveys of the five proposed canal routes.[72]
  11. ^ There was significant opposition to the canal from other Lake Erie cities, particularly Sandusky. Declining to specify a northern terminus may have been a political decision calculated to defuse some of this tension, even though Cleveland was clearly the intended northern terminus.[75]
  12. ^ Brown and Buckingham declined to serve, hence the new commission membership.[81]
  13. ^ Kelley had a very hands-on management style. He personally handled contractor complaints and mediated disputes on his engineering staff. He also performed tasks contractors might be expected to carry out, such as locating sources of lime or potential quarries along the route and acting as a quality inspector.[83]
  14. ^ Many donations came from real estate developers who wanted to steer the canal toward their lands so they could later reap huge profits.[86]
  15. ^ Three other factors also helped make the bond sale successful. First, Erie Canal bonds were selling very well, which helped assuage investor nervousness about the riskiness of the Ohio canal bonds. Second, investors knew that traffic on the Erie Canal would increase significantly once goods began moving on the Ohio & Erie Canal. Thus, building the Ohio & Erie Canal was a way of improving the value of their existing investment in the New York state canal. Third, the state of Ohio had pledged to use its tax revenues to guarantee payment of bond interest and principal.[90]
  16. ^ Completing segments that connected to market outlets (like Cleveland) was the highest priority. These segments would generate significant toll revenue. If future bond sales failed, canal tolls on these segments could keep construction going.[86]
  17. ^ This canal extended from Dayton to the Wabash and Erie Canal at Junction, Ohio.[93]
  18. ^ Before the adoption of the United States Constitution in 1790, the federal government had no power to levy taxes or coin money. It authorized banks to issue "scrip", a promise by the government to pay. Scrip became, essentially, paper currency.[119] Congress defined the United States dollar as the standard money unit in 1792,[120] but banks continued to issue scrip both as "bills of credit" guaranteed by the federal government and as representative of specie deposits made by customers. Scrip was not universally accepted, however. Scrip that was easily counterfeited or issued by a bank without an extremely strong reputation for honoring scrip was often not accepted.[121] It was not until 1866 that a federal tax essentially put an end to the practice of bank-issued scrip.[122]
  19. ^ The Dwights lived primarily in Geneva, New York, and Springfield, Massachusetts.[88]
  20. ^ The associates included Benjamin Franklin Butler, Lot Clark, Jonathan Goodhue, Gould Hoyt, James G. King, James Boyles Murray, John Ward (brother of financier Samuel Ward III), and Stephen Whitney.[131]
  21. ^ Whittlesey had been elected to the Ohio General Assembly in 1820, and to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1823. He was a prominent Whig, banker, and land speculator, and was still serving in the House in 1834. On the advice of Kelley, Whittlesey had, some years earlier, bought extensive land in Toledo, Ohio, which later was chosen as the northern terminus of the Wabash and Erie Canal.[133]
  22. ^ President Andrew Jackson had vetoed a bill renewing the charter of the Second Bank of the United States,[134] and federal officials shut down the bank's branches in Ohio in October 1833[135]—leaving the state with much less capital and specie.[134] The General Assembly could have chartered a state bank to take the place of the Second Bank, but declined to do so.[136]
  23. ^ These included Henry James Anderson, Walter Bowne,[139] Isaac Carrow, George Griswold, Peter Harmony,[140] Pierre Lorillard II,[139] Thomas B. Olcott,[141] and Enos T. Throop,[139] and companies such as John Ward and Company; Nevins, Townsend and Company; and Prime, Ward & King.[140]
  24. ^ Bonds are sold with a par, or face, value and an interest rate. Bond sellers can sell the bond for below par, effectively raising the yield of the bond. Selling the bond below par, however, means the bond seller does not raise as much money as expected. In the worst-case scenario, the Canal Fund Commission would not only sell bonds below par but also fail to sell all the bonds it needed (as investors—worried by the drop in face value—lost faith in the bonds and stopped purchasing them).
  25. ^ These included the Hocking Canal, Walhonding Canal, Warren County Canal, and the Muskingum Improvement.[155]
  26. ^ A feeder canal is a canal primarily used to convey water into the main canal, although it may also carry boat traffic.[156] A branch canal is a canal, of short to medium length, designed to penetrate a geographic or market area adjacent to the main canal and bring traffic in agricultural products, raw materials, or finished goods to the main canal.[157] A sidecut is a short canal similar to a branch canal, but intended to link a specific village, town, or city to the main canal.[158]
  27. ^ Beginning in 1838 and ending in 1844, more than $900,000 ($28,300,000 in 2022 dollars) in new borrowing (bonds and loans) was made to meet interest payments alone.[165]
  28. ^ The legislature authorized the Canal Fund Commission to seek $1 million ($28,400,000 in 2022 dollars) in loans to complete the Miami Canal Extension, Muskingum Improvement, Wabash and Erie Canal, and Walhonding Canal; authorized the commission to obtain $581,000 ($16,500,000 in 2022 dollars) in loans to pay existing debts to contractors; and authorized the commission to float $480,000 ($13,600,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds to meet required investments under the Loan Law.[167]
  29. ^ The loan had to be repaid swiftly: $100,000 in principal had to be repaid on May 1, 1842; $200,000 in principal on December 1, 1842; $100,000 in principal on March 1, 1843; and the remaining principal on May 1, 1843.[169]
  30. ^ This loan also had to be repaid swiftly: $50,000 in principal had to be repaid on November 1, 1841; $100,000 in principal on May 1, 1842; $100,000 in principal on December 1, 1842; and $200,000 in principal on June 1, 1843.[170]
  31. ^ Even with the loans, payments to contractors were irregular, and sometimes infrequent.[174]
  32. ^ Kelley was able to sell these bonds in New York City in April. The amount of bonds sold was more than $667,000, because buyers would only purchase them at a 33 percent discount.[175]
  33. ^ To handle a federal budget surplus in 1836, Congress "deposited" with each state a percentage of the federal budget surplus. Ohio received about $2 million ($53,300,000 in 2022 dollars). Technically, the states were to pay this money back on demand. In practice, Ohio treated the money as a grant. It gave the money to each county, with the proviso that they use them for building schools or infrastructure. Although these funds had almost all been spent by 1842, the state pledged it as collateral for this bond sale, which is why the sale proved successful.[184]
  34. ^ There is disagreement among sources as to how the work stoppage occurred. Historian Harry N. Scheiber says that Kelley and the other Canal Fund commissioners ordered the construction halt.[181] Political scientist Ernest L. Bogart, however, points to the legislature as the source of the work stoppage.[183] In its January 1842 annual report (probably written by Kelley himself),[185] the Canal Fund Commission unanimously and expressly opposed a suspension of work on public infrastructure[168] even though a majority of the commissioners want to halt work on all but the Wabash and Erie Canal and for the state to begin selling canal lands to fund that work.[186]
  35. ^ The Ohio General Assembly had been selling federally-ceded canal land at $1.25 ($34 in 2022 dollars) an acre for Miami Extension Canal lands and $2.50 ($69 in 2022 dollars) an acre for Wabash and Erie Canal lands. Both were beneath the market rate. The collapse of real estate prices, a precursor to the Panic of 1837, brought a halt to canal land sales in 1836. To raise funds, in 1838 the legislature required that all canal lands be appraised. Canal lands could now only be sold at their appraised price or $3.00 ($82 in 2022 dollars) an acre, whichever was higher. With the depression caused by the Panic of 1837 continuing, there were no buyers.[187] Additionally, title to some lands were in dispute between February 1838 and late 1840, as the state of Ohio and the federal government argued about which lands Congress had ceded to the state. These title disputes also inhibited canal land sales.[188]
  36. ^ The legislature actively considered a bill which barred the canal commissioners from raising any funds to pay off the temporary loans made by the New York City banks. This bill passed the Ohio House, and passed the Ohio Senate with amendments some time between midnight and 6 AM on March 7, 1842. The House asked for a conference committee, but the legislature adjourned at noon on March 7. Had the bill passed, it would have essentially bankrupted the canal commission fund. Deeply alarmed by the pending legislation, Kelley submitted a bill during the Senate's final hours in which the state pledged not only to pay its debts but also to reduce spending and issue such stock as necessary to pay off the debt. This legislation passed both chambers, and greatly improved the state's financial standing with Eastern investors.[192]
  37. ^ The Canal Fund Commission issued another $210,000 ($6,600,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds in 1844, and paid off all outstanding contractor debt.[174]
  38. ^ As the economy began growing swiftly again, Ohio was easily able to refinance its high-interest debt and permanently resolve its fiscal emergency.[198] Work on the Miami Extension Canal was finished in 1845, which also greatly reduced the state's need for money.[198][152] All other new canal construction ended in 1847.[155]
  39. ^ Kelley had previously worked closely with three members of the board. William Dennison Jr.[227] and Samuel Medary[231] were both incorporators of the Columbus and Xenia Railroad, and were involved in bringing Kelley aboard as president of that line. Truman P. Handy was a director of the Commercial Bank of Lake Erie alongside Kelley.[213]
  40. ^ All of the railroad's rails came from the United Kingdom.[261]
  41. ^ Although the FCC had enough funds in hand in December 1850 to purchase this land,[315] it apparently had not yet done so.
  42. ^ The right to construct lateral railroads was granted in May 1932 in An Act Regulating Lateral Railroads, although they were restricted to 3 miles (4.8 km) in length[316] and could only be constructed in Lycoming, Luzerne, Northumberland, and Schuylkill counties.[317] The law was amended in March 1840 to permit lateral railroads up to 6 miles (9.7 km) in length in A Supplement to the Act Entitled "An Act Regulating Lateral Railroads".[318] The state legislature extended the right to build lateral railroads to all parts of the state in April 1848 in An Act Relative to Margaret Parthmore and Relative to Lateral Railroads, Etc..[317]
Citations
  1. ^ a b Fess 1937, p. 59.
  2. ^ Kelley 1897, p. 46.
  3. ^ Kelley 1897, p. 10.
  4. ^ Kelley 1897, p. 13.
  5. ^ Kelley 1897, p. 24.
  6. ^ a b Kelley 1897, p. 28.
  7. ^ a b Bates 1888, p. 2.
  8. ^ Kelley 1897, p. 34.
  9. ^ a b c d e Avery 1918b, p. 11.
  10. ^ a b Kelley 1897, p. 37.
  11. ^ Kelley 1897, p. 35.
  12. ^ a b c Wickham 1914, p. 155.
  13. ^ a b c d Lupold & Haddad 1988, p. 6.
  14. ^ Ayers et al. 2006, p. 174.
  15. ^ a b Kelley 1897, p. 38.
  16. ^ Bates 1888, p. 3.
  17. ^ Rose 1990, p. 93.
  18. ^ a b Rose 1990, p. 73.
  19. ^ Rose 1990, p. 74.
  20. ^ a b Avery 1918a, p. 98.
  21. ^ Whittlesey 1867, p. 469.
  22. ^ a b Whittlesey 1867, p. 466.
  23. ^ Avery 1918a, p. 100.
  24. ^ a b c d e Kennedy 1886, p. 557.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i Avery 1918b, p. 12.
  26. ^ a b Memorial Record 1894, p. 225.
  27. ^ a b c Havighurst 1977, p. 79.
  28. ^ Korenko 2009, pp. 37, 45.
  29. ^ Rose 1990, p. 236.
  30. ^ Rose 1990, p. 82.
  31. ^ Ingham 1893, pp. 233–234.
  32. ^ a b Wickham 1914, p. 227.
  33. ^ Jarboe, Michelle (June 11, 2017). "Forest City to sell Scranton Peninsula land to investor group eyeing development". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved May 18, 2018.
  34. ^ a b c d e f Kennedy 1886, p. 553.
  35. ^ a b Rose 1990, p. 78.
  36. ^ Wickham 1914, p. 169.
  37. ^ a b c d Rose 1990, p. 127.
  38. ^ Rose 1990, p. 80.
  39. ^ Avery 1918a, pp. 105–106.
  40. ^ Ohio Secretary of State 1885, p. 76.
  41. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, pp. 78–79.
  42. ^ a b c d Scheiber 1978, p. 368.
  43. ^ Kennedy 1886, p. 551.
  44. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, pp. 82–83.
  45. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, pp. 84–85.
  46. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, pp. 94–96.
  47. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 12–13.
  48. ^ a b Cole 2001, p. 71.
  49. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 14–17.
  50. ^ Galbreath 1925, p. 448.
  51. ^ Bates 1888, p. 11.
  52. ^ a b Kennedy 1886, p. 552.
  53. ^ a b Cole 2001, p. 34.
  54. ^ Bates 1888, p. 19.
  55. ^ Bates 1888, p. 9.
  56. ^ Rothbard 2012, p. 17.
  57. ^ Rothbard 2012, p. 25.
  58. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, pp. 107–108.
  59. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, p. 111.
  60. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 369.
  61. ^ United States Congress. "Ethan Allen Brown (id: B000914)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  62. ^ Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Muskingum County, Ohio 1892, pp. 399–405.
  63. ^ United States Congress. "Jeremiah Morrow (id: M001003)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  64. ^ United States Congress. "Benjamin Tappan (id: T000039)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  65. ^ United States Congress. "Thomas Worthington (id: W000750)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  66. ^ Brown 1998, pp. 234, 244.
  67. ^ Bates 1888, p. 63.
  68. ^ a b Bates 1888, pp. 60–61.
  69. ^ Scheiber 1978, pp. 370–371.
  70. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 372.
  71. ^ Bates 1888, p. 60.
  72. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 370.
  73. ^ a b c d Bates 1888, p. 64.
  74. ^ Scheiber 1978, pp. 369–370.
  75. ^ a b c d e Scheiber 1978, p. 373.
  76. ^ Scheiber 1978, pp. 370, 373.
  77. ^ Bates 1888, p. 69-73.
  78. ^ Huntington, C.C.; McClelland, C.P. (1905). History of the Ohio Canals: Their Construction, Cost, Use and Partial Abandonment. Columbus, Ohio: Press of F.J. Heer. p. 18. OCLC 7004707.
  79. ^ Morrow 1883, pp. 359–360.
  80. ^ Hill 1957, generally.
  81. ^ a b Bates 1888, p. 74-75.
  82. ^ a b Bates 1888, p. 76.
  83. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, pp. 374–375.
  84. ^ a b c d e Scheiber 1978, p. 374.
  85. ^ Scheiber 1978, pp. 373–374.
  86. ^ a b Gieck 1988, p. xv.
  87. ^ Weiner 2005, pp. 12–14.
  88. ^ a b c d Haeger 1981, p. 39.
  89. ^ Gieck 1988, p. xiv.
  90. ^ Gieck 1988, pp. xiv–xv.
  91. ^ Scheiber 1978, p. 379.
  92. ^ a b c d Scheiber 1978, p. 380.
  93. ^ Oeters & Gulick 2014, p. 53.
  94. ^ Chapman, Charles K. (December 1918). "Ohio Canals". Journal of Geography: 154. Retrieved May 26, 2018.
  95. ^ Bates 1888, p. 78.
  96. ^ a b Bates 1888, p. 186.
  97. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 78–79.
  98. ^ a b c Scheiber 1978, p. 376.
  99. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 83–84.
  100. ^ Myers & Cetina 2015, p. 15.
  101. ^ a b Bates 1888, p. 94.
  102. ^ a b Cole 2001, p. 101.
  103. ^ Cole 2001, p. 89.
  104. ^ a b c d e f Scheiber 1978, p. 382.
  105. ^ Martin 1858, pp. 300–301.
  106. ^ Kennedy, Cohen & Piehl 2017, p. 178.
  107. ^ Norton et al. 2015, p. 348.
  108. ^ Waldstreicher 2013, pp. 269–270.
  109. ^ Remini 1991, pp. 234=272.
  110. ^ Rutland 1995, p. 2.
  111. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, p. 266.
  112. ^ Scheiber 1978, pp. 376–377.
  113. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 378.
  114. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, pp. 171–173.
  115. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, pp. 176–177.
  116. ^ a b Gold 2004, p. 98.
  117. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 384.
  118. ^ Bates 1888, p. 95.
  119. ^ Hurst 2001, p. 5.
  120. ^ Hurst 2001, p. 32.
  121. ^ Hurst 2001, pp. 35–38, 46–47, 49–53.
  122. ^ Hurst 2001, p. 53.
  123. ^ Bennett 1904, p. 212.
  124. ^ a b Huntington 1915, p. 362.
  125. ^ Haeger 1981, pp. 39, 44.
  126. ^ Scheiber, Harry N. (Spring 1966). "The Commercial Bank of Lake Erie, 1831-1843". The Business History Review. 40 (1): 47–65. doi:10.2307/3112301. JSTOR 3112301. S2CID 153481665.
  127. ^ a b c Marvin, Walter Rumsey (February 1960). "Alfred Kelley". Museum Echoes: 12.
  128. ^ Lee 1892, p. 400.
  129. ^ Hooper 1920, p. 248.
  130. ^ Haeger 1981, p. 45.
  131. ^ Haeger 1981, pp. 39, 43.
  132. ^ Haeger 1981, p. 40.
  133. ^ a b c Haeger 1981, p. 44.
  134. ^ a b c Haeger 1981, p. 51.
  135. ^ Remini 1984, p. 105.
  136. ^ a b Haeger 1981, p. 43.
  137. ^ a b c d e f Spiegelman 1948, p. 247.
  138. ^ Haeger 1981, pp. 52–53.
  139. ^ a b c Haeger 1981, p. 53.
  140. ^ a b Haeger 1981, p. 52.
  141. ^ Haeger 1981, p. 226.
  142. ^ Haeger 1981, pp. 53–54.
  143. ^ a b c d e Haeger 1981, p. 54.
  144. ^ Stampp 1992, pp. 221–222.
  145. ^ Huntington 1915, p. 391.
  146. ^ "Commercial". The North American. November 13, 1839. p. 1.
  147. ^ Wittke et al. 1941, p. 352.
  148. ^ Scheiber 1978, pp. 382–383.
  149. ^ Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland 1976, p. 18.
  150. ^ a b c Scheiber 1978, p. 383.
  151. ^ Bates 1888, p. 102.
  152. ^ a b Gieck 1988, p. 125.
  153. ^ Miller & Baxter 1906, p. 187.
  154. ^ Gieck 1988, p. 199.
  155. ^ a b Bogart 1911, p. 257.
  156. ^ Woods 1995, p. 12.
  157. ^ Woods 1995, p. 7.
  158. ^ Woods 1995, p. 32.
  159. ^ Scheiber 1978, pp. 383–384.
  160. ^ Roy 1999, pp. 62–63.
  161. ^ a b Roy 1999, p. 64.
  162. ^ a b Bogart 1911, p. 260.
  163. ^ a b Cole 2001, p. 38.
  164. ^ a b Way 2009, p. 208.
  165. ^ a b Bogart 1911, pp. 259–260.
  166. ^ Bogart 1911, pp. 260–261.
  167. ^ a b c Bogart 1911, p. 261.
  168. ^ a b c Canal Fund Commission 1842a, p. 5.
  169. ^ a b Canal Fund Commission 1842a, pp. 5–6.
  170. ^ a b c Canal Fund Commission 1842a, p. 6.
  171. ^ Bogart 1911, p. 262.
  172. ^ a b c Canal Fund Commission 1842a, p. 7.
  173. ^ Canal Fund Commission 1842a, p. 8.
  174. ^ a b c d e Way 2009, p. 209.
  175. ^ a b c Bogart 1911, p. 263.
  176. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 104–105.
  177. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 105–106.
  178. ^ a b c d e f Scheiber 1978, p. 385.
  179. ^ Scheiber 1975, p. 88.
  180. ^ Canal Fund Commission 1842b, p. 9.
  181. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, pp. 384–385.
  182. ^ Scheiber 1968, p. 151.
  183. ^ a b c Bogart 1911, p. 264.
  184. ^ Bogart 1911, pp. 258–259, 265.
  185. ^ a b Cole 2001, p. 39.
  186. ^ Canal Fund Commission 1842a, p. 11.
  187. ^ Scheiber 1975, pp. 88–89.
  188. ^ Scheiber 1975, p. 90.
  189. ^ Scheiber 1975, p. 91.
  190. ^ a b Bates 1888, p. 118.
  191. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 386.
  192. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 118–124.
  193. ^ Bates 1888, p. 124.
  194. ^ Bogart 1911, pp. 264–265.
  195. ^ a b c Bogart 1911, p. 265.
  196. ^ Bates 1888, p. 127.
  197. ^ a b c Scheiber 1978, p. 387.
  198. ^ a b Scheiber 1975, p. 92.
  199. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, pp. 387–388.
  200. ^ Bates 1888, p. 129.
  201. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, p. 213.
  202. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, p. 217.
  203. ^ Bates 1888, p. 131.
  204. ^ Bates 1888, p. 139.
  205. ^ a b Cole 2001, p. 70.
  206. ^ Bates 1888, p. 136.
  207. ^ Rose 1990, pp. 171–172.
  208. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 388.
  209. ^ Bates 1888, p. 142.
  210. ^ a b Vernon 1873, p. 470.
  211. ^ Meints 1992, pp. 72–73.
  212. ^ Scheiber 1978, pp. 389–390.
  213. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 390.
  214. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899a, p. 171.
  215. ^ Lee 1892, p. 239.
  216. ^ Acts of a Local Nature Passed By the General Assembly Ohio 1836, p. 529.
  217. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 389.
  218. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906, pp. 56–57.
  219. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906, p. 57.
  220. ^ Schwieterman 2001, p. 248.
  221. ^ Churella 2013, p. 267.
  222. ^ a b Cole 2001, p. 52.
  223. ^ "Railway Statistics". The Cleveland Herald. February 23, 1847. p. 2.
  224. ^ Marvin 1954, p. 263.
  225. ^ a b c d Scheiber 1978, p. 391.
  226. ^ a b c Bates 1888, p. 175.
  227. ^ a b Hooper 1920, p. 225.
  228. ^ a b c "Receipts of Railroad Iron at Cleveland for Nine Years". The Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review. May 1858. p. 631. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  229. ^ a b "Railroad Matters". Daily National Intelligencer. August 22, 1849. p. 3.
  230. ^ "Columbus and Xenia Rail Road". The Cleveland Herald. October 21, 1847. p. 3.
  231. ^ a b c Cole 2001, p. 53.
  232. ^ "The Columbus and Xenia Railroad". The Daily Ohio Statesman. February 22, 1850. p. 3.
  233. ^ "The Railroad Trip". The Daily Ohio Statesman. February 28, 1850. p. 3.
  234. ^ Report of Proceedings 1852, p. 8.
  235. ^ Cincinnati, Hamilton, and Dayton Railroad 1854, p. 6.
  236. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1901, p. 55.
  237. ^ a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1874, p. 68.
  238. ^ Lee 1892, p. 250.
  239. ^ Vernon 1873, p. 419.
  240. ^ a b "The Arrival". Daily True Democrat. February 22, 1851. p. 2.
  241. ^ "Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road Company". The Cleveland Herald. April 15, 1847. p. 3. Retrieved May 31, 2018; "The Crisis". The Cleveland Herald. May 22, 1847. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  242. ^ "Railroads". Cleveland Weekly Herald. April 21, 1847. p. 4.
  243. ^ a b c Thomas 1920, p. 107.
  244. ^ a b "Railroad News Gleanings". Locomotive Engineers Monthly Journal. March 1907. p. 255. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  245. ^ "Alfred Kelley". The Cleveland Herald. August 14, 1847. p. 3. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  246. ^ "Delaware County". The Cleveland Herald. September 9, 1847. p. 3. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  247. ^ "Extract from the Minutes of the Board of the C. C. & R. R. Cleveland, Sept. 7, 1847". The Cleveland Herald. September 15, 1847. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  248. ^ a b Rose 1990, p. 145.
  249. ^ Avery 1918a, p. 217.
  250. ^ "Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road". The Cleveland Herald. September 15, 1847. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  251. ^ "Railroad Matters". American Railroad Journal. April 15, 1848. p. 241. hdl:2027/uva.x002211471. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  252. ^ "Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road Meeting". The Cleveland Herald. August 3, 1848. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  253. ^ "C. C. and C. Rail Road". The Plain Dealer. January 15, 1848. p. 2.
  254. ^ Harbach & Childe 1848, p. 3.
  255. ^ a b c Thomas 1920, p. 108.
  256. ^ Haddad 2007, p. 6.
  257. ^ a b Hatcher 1988, p. 171.
  258. ^ a b Kennedy 1896, p. 323.
  259. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, pp. 390–391.
  260. ^ "Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati Rail Road". The Cleveland Herald. June 1, 1849. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  261. ^ "Rail Road Iron at Cleveland". Daily True Democrat. December 31, 1852. p. 2.
  262. ^ "Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad". The Cleveland Herald. April 7, 1849. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  263. ^ "Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad". American Railroad Journal. May 12, 1849. p. 295. hdl:2027/uva.x002211472. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  264. ^ a b "The N. Y. Tribune of Saturday". Milwaukee Sentinel and Gazette. July 24, 1849. p. 2. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  265. ^ "Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati Railroad". The Ohio Observer. July 25, 1849. p. 3. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  266. ^ "The Ride". Daily True Democrat. March 18, 1850. p. 2.
  267. ^ "Ohio: Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad". American Railroad Journal. February 9, 1850. p. 89. hdl:2027/umn.31951000877135t. Retrieved June 26, 2018.
  268. ^ a b "Whither We Are Tending". Bangor Daily Whig and Courier. May 20, 1850. p. 1. Retrieved June 26, 2018.
  269. ^ "Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road". Cleveland Herald. June 12, 1850. p. 2. Retrieved June 26, 2018.
  270. ^ "The Railroad Will Be Complete to Shelby To-Day". Daily True Democrat. November 2, 1850. p. 2; "Shelby". The Plain Dealer. November 2, 1850. p. 2.
  271. ^ a b c d "Moving Events—C. C. and C. Rail Road Completed". The Plain Dealer. February 18, 1851. p. 2.
  272. ^ a b "The Steam Whistle, and the Boom of the Cannon". Daily True Democrat. February 19, 1851. p. 2.
  273. ^ "Matters at Columbus". The Plain Dealer. February 21, 1851. p. 2.
  274. ^ "Ohio Legislature Going to Cleveland". The Daily Ohio Statesman. February 19, 1851. p. 3. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  275. ^ "The First Through-Trip to Cleveland". The Daily Ohio Statesman. February 25, 1851. p. 3. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  276. ^ Camp 2007, p. 53.
  277. ^ a b "The 22nd In Cleveland". The Daily Ohio Statesman. February 25, 1851. p. 3. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  278. ^ "Back Again". The Daily Ohio Statesman. February 25, 1851. p. 3. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  279. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868a, p. 117.
  280. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1871, p. 224.
  281. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 178–183.
  282. ^ Ohio Secretary of State 1848, pp. 184–185.
  283. ^ "Cleveland and Buffalo Rail Road". The Plain Dealer. August 2, 1849. p. 2.
  284. ^ "Ohio". American Railroad Journal. April 6, 1850. pp. 246–247. hdl:2027/mdp.39015013032118.
  285. ^ Harbach 1850, p. 3.
  286. ^ Bates 1888, p. 179.
  287. ^ Orth 1910a, pp. 738–739.
  288. ^ Rose, W.R. (September 23, 1924). "All in the Day's Work". The Plain Dealer. p. 10.
  289. ^ a b c "Ohio". American Railroad Journal. November 29, 1851. p. 757. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
  290. ^ a b Churella 2013, p. 187.
  291. ^ a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1874, p. 91.
  292. ^ Bates 1888, p. 181.
  293. ^ Hatcher 1988, p. 172.
  294. ^ a b Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 1853, p. 142.
  295. ^ a b c d e "Franklin Canal Company". The Plain Dealer. February 6, 1854. p. 2.
  296. ^ Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad Company v. Franklin Canal Company, et al., 5 Fed. Cas. 1044, 1045 (W.D. Pa. 1853).
  297. ^ Franklin Canal Company 1851, pp. 3–4.
  298. ^ Franklin Canal Company 1853, p. 358.
  299. ^ Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 1853, pp. 143, 148.
  300. ^ Franklin Canal Company 1851, pp. 4–5.
  301. ^ Ninth Annual Report of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern 1879, p. 55.
  302. ^ Franklin Canal Company 1851, p. 5.
  303. ^ "Pennsylvania". American Railroad Journal. May 31, 1851. p. 341. Retrieved February 26, 2018.
  304. ^ Franklin Canal Company 1853, p. 355.
  305. ^ Michigan Railroad Commission 1877, p. lxiv.
  306. ^ Kent 1948, pp. 253–254, 256–259.
  307. ^ "And Coming Down". Erie Weekly Gazette. February 2, 1854. p. 3.
  308. ^ Grinde 1974, p. 16.
  309. ^ Commonwealth v. Franklin Canal Company, 9 Harris 117, 118 (Pa. 1853).
  310. ^ "Franklin Canal Rail Road—Hurrah for Judge Lewis". The Plain Dealer. January 29, 1853. p. 2.
  311. ^ Hatcher 1988, p. 173.
  312. ^ "Lake Shore Railroad". The New York Times. January 11, 1853. p. 4.
  313. ^ Commonwealth v. Franklin Canal Company, 9 Harris 117 (Pa. 1853).
  314. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 181–182.
  315. ^ "Pennsylvania". American Railroad Journal. December 7, 1850. pp. 772–773. hdl:2027/mdp.39015013032118.
  316. ^ Ball 1884, pp. 5–11.
  317. ^ a b Ball 1884, p. 40.
  318. ^ Ball 1884, pp. 20–21.
  319. ^ Bates 1888, p. 182.
  320. ^ Hatcher 1988, pp. 173–174.
  321. ^ "Retaliatory". The New York Times. April 29, 1853. p. 4.
  322. ^ Rhodes 1919, p. 21.
  323. ^ Churella 2013, pp. 187–188.
  324. ^ Kent 1948, pp. 253–266.
  325. ^ Grinde 1974, p. 18.
  326. ^ "Erie Affairs". The New York Times. December 24, 1853. p. 4.
  327. ^ "The Latest from Erie". The New York Times. January 9, 1854. p. 1; "The Erie War". The New York Times. January 14, 1854. p. 2.
  328. ^ "Rejoicings At Erie". The Plain Dealer. January 30, 1854. p. 3.
  329. ^ a b Kent 1948, p. 269.
  330. ^ "Terms of the Agreement". Erie Weekly Gazette. February 16, 1854. p. 2.
  331. ^ "Alfred Kelley". The Plain Dealer. February 20, 1854. p. 3; "Cleveland, Painesville, Ashtabula". The Plain Dealer. August 20, 1854. p. 3.
  332. ^ a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1874, pp. 91–92.
  333. ^ "Breaking Up of Parties". Perrysburg Journal. May 6, 1854. p. 67.
  334. ^ Vernon 1873, p. 211.
  335. ^ a b Scheiber 1978, p. 392.
  336. ^ "Hon. Alfred Kelley has been relieved". The Daily Scioto Gazette. October 10, 1851. p. 2.
  337. ^ "Change in the C. C. & C. Railroad". The Daily Cleveland Herald. May 25, 1853. p. 2.
  338. ^ a b Avery 1918b, p. 13.
  339. ^ "O.S. Journal". The Daily Cleveland Herald. May 9, 1854. p. 2.
  340. ^ Bates 1888, p. 185.
  341. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 186–187.
  342. ^ Taylor & Taylor 1899b, p. 31.
  343. ^ a b c Bates 1888, p. 197.
  344. ^ Bates 1888, p. 187-191.
  345. ^ Wikoff 1875, p. 75.
  346. ^ Bates 1888, pp. 193–195.
  347. ^ Bates 1888, p. 10.
  348. ^ a b Kennedy 1886, p. 556.
  349. ^ Kennedy 1886, pp. 555, 557.
  350. ^ Kelley 1897, p. 75.
  351. ^ a b Johnson 1879, p. 365.
  352. ^ Bates 1888, p. 200.
  353. ^ "Illness of Alfred Kelley". The Plain Dealer. November 29, 1859. p. 3.
  354. ^ Kennedy 1886, p. 555.
  355. ^ "Telegraphic News". The Plain Dealer. December 2, 1859. p. 2.
  356. ^ Phillips, David E. (October 1907). "Monumental Inscriptions From Green Lawn Cemetery, Columbus, Ohio". The "Old Northwest" Genealogical Quarterly: 357. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
  357. ^ "Alfred Kelley's Will". The Plain Dealer. December 13, 1859. p. 3.

Bibliography Edit

  • Acts of a Local Nature Passed at the First Session of the Thirty-Fourth General Assembly of the State of Ohio. Volume 34. Columbus, Ohio: James B. Gardiner, State Printer. 1836.
  • Avery, Elroy McKendree (1918). A History of Cleveland and Its Environs: The Heart of New Connecticut. Volume 1. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co.
  • Avery, Elroy McKendree (1918). A History of Cleveland and Its Environs: The Heart of New Connecticut. Volume II. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co.
  • Ayers, Edward L.; Gould, Lewis L.; Oshinsky, David M.; Soderland, Jean R. (2006). American Passages: A History of the United States. Boston, Mass.: Wadsworth/Cengage Learning. ISBN 9780618914067.
  • Ball, George W.I. (1884). General Railroad and Telegraph Laws of the State of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Allen, Lane & Scott.
  • Bates, James L. (1888). Alfred Kelley: His Life and Work. Columbus, Ohio: Press of R. Clarke & Co.
  • Bennett, William A. (1904). "Banking in Cleveland". Annals of the Early Settlers Association of Cuyahoga County. Volume V. Cleveland: Early Settlers Association of Cuyahoga County.
  • Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Muskingum County, Ohio. Chicago: The Goodspeed Publishing Co. 1892.
  • Bogart, Ernest L. (April 1911). "The State Debt of Ohio". Journal of Political Economy. 19 (4): 249–266. doi:10.1086/251838. S2CID 154531921. Retrieved May 26, 2018.
  • Brown, Marion A. (1998). The Second Bank of the United States and Ohio (1803-1860): A Collision of Interests. Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 9780773483545.
  • Camp, Mark J. (2007). Railroad Depots of Northeast Ohio. Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738551159.
  • Canal Fund Commission (January 21, 1842). Annual Report of the Commissioners of the Canal Fund, of the State of Ohio, Made to the Fortieth General Assembly. Doc. No 49. Columbus, Ohio: Samuel Medary, State Printer. hdl:2027/chi.78251504.
  • Canal Fund Commission (December 27, 1842). Annual Report of the Commissioners of the Canal Fund, of the State of Ohio, Made to the Forty First General Assembly. Doc. No 29. Columbus, Ohio: Samuel Medary, State Printer. hdl:2027/osu.32435074906009.
  • "Case of the Franklin Canal Company". Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Commenced at Harrisburg, Tuesday the Fourth Day of January, In the Year of Our Lord One Thousand Eight-Hundred and Fifty-Three. Volume II. Harrisburg, Pa.: Theo. Fenn & Co., Printers to the State. 1853.
  • Churella, Albert J. (2013). The Pennsylvania Railroad. Volume 1: Building an Empire, 1846-1917. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812243482.
  • Cincinnati, Hamilton, and Dayton Railroad (1854). Statement of the Existing Controversy Between the Two Lines of Railroads From Cincinnati to Lake Erie. Cincinnati, Ohio: Cincinnati Gazette Company, Printer. hdl:2027/chi.26452099.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Cole, Chester (2001). A Fragile Capital: Identity and the Early Years of Columbus, Ohio. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University Press. ISBN 9780814208533.
  • Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland (1976). Annual Report, 1976 (Report). Cleveland: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.
  • Fess, Simeon D. (1937). Ohio: A Four-Volume Reference Library on the History of a Great State. Volume 4: Ohio's Three Hundred. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co.
  • Franklin Canal Company (1851). Pennsylvania Section of the Erie and Cleveland Railroad. New York: William W. Rose, stationer. hdl:2027/ien.35556042945196.
  • Franklin Canal Company (1853). "Report of the Franklin Canal Company". Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Commenced at Harrisburg, Tuesday the Fourth Day of January, In the Year of Our Lord One Thousand Eight-Hundred and Fifty-Three. Volume II (Report). Harrisburg, Pa.: Theo. Fenn & Co., Printers to the State. pp. 355–359.
  • Galbreath, Charles B. (1925). History of Ohio. Volume 2. Chicago: The American Historical Society. hdl:2027/mdp.39015070269074.
  • Gieck, Jack (1988). A Photo Album of Ohio's Canal Era, 1825-1913. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 9780873383530.
  • Gold, David M. (2004). "The General Assembly and Ohio's Constitutional Culture". In Benedict, Michael Les; Winkler, John F. (eds.). The History of Ohio Law. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press. ISBN 9780821415467.
  • Grinde, Donald A., Jr. (January 1974). "Erie's Railroad War: A Case Study of Purposive Violence for a Community's Economic Advancement". Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine: 15–23. Retrieved March 10, 2018.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Haddad, Gladys (2007). Flora Stone Mather: Daughter of Cleveland's Euclid Avenue and Ohio's Western Reserve. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 9780873388993.
  • Haeger, John Dennis (1981). The Investment Frontier: New York Businessmen and the Economic Development of the Old North-West. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press. ISBN 9780873955317.
  • Harbach, Frederick (1850). Report on the Preliminary Surveys for the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad Company. Cleveland: Sanford & Hayward.
  • Harbach, Frederick; Childe, John (1848). Report on the surveys, estimates and income of the Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad. Cleveland: Smead & Cowles. hdl:2027/njp.32101066800754.
  • Hatcher, Harlan (1988). "Building the Railroads". In Lupold, Harry Forrest; Haddad, Gladys (eds.). Ohio's Western Reserve: A Regional Reader. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 9780873383639.
  • Havighurst, Walter (1977). Ohio: A Bicentennial History. New York: Norton. ISBN 9780393056136.
  • Heidler, David S.; Heidler, Jeanne T. (2010). Henry Clay: The Essential American. New York: Random House. ISBN 9781588369956. jackson.
  • Hill, Leonard U. (1957). John Johnston and the Indians: In the Land of the Three Miamis. Columbus, Ohio: Stoneman Press.
  • Hooper, Osman Castle (1920). History of the City of Columbus, Ohio, From the Founding of Franklinton in 1797, Through the World War Period to the Year 1920. Columbus, Ohio: Memorial Publishing Co.
  • Huntington, C.C. (1915). "A History of Banking and Currency in Ohio Before the Civil War". Ohio Archæological and Historical Publications. Cleveland: Fred J. Herr.
  • Hurst, James Willard (2001). A Legal History of Money in the United States, 1774-1970. Washington, D.C.: Beard Books. ISBN 9781587980985.
  • Ingham, Mary Bigelow (1893). Women of Cleveland and Their Work, Philanthropic, Educational, Literary, Medical and Artistic. Cleveland: Ingham, Clarke, & Co.
  • Johnson, Crisfield (1879). History of Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Cleveland: D.W. Ensign & Co.
  • Kelley, Hermon Alfred (1897). A Genealogical History of the Kelley Family Descended From Joseph Kelley of Norwich, Connecticut, With Much Biographical Matter Concerning the First Four Generations and Notes of Inflowing Female Lines. Cleveland: H.A. Kelley.
  • Kennedy, James Harrison (March 1886). "Alfred Kelley". Magazine of Western History. pp. 550–557. Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  • Kennedy, James Harrison (1896). A History of the City of Cleveland: Its Settlement, Rise and Progress, 1796-1896. Cleveland: Imperial Press.
  • Kennedy, David M.; Cohen, Lizbeth; Piehl, Mel (2017). The Brief American Pageant: A History of the Republic. Boston: Cengage Learning. ISBN 9781285193298.
  • Kent, Donald H. (October 1948). "The Erie War of the Gauges". Pennsylvania History: 253–275.
  • Korenko, Leslie (2009). Kelleys Island: The Courageous, Poignant and Often Quirky Lives of Island Pioneers, 1810-1861. Kelleys Island, Ohio: The Wine Press. ISBN 9780981961217.
  • Larick, Roy; Gibbons, Bob; Siplock, Edward (2005). Euclid Creek. Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738539539.
  • Lee, Alfred E. (1892). History of the City of Columbus, Capital of Ohio. Volume 1. New York: Munsell & Co.
  • Lupold, Harry Forrest; Haddad, Gladys (1988). "Conquest and Settlement: Native Americans to New Englanders". In Lupold, Harry Forrest; Haddad, Gladys (eds.). Ohio's Western Reserve: A Regional Reader. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 9780873383639.
  • Martin, William T. (1858). History of Franklin County: A Collection of Reminiscences of the Early Settlement of the County. Columbus, Ohio: Follett, Forster & Co.
  • Marvin, Walter Rumsey (July 1954). "Ohio's Unsung Penitentiary Railroad". Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly: 254–269. Retrieved May 27, 2018.
  • Meints, Graydon M. (1992). Michigan Railroads and Railroad Companies. East Lansing, Mich.: Michigan State University Press. ISBN 9780870133183.
  • Memorial Record of the County of Cuyahoga and City of Cleveland, Ohio. Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Co. 1894.
  • Michigan Railroad Commission (1877). "Fifth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads of the State of Michigan, for the Year Ending December 31, 1876". Report of the Commissioner of Railroads. Lansing, Mich.: W.S. George and Co., State Printers and Binders: 34 v. hdl:2027/njp.32101066784305.
  • Miller, Charles C.; Baxter, Samuel A. (1906). History of Allen County, Ohio, and Representative Citizens. Chicago: Richmond & Arnold.
  • Morrow, Josiah (1883). The History of Brown County, Ohio. Chicago: W.H Beers & Co.
  • Myers, John; Cetina, Judith G. (2015). Irish Cleveland. Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781467113496.
  • Ninth Annual Report of the President and Directors of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company to the Stockholders for the Fiscal Year Ending December 31, 1878 (Report). Cleveland: Fairbanks & Co. 1879.
  • Norton, Mary Beth; Kamensky, Jane; Sheriff, Carol; Blight, David W.; Chudacoff, Howard (2015). A People and a Nation: A History of the United States. Stamford, Conn.: Cengage Learning. ISBN 9781133312727.
  • Oeters, Bill; Gulick, Nancy (2014). Miami and Erie Canal. Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781467112536.
  • Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs (1868). "Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs, to the Governor of the State of Ohio, for the Year 1867". Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs, to the Governor of the State of Ohio, for the Year. Columbus, Ohio: L.D. Myers & Bro., State Printers: 38 v. in 39. hdl:2027/njp.32101066796929.
  • Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs (1871). Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs, for the Year Ending June 30, 1870, In Two Volumes. Volume II. Columbus, Ohio: Nevins and Myers, State Printers.
  • Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs (1874). Seventh Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs of Ohio for the Year Ending June 30, 1873. Columbus, Ohio: Nevins and Myers, State Printers.
  • Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs (1888). Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs, to the Governor of the State Ohio, for the Year 1887. Columbus, Ohio: The Westbote Company, State Printers.
  • Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs (1901). The Thirty-Fourth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs, to the Governor of the State Ohio, for the Year 1901. Columbus, Ohio: F.J. Heer, State Printer.
  • Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs (1906). The Thirty-Eighth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs, to the Governor of the State Ohio, for the Year 1905. Columbus, Ohio: The Springfield Publishing Company, State Printers.
  • Ohio Secretary of State (1848). Acts of a General Nature Passed By the Forty-Sixth General Assembly of the State of Ohio. Volume XLVI. Columbus, Ohio: Chas. Scott's Steam Press.
  • Ohio Secretary of State (1885). Annual Report of the Secretary of State to the Governor of Ohio for the Year 1884. Columbus, Ohio: The Westbote Co., State Printers.
  • Orth, Samuel Peter (1910). A History of Cleveland, Ohio. Volume I. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co.
  • Orth, Samuel Peter (1910). A History of Cleveland, Ohio. Volume II: Biography. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1984). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Democracy, 1833–1845. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 9780060152796.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1991). Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 9780393030044.
  • Report of the Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates From Railroad Companies, Held in Columbus, May 4, 1852. Columbus, Ohio: Scott & Bascom, Printers. 1852. hdl:2027/miun.aft9076.0001.001.
  • Rhodes, James Ford (1919). History of the United States From the Compromise of 1850. Volume 3. New York: Harper & Bros.
  • Rose, William Ganson (1990). Cleveland: The Making of a City. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 9780873384285.
  • Rothbard, Murray N. (2012). The Panic of 1819: Reactions and Policies. Auburn, Ala.: Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 9781933550084.
  • Roy, William G. (1999). Socializing Capital: The Rise of the Large Industrial Corporation in America. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691010342.
  • Rutland, Robert Allen (1995). The Democrats: From Jefferson to Clinton. Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 9780826210340.
  • Scheiber, Harry N. (1968). The Ohio Canal Era: A Case Study of Government and the Economy, 1820-1861. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
  • Scheiber, Harry N. (Summer 1975). "Land Reform, Speculation, and Government Failure: The Administration of Ohio's State Canal Lands, 1836-1860". Prologue: The Journal of the National Archives: 85–89. hdl:2027/uc1.b5181423. Retrieved May 26, 2018.
  • Scheiber, Harry N. (Autumn 1978). "Alfred Kelley and the Ohio Business Elite, 1822-1859". Ohio History: 354–392. Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  • Schwieterman, Joseph P. (2001). When the Railroad Leaves Town: American Communities in the Age of Rail Line Abandonment. Kirksville, Mo.: Truman State University Press. ISBN 9780943549989.
  • Spiegelman, Mortimer (July 1948). "The Failure of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company, 1857". Ohio History Journal: 247–265. Retrieved May 22, 2018.
  • Stampp, Kenneth Milton (1992). America in 1857: A Nation on the Brink. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195074819.
  • Taylor, William Alexander; Taylor, Aubrey Clarence (1899). Ohio Statesmen and Annals of Progress, From the Year 1788 to the Year 1900. Volume I. Columbus, Ohio: Press of the Westbote Co.
  • Taylor, William Alexander; Taylor, Aubrey Clarence (1899). Ohio Statesmen and Annals of Progress, From the Year 1788 to the Year 1900. Volume II. Columbus, Ohio: Press of the Westbote Co.
  • Thomas, William B. (Fall 1920). "Early History of the Old Bee Line R.R. and Its Completion By Hon. Alfred Kelley in 1851". Firelands Pioneer: 104–122. Retrieved June 1, 2018.
  • Vernon, Edward (1873). "American Railroad Manual for the United States and the Dominion". American Railroad Manual. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co. hdl:2027/njp.32101066799089.
  • Voight, Norman R. (2017). Transportation Depth Reference Manual for the Civil PE Exam. Belmont, Calif.: Professional Publications. ISBN 9781591264682.
  • Waldstreicher, David (2013). A Companion to John Adams and John Quincy Adams. Malden, Mass: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 9780470655580.
  • Way, Peter (2009). Common Labour: Workers and the Digging of North American Canals, 1780-1860. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521102650.
  • Weiner, Ronald R. (2005). Lake Effects: A History of Urban Policy Making in Cleveland, 1825-1929. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University Press. ISBN 9780814209899.
  • Whittlesey, Charles (1867). Early History of Cleveland. Cleveland: Fairbanks, Benedict, & Co., Printers.
  • Wickham, Gertrude Van Rensselaer (1914). The Pioneer Families of Cleveland 1796–1840. Volume 1. Cleveland: Evangelical Publishing House.
  • Wikoff, Allen T. (1875). Annual Report of the Secretary of State to the Governor of the State of Ohio for the Year 1874. Columbus, Ohio: Nevins & Myers, State Printers.
  • Wittke, Carl Frederick; Bond, Beverley W.; Utter, William T.; Weisenburger, Francis P.; Roseboom, Eugene H.; Jordan, Philip D.; Lindley, Harlow (1941). The History of the State of Ohio. Volume 3: The Passing of the Frontier, 1825-1850. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society.
  • Woods, Terry K. (1995). The Ohio and Erie Canal: A Glossary of Terms. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 9780873385220.

External links Edit

alfred, kelley, november, 1789, december, 1859, banker, canal, builder, lawyer, railroad, executive, state, legislator, state, ohio, united, states, considered, historians, most, prominent, commercial, financial, political, ohioans, first, half, 19th, century,. Alfred Kelley November 7 1789 December 2 1859 was a banker canal builder lawyer railroad executive and state legislator in the state of Ohio in the United States He is considered by historians to be one of the most prominent commercial financial and political Ohioans of the first half of the 19th century Alfred KelleyAlfred KelleyBorn 1789 11 07 November 7 1789Charlton Connecticut U S DiedDecember 2 1859 1859 12 02 aged 70 Columbus Ohio U S NationalityAmericanOccupation s Banker canal builder lawyer legislator railroad executiveKnown forBuilding the Ohio and Erie Canal saving Ohio from bankruptcy establishing the State Bank of Ohio Building the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati RailroadKelley is known as the Father of the Ohio and Erie Canal for his successful legislative attempt to establish the Ohio and Erie Canal He was one of the canal s first two acting commissioners and oversaw its construction and completion He was the president of Columbus and Xenia Railroad completed in 1850 and the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad completed in 1851 and pushed for a state charter for the Cleveland Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad later known as the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad For this he is known as the architect of Ohio s rail system As a member of the Canal Commission Fund he helped save Ohio from bankruptcy in 1841 and 1842 As a state legislator he led the investigation into and secured the resignation of two Ohio State Treasurers for financial malfeasance successfully proposed legislation abolishing imprisonment for debt created the State Bank of Ohio reformed the state s tax system and successfully proposed legislation to create the first state oversight of public education Kelley was notably the first lawyer and prosecuting attorney in Cleveland He became the youngest member of the Ohio General Assembly at the age of 25 and returned to the legislature numerous times until he became the oldest serving in the assembly Contents 1 Early years 2 Business and legal career in Cleveland 3 Early legislative career 4 Involvement with the Ohio amp Erie Canal 4 1 Support for a north south canal in Ohio 4 2 Role on the investigating commission 4 3 Canal commissioner 5 Return to the state legislature 5 1 Becoming a Whig 5 2 Return to the Ohio House 6 Bank investor and executive 6 1 Using the canal fund to build banking relationships 6 2 Banking roles 6 3 Dilemma of 1839 7 Canal Fund Commission and the Panic of 1837 7 1 Causes of the Canal Fund crisis 7 2 Canal Fund financial crisis of 1841 7 3 Canal Fund financial crisis of 1842 7 4 End of the Canal Fund financial crisis 8 Second return to the state legislature 9 Early involvement with railroads 9 1 Columbus and Xenia Railroad 10 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad 10 1 Election as president of the line 10 2 Raising funds and constructing the road 10 3 Celebratory completion trip 11 Cleveland Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad 11 1 Election as first president of the railroad 11 2 Role in creating the Franklin Canal Company railroad 11 3 Role in the Erie Gauge War 11 4 Resignation 12 Third return to the state legislature 12 1 Health problems 12 2 Final legislative term 13 Personal life 14 Death and legacy 15 References 16 Bibliography 17 External linksEarly years Edit nbsp Joshua Stow who encouraged his nephew Alfred Kelley to emigrate to OhioAlfred Kelley was born in Middlefield Connecticut on November 7 1789 to Daniel and Jemima nee Stow Kelley 1 He was the second of six children all boys 2 The Kelleys were of English descent 3 having lived in Connecticut since at least 1690 4 The Stows were an important English land owning family which emigrated to Massachusetts in 1630 and then Connecticut in 1650 5 Alfred s uncle Silas Stow was the land agent for Nicholas Low who owned the township that later became Lowville New York At the urging of Silas Stow 6 the Kelleys moved to Lowville in the winter of 1798 1799 7 Daniel built and operated a gristmill and Jemima dispensed medication and medical treatment to the settlers in the area 8 Having attended public school in Middlefield and Lowville 9 Alfred enrolled at Fairfield Academy in Fairfield New York in 1804 10 Daniel Kelley was appointed a judge of the New York Court of Common Pleas in 1805 and held various other public offices in Lowville and Oneida County 11 a The Kelleys became moderately wealthy 7 In 1807 Alfred began the study of law under Jonas Pratt a judge of the New York Supreme Court 9 Daniel Kelley was increasingly unhappy with the Stow family s liberal religious views which were beginning to influence his sons 10 Another of Alfred s uncles Joshua Stow was one of the original investors in the Connecticut Land Company 12 By royal charter the Connecticut Colony laid claim to most of the lands west of the colony between the 41st and 42nd parallels of north latitude In 1786 Connecticut ceded all its land claims to the government of the United States 13 in exchange for cancellation of its American Revolutionary War debts 14 Connecticut retained only those lands known as the Connecticut Western Reserve an area bounded by Lake Erie on the north Pennsylvania on the east and the 41st parallel of north latitude on the south The Western Reserve extended for exactly 120 miles 190 km to the west and came to an abrupt halt 13 b On August 3 1795 the state of Connecticut sold the Western Reserve to the Connecticut Land Company for 1 2 million 20 700 000 in 2022 dollars 13 Joshua Stow was a member of the party led by Moses Cleaveland which surveyed the Western Reserve in 1796 12 Encouraged by his uncle s descriptions of the lush lands of the Western Reserve 12 Alfred s eldest brother Datus traveled to the nascent settlement of Cleveland in early 1810 Although he returned almost immediately 15 Alfred emigrated to Cleveland in May 1810 16 He made the journey on horseback accompanied by Joshua Stow and a medical student Jared Potter Kirtland 9 Business and legal career in Cleveland EditAlfred Kelley was admitted to the bar on November 7 1810 He was the first lawyer to practice in Cleveland The local court immediately appointed him prosecuting attorney for Cuyahoga County a position he held until 1822 9 c In one of his most notable cases he prosecuted a slave hunter for kidnapping in 1820 He won the case 17 In 1811 Kelley and 16 others formed the first library association in Cuyahoga County It lasted about four years 18 Largely through the efforts of Kelley 19 Cleveland was incorporated as a village by the state of Ohio on December 23 1814 The village s first elections were held on June 5 1815 and Kelley was elected the first president of the village unanimously 20 d Kelley held the position only a few months resigning on March 19 1816 9 21 e nbsp House built in Cleveland by Alfred Kelley about 1814 Kelley bought several properties in and around Cleveland In 1814 he purchased a parcel of land near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River This property was defined by Water Street now W 9th Street in the east W Lakeside Avenue on the south the Cuyahoga River on the west and Lake Erie on the north 18 Kelley constructed a home on this land in 1816 It was only the second brick house in the village of Cleveland 24 25 The structure was intended as a residence for his parents but his mother died before it was completed Kelley and his wife took up residence there instead occupying the house until 1827 24 f Kelley and his brothers Datus and Irad formed a general store in January 1815 27 They erected a brick building on Superior Avenue at the intersection with Bank Street now W 6th Street 28 g Kelley also purchased a peninsula on the west bank of the Cuyahoga River 24 where he established a farm 30 In 1833 31 he sold most of this land to local merchant Joel Scranton 24 32 The area thereafter became known as Scranton Flats 32 or the Scranton Peninsula 33 Kelley was a major investor in and helped organize the Commercial Bank of Lake Erie also known as the Commercial Bank of Cleveland in August 1816 34 35 It was the first bank in Cleveland 36 The bank survived the Panic of 1819 but its finances were in such disarray that it was reorganized in 1820 37 h Kelley was named one of 11 members of the reorganized bank s board of directors 37 and elected the bank s president in 1823 34 35 The bank s charter expired in 1842 its affairs wound up and its assets distributed to its investors in 1845 37 The same year that Kelley helped organize the Commercial Bank he and 13 others formed the Cleveland Pier Company to build a pier into Lake Erie This structure located at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River was erected on sand without pilings and storms soon destroyed it 22 On March 2 1817 Kelley met with eight others in Brooklyn Township to form an Episcopal congregation named Trinity Parish 38 Holding services in the township Cleveland and occasionally in the village of Euclid it was the first Christian church formally organized in Cuyahoga County 39 Early legislative career EditIn October 1814 40 Alfred Kelley was elected to the Ohio House of Representatives 41 He was the youngest member of the state legislature 42 barely old enough to meet the Ohio constitution s age requirement for holding public office 43 He was re elected in 1815 44 and 1816 45 i Kelley did not seek office in 1817 or 1818 but was elected again to the House in 1819 He served a single term 46 and did not run for reelection His legislative accomplishments in this short period were numerous Kelley successfully proposed that the Ohio House create a finance committee and the members elected him its first chair Within weeks he authored a report which argued for taxation of land according to value and not use 47 No action was taken on the report it would not be until 1846 that the state s property tax laws were changed 48 Kelley was also one of five members of the legislature appointed to a special committee to investigate financial malfeasance by Hiram M Curry the Ohio State Treasurer and his predecessor William McFarland both of whom had incurred substantial deficits embezzled funds and exhibited incompetence 49 Curry resigned the first state official to do so for corruption 50 Some of Kelley s legislative proposals were less successful He introduced the first bill barring imprisonment for debt but it did not pass 25 51 52 53 He also supported a bill to allow free African Americans to testify in court against white citizens but this also did not win enactment 54 Involvement with the Ohio amp Erie Canal EditSupport for a north south canal in Ohio Edit In 1816 the state of New York asked the state of Ohio s aid in building the Erie Canal The request was referred to the Ohio House committee on public works which was chaired by Kelley He wrote a report endorsing the project but the Ohio General Assembly did not act on New York s request 55 Kelley and others came to believe that a canal linking the Ohio River with Lake Erie would greatly benefit Ohio They frequently communicated with New York Governor DeWitt Clinton and those building the Erie Canal and circulated glowing reports about construction progress and the ease with which financing was obtained They also worked to build a coalition strong enough to overcome parochial opposition to an Ohio canal 42 In one of his first acts as Governor of Ohio in December 1818 Ethan Allen Brown proposed construction of a canal between the Ohio River and Lake Erie A financial panic occurred between March and August 1818 56 that led to a severe national recession known as the Panic of 1819 that militated against any consideration of a major spending bill like the canal 42 The recession finally eased in the spring of 1821 57 Role on the investigating commission Edit nbsp Micajah WilliamsKelley was elected to the Ohio Senate in 1821 58 and again in 1822 59 On January 31 1822 52 the Ohio General Assembly passed legislation authorizing the appointment of a commission to investigate the feasibility of building the canal proposed by Governor Brown Five different routes were described in the authorization bill and the commission was charged with assessing each of them The seven individuals appointed to the commission 60 were Ethan Allen Brown newly sworn in on January 3 as a U S Senator 61 Ebenezer Buckingham Jr who had surveyed much of central Ohio 62 former Madison County judge Isaac Miner former U S Senator Jeremiah Morrow 63 former Ohio State Senator and prominent Steubenville attorney Benjamin Tappan 64 former governor and U S Senator Thomas Worthington 65 and Alfred Kelley Morrow resigned after being elected governor of Ohio in the fall of 1822 and was replaced by Micajah Williams a Cincinnati banker 66 on January 27 1823 67 Kelley drafted the report of the investigatory commission 68 He grasped the need for a statewide not regional or local transportation network and realized that only the state government could be the catalyst for making this improvement 69 His expansive vision for the state was moderated by a strong commitment to careful planning and strong cost benefit analysis 70 Kelley and Williams did most of the work of the investigating commission They examined 71 and surveyed routes 60 j collected data wrote economic studies and analyzed construction techniques to determine the best means of building the canal 68 Kelley traveled to New York to see the kind of construction technology used there 72 73 consulted with Erie Canal construction supervisors and state officials and procured as much information as he could on how the canal was financed 73 Kelley purchased engineering and surveying instruments from firms on the East Coast identified engineers available to work on the canal and obtained a 1 400 34 199 in 2022 dollars appropriation for the State Library of Ohio so it could purchase books on canal engineering and construction This work gave Kelley critical insight into the importance of design and the mastery of detail 74 The investigating commission issued its report on January 21 1824 73 The report recommended that the northern terminus be near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River The canal route followed the Cuyahoga from Cleveland to Akron the Tuscarawas River from Akron through Dover to Coshocton the Muskingum River from Coshocton to Zanesville and the Licking River from Zanesville to Newark The proposed route then proceeded overland from Newark south to Licking Summit Reservoir now Buckeye Lake and then overland again to Baltimore and Carroll before turning northwest toward Canal Winchester Thereafter the report recommended that the canal generally follow Big Walnut Creek to Columbus and then the Scioto River south from Columbus through Chillicothe to Portsmouth on the Ohio River The investigating commission also recommended simultaneous construction of the Miami and Erie Canal from Cincinnati at least as far as Dayton 70 Opponents of the canal accused Kelley and other investigating commissioners of recommending a route along which they already owned land enriching themselves 75 These accusations appear unfounded The commission had surveyed the other routes and extensively documented their unfeasibility 73 76 and historian Harry N Schreiber has observed that there is no evidence in the commission s papers or Kelley s private correspondence to suggest any impropriety 75 Nor did the report actually designate Cleveland as the northern terminus Instead it required the canal to be built along the route with the most water 75 k To placate its critics the investigating commission had the route between Sandusky and Columbus resurveyed by a new engineer Once more the investigating committee rejected this route as lacking enough water to sustain the canal 75 The investigating commission issued its updated report on January 8 1825 77 Canal commissioner Edit nbsp Map of the Ohio and Erie Canal in red The Ohio General Assembly approved legislation on February 4 1825 authorizing construction of the Ohio amp Erie Canal 78 The same day the legislature adopted a bill to reconstitute the investigating commission as the Canal Commission with authority to oversee financing and construction of the canal Canal Commission members included Kelley newcomer Nathaniel Beasley a former surveyor and soldier who had served several terms in both chambers of the General Assembly 79 newcomer John Johnston a former Indian agent with extensive landholdings in Miami County 80 Miner Tappan Williams and Worthington 81 l The Canal Commission picked two of their members Kelley and Williams to be acting commissioners individuals with direct supervision over canal construction 82 The two men located the actual canal route negotiated for and purchased land wrote engineering specifications for the canal bed and locks advertised for and awarded contracts purchased supplies and supervised the engineers and surveyors in the employ of the state who worked on the canal m The raising of funds through the issuance of bonds and stock was the legal responsibility of a separate Canal Fund Commission but in practice the Canal Fund Commission delegated most of its power to Kelley and Williams 84 Kelley and Williams accomplished two major tasks in 1825 The first was to purchase or obtain a right of way to the land needed for the canal The Canal Commission did not formally select the northern route of the canal until May 1825 and until that happened Kelley and Williams had to solicit land along both the Black and Cuyahoga rivers They were highly successful and managed to have significant amount of land donated rather than sold 85 n Kelley himself donated about a third of his remaining Scranton Flats land for the project 42 Kelley and Williams also established a large professional bureaucracy to construct and finance the canal In the United States in the early 1800s state governments employed only a few dozen people Kelley and Williams made recommendations to the full commission regarding organizational structure staffing and the duties of each job The commission invariably followed their guidance and in so doing allowed Kelley and Williams to create the first large bureaucracy in Ohio history 83 Work on the Ohio amp Erie Canal commenced on December 10 1825 82 Ohio was underdeveloped and starved for capital 87 88 and there was not nearly enough private money in the state to make even a small domestic bond sale successful Kelley and Williams had to spend money judiciously Rather than market all or a large portion of the necessary bonds immediately the Canal Fund Commission decided to float only 400 000 10 700 000 in 2022 dollars worth of bonds These bonds were offered at a high rate of interest to attract buyers The hope was that as segments of the canal became operational and substantial toll income was generated the bonds would become more attractive and the interest rate on future offerings would necessarily fall 89 o Work on the Cleveland to Akron segment began first p Kelley fought against constant pressure from politicians and the press to spread finances and workforce thin and work on all segments of the canal at the same time 84 The acting commissioners also had to overcome unexpected labor shortages and contractors who abandoned their work 84 nbsp Kelley s topographical map of OhioThrough his hands on work on the canal Kelley became so well acquainted with the geography of Ohio that he authored the first comprehensive topographical map of the state in 1826 The other canal commissioners agreed to allow it to be published Kelley tried to have the map published by a printer in the state of Delaware but was embarrassed to discover that the Ohio General Assembly claimed copyright of his document 91 The Cleveland to Akron portion of the canal opened in July 1827 ahead of schedule The high quality work lack of corruption and budget conscious construction impressed investors making it easier to sell canal bonds in the future 84 The responsibility for setting toll rates on the new canal also fell to Kelley and Williams 92 Impressed with the efficiency and speed of Ohio canal construction the federal government agreed donate public land to the state with the stipulation that this land be sold to aid canal construction Almost 421 400 acres 1 705 km2 were donated along the route of the Miami Extension Canal q almost 292 700 acres 1 185 km2 along the Wabash and Erie Canal and another 500 000 acres 2 000 km2 throughout the state for other canals 94 In 1832 the Ohio amp Erie Canal was finished except for the final lock at Portsmouth Work on the Miami and Erie Canal was also complete except for the lock connecting the Great Miami and Ohio Rivers at Cincinnati 95 Kelley contracted malaria in his first years of work on the canal 96 and in 1832 his health was so poor that canal commission meetings had to be held at his home 97 In their 1832 annual report to the state legislature Kelley and Williams proposed that the Canal Commission be abolished and a new commission consisting entirely of politically neutral engineers be established to oversee future construction and operation This was one of only a handful of recommendations the two made which the General Assembly refused to adopt 98 With work on both canals completed in 1833 84 and in poor health 25 Kelley resigned from the Canal Commission on January 24 1834 effective March 1 99 For his role in authorizing and construction the Ohio and Erie Canal the press and civic leaders in Ohio lauded him as the father of the Ohio and Erie Canal 100 Return to the state legislature Edit nbsp The Alfred Kelley mansion in 1958 a few years before it was demolished In October 1830 Alfred Kelley relocated from Cleveland to Columbus 34 101 after his wife Mary pleaded with him to move the family so they could spend more time together 102 Kelley one of the wealthiest men in Columbus 103 purchased 18 acres 73 000 m2 of land on E Broad Street Beginning in 1837 he began construction on a large Greek Revival home at 282 East Broad Street known as the Alfred Kelley mansion 102 Kelley also made large real estate purchases in Franklin County and in Cleveland after leaving the Canal Commission 104 Kelley Moylen Northrup and John Kerr purchased a large parcel in what became downtown Columbus This land was platted and subdivided in 1838 and incorporated into the city of Columbus making Kelley a substantial profit 105 Becoming a Whig Edit In the early 1830s Kelley left the Democratic Republican Party and joined the Whig Party 98 This switch in political affiliations began in the mid 1810s when Kelley became a supporter of Henry Clay 98 the Democratic Republican Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Clay had proposed the American System an economic program consisting of high tariffs strong banking regulation and federal subsidies for infrastructure improvements like roads and canals 106 The Democratic Republican Party was deeply divided over these proposals however One faction led by Andrew Jackson harbored a deep suspicion of the federal government These Jacksonians viewed strong government as a threat to individual freedom favored the farmer over the businessman and believed that government programs such as banking reform and regulation infrastructure development public education and high tariffs benefited the rich at the expense of the common man 107 The other faction led by Clay and John Quincy Adams favored high tariffs believing they would prevent specie from going overseas and thus allow banks to expand capital and credit Coupled with a strong and activist central government and system of federally financed infrastructure improvement these National Republicans hoped to expand the economy empower producers businessmen and farmers and bring new and improved products to markets consumers 108 Clay ran against Jackson for the presidency in 1824 but John Quincy Adams won the nation s highest office after the election was thrown into the House for resolution 109 The Democratic Republican Party collapsed with Jackson forming a new Democratic Party in 1828 110 Rejecting the label National Republican as too closely tied to northeastern business interests Clay formed the Whig Party in 1834 111 Neither the national Democratic Party which dismissed state intervention in the economy and a stronger banking system nor the Ohio Democratic Party which rejected prioritization of canal construction projects distrusted the opinions of professionals and experts and wished to retain a politicized canal board held any interest for Kelley 112 Kelley was elected chairman of the Whig State Central Committee of Ohio in 1840 25 34 His prominence in the party made him a frequent target of political invective 113 Return to the Ohio House Edit Kelley sought and won election to the Ohio House again in 1836 114 Columbus and Franklin County were Democratic strongholds however 34 and Democratic controlled newspapers accused Kelley of making immorally high profits from his banking business speculating on real estate and enriching himself by ensuring that the Ohio amp Erie Canal passed near his land As evidence of his wealth the newspapers pointed to the palace Kelley was building in Columbus 113 These attacks were largely ignored by voters who elected Kelley by a wide margin even though he was now a Whig 34 During the 1836 1837 legislative term Kelley sponsored a resolution instructing the House Committee on Schools and School Lands to report a bill authorizing appointment of a state school commissioner The resolution passed and the reported bill became law creating the modern Ohio public school system 101 Kelley sought and won re election to the Ohio House in 1837 115 The previous session the Ohio General Assembly had enacted legislation known colloquially as the Loan Law which required the state to match on a dollar for dollar basis any private investment in canals railroads or turnpikes so long as these ventures met certain requirements 116 The state was rapidly issuing bonds to comply with the law despite the ill considered or parochial nature of these projects 117 Kelley s bill to repeal the Loan Law failed He was successful on another front when his 17 year legislative effort to abolish imprisonment for debt finally won the approval of the legislature 53 118 Bank investor and executive EditUsing the canal fund to build banking relationships Edit Kelley built extensive business and personal relationships with bankers in Ohio and New York City while a Canal Commissioner 92 To help Ohio banks Kelley required that canal workers be paid in bank scrip This ensured that bank scrip circulated more widely helping to expand a bank s market and making each bank s scrip more widely accepted by the public 92 r Banking roles Edit Kelley s close association with the banks made him a leading figure in the Ohio banking community by the mid 1830s 92 In April 1832 Kelley and eight others sought additional investment to help expand the Commercial Bank of Lake Erie 123 Most of the capital was provided by Henry W Dwight and his wealthy family of bankers and investors 124 125 s The Commercial Bank of Lake Erie was Cleveland s only bank from 1832 to 1834 and afterward only one of two Until the expiration of its charter in 1843 it provided most of the scrip and bills of credit in northern Ohio provided the underpinning for nearly all of Cleveland s business community and was one of only a few major banks where the state and federal government deposited specie 126 Kelley pushed the bank to become involved with the Ohio amp Erie Canal It received specie payments from Eastern bond investors and disbursed scrip and specie on behalf of the Canal Fund Commission 104 Kelley also became a major investor in the Franklin Bank of Columbus 127 probably no later than June 1836 128 This institution founded in 1816 129 became a depository for canal funds and disbursed specie and scrip on behalf of the Canal Commission 104 and Kelley was later elected to the bank s board of directors 127 Through Micajah Williams Kelley also became a stockholder in the Franklin Bank of Cincinnati 130 nbsp Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Co banknote from 1839 or 1840Kelley s biggest role as a banker was his participation as an organizer and trustee of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company 127 The Trust Co as it was more commonly known was conceived by Connecticut and New York financier Isaac Bronson his son Arthur Bronson and New York lawyer and prominent Jacksonian Charles Butler brother of U S Attorney General Benjamin Franklin Butler They had previously incorporated the New York Life Insurance and Trust Company which gave wealthy Easterners the chance to invest in a bank whose sole business was to make real estate mortgages in western New York It made large profits They now conceived of a similar organization for Ohio and gathered a secretive group of initial investors the associates t At this period in American history nearly all states refused to allow foreign out of state corporations to do business within their borders 132 The associates recruited Elisha Whittlesey u and Micajah T Williams to be front men for them so that the project would appear to be conceived by and for the benefit of Ohioans 133 The Bronsons and a few of the other associates wrote the Trust Co charter 88 Although Democrats attacked the Trust Co as a moneyed monster 104 a majority of Ohio state legislators were deeply concerned that a capital liquidity crisis was about to emerge in Ohio 134 v To alleviate the problem on February 12 1834 137 the Ohio General Assembly chartered 10 new private banks with total a capitalization of 4 4 million 129 000 000 in 2022 dollars Among them was the Trust Co which accounted for 2 million 5 900 000 in 2022 dollars of that capital 136 Although Trust Co stock was supposed to be sold to the public the associates ensured that all the stock was sold in advance to their most trusted friends and business partners Fully 75 percent of the stock was owned by wealthy New Englanders and large New York City investment companies 138 w The remaining stock was sold to prominent Ohioans such as Jacob Burnet David T Disney John H Groesbeck Simon Perkins Elisha Whittlesey Micajah Williams 142 and Alfred Kelley 133 The Bronsons who secured a large majority of shares via proxy from the eastern shareholders hand picked the board of directors 143 who were elected on September 30 1834 137 The charter required that at least two thirds of the board be Ohioans which required great care on the part of the Bronsons to ensure that the board did not include risk takers or self dealers Among the Ohioans on the board were Jacob Burnet 137 David T Disney 143 Calvin Pease 137 Simon Perkins 143 Benjamin Tappan Allen Trimble Joseph Vance 137 Elisha Whittlesey Micajah Williams 143 and Alfred Kelley 137 143 Dilemma of 1839 Edit The Trust Co was highly respected at the outset As expected it served as a depository institution for the state of Ohio receiving and disbursing scrip and specie It also did a large amount of business with private banks in addition to its real estate mortgage business 144 The Panic of 1837 significantly damaged the financial standing of the Trust Co In October 1839 the company stopped making payment in specie 145 146 This placed its charter at risk for state law allowed the company to suspend payment of specie only for 30 days 147 As a director of the bank Kelley faced a dilemma 148 The Trust Co held more than 1 million 27 500 000 in 2022 dollars in canal and state bonds 149 The only way the company could survive was if it sold these bonds However this risked driving down the price of the bonds the Canal Fund Commission was trying to sell at the same time and could imperil work on the many Ohio amp Erie branch canals under construction as well as other state backed canals 150 x Kelley decided to risk further work on the canal system and advocated saving the bank by placing the bonds on the market He believed that the Trust Co was too big to fail there was no way state legislature would retaliate by rescinding the bank s charter because this would cause too much damage to Ohio s economy Disaster was averted when the bond market recovering from the Panic of 1837 absorbed the sale of bonds sold by the Trust Co and the Canal Fund 150 Canal Fund Commission and the Panic of 1837 EditKelley returned to state employment when he was appointed a Canal Fund Commissioner on March 30 1841 151 He did not relinquish his seat on the Trust Co board of directors 104 Kelley became a commissioner as the Canal Fund and Ohio state finances were in crisis 150 Causes of the Canal Fund crisis Edit nbsp A political cartoon caricatures Andrew Jackson and others for starving the American economy of cash causing the Panic of 1837One distal cause of the financial crisis was the extensive amount of canal construction the state had embarked on beginning in 1833 The General Assembly authorized construction of the Miami Canal Extension from Dayton to Lake Erie in 1833 152 construction of the Wabash and Erie Canal in 1834 153 and more than 15 feeder and branch canals and sidecuts 154 y z Unlike the prioritized building program adopted by Kelley and Williams the state pursued all these construction projects simultaneously This greatly increased the Canal Fund Commission s need to raise money 159 Moreover while the cost of these projects was originally estimated at 4 5 million 136 500 000 in 2022 dollars 160 actual costs were much closer to 10 million 258 600 000 in 2022 dollars 117 Another distal cause of the crisis was the Loan Law of 1837 116 By 1839 state debt had soared to 12 million 329 800 000 in 2022 dollars of which 2 5 million was Loan Law debt and 8 5 million was attributable to work on the six new feeder and branch canals The debt reached 14 8 million 433 800 000 in 2022 dollars in 1840 161 and another 2 5 million was needed to complete the work 161 162 The debt reached 17 million 482 300 000 in 2022 dollars in 1841 163 The proximate cause of the financial crisis was the Panic of 1837 The Canal Fund had great difficulty selling bonds in 1837 and had so little money on hand that except for those working on the Wabash amp Erie Canal it stopped paying contractors in December 1837 164 Additionally canal revenues were not high enough to pay the interest on canal construction debt In order to make interest payments in early 1838 the Canal Fund floated even more bonds and sought loans from banks 165 aa By early 1840 there was talk in the state legislature and among politicians and other civic leaders of repudiating a portion of the state debt 163 The Canal Fund was able to make its 281 000 8 200 000 in 2022 dollars interest payment in June 1840 only after the state in March approved 300 000 in new borrowing expressly to meet the interest payment 162 The Canal Fund was nearly out of cash again by November 1840 The fund commissioners asked the Ohio State Auditor for an advance of 200 000 5 900 000 in 2022 dollars which was refused 166 Canal Fund financial crisis of 1841 Edit In early 1841 the State Auditor warned the commissioners that 400 000 11 300 000 in 2022 dollars would be needed pay the January 1842 interest payment Instead of taking action to put the Canal Fund on a sound financial footing the General Assembly asked the Canal Commission to expand construction and seek temporary loans to pay contractors and interest 167 ab Kelley and the other Canal Fund commissioners declined to borrow the money 167 Kelley discovered that New York City banks were unwilling to loan the Canal Fund Commission any money except on a short term basis and bonds could be sold only at a steep 25 percent discount of the par value and at high guaranteed interest rate 6 percent 168 The Canal Fund Commission decided to seek loans from Ohio banks instead Despite advertising widely only two banks responded in April 1841 168 The first of these was the Bank of Chillicothe which agreed to lend the Canal Fund 581 000 16 500 000 in 2022 dollars at 6 percent interest 169 ac The Bank of Franklin on whose board of directors Kelley still sat agreed to loan the Canal Fund 500 000 14 200 000 in 2022 dollars at 6 percent interest 170 ad The loans were dispersed in banknotes paper money similar to scrip but which was redeemed by the bank s own specie rather than federal specie on deposit Contractors suppliers and others accepted these banknotes only at a discount and even then many doubted they could be redeemed But the commissioners had no choice 171 Later in 1841 a third institution the Bank of Wooster agreed to loan the Canal Fund 199 355 5 700 000 in 2022 dollars at 6 percent the entire principal due in one year These loans were not enough to cover essential costs however and the Canal Fund was forced to borrow 275 000 7 800 000 in 2022 dollars in high interest very short term loans from New York City banks 172 All of these loans proved critical to helping the Canal Fund survive The Canal Fund was able to make its interest payments 173 and pay contractors about 580 000 16 500 000 in 2022 dollars 172 Without them the canal fund would have had been all but bankrupt and would have stopped paying contractors for the entire year 170 ae The overall financial situation was still poor however The Canal Fund s total debt rose to 15 573 million 441 800 000 in 2022 dollars in 1841 and there was 1 6 million 45 400 000 in 2022 dollars in non contractor current and accumulated liabilities The Canal Fund commissioners were able to eliminate some of the current and accumulated liability by selling 1 3 million 36 900 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds at an average discount of about one third netting just 858 000 175 By November 1841 the Canal Fund had a balance of 1 393 39 516 in 2022 dollars with interest due in January 1842 of 400 000 12 100 000 in 2022 dollars and a 300 000 9 100 000 in 2022 dollars temporary loan due shortly thereafter 176 When General Assembly s legislative session opened in early December there was immense pressure to repudiate all or a portion of the state s debt 177 To help prevent this Kelley used his influence with the Ohio Life and Trust Co on whose board he still sat Although it had no authorization to do so the commission gave the Trust Co 300 000 8 500 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds in late 1841 and early 1842 as collateral for a 200 000 6 100 000 in 2022 dollars loan 178 The commission received the loan funds in March 1842 172 Kelley and the other fund commissioners also illegally withdrew in late 1841 several large sums from the general tax fund of the Ohio State Treasury so that the Canal Fund Commission could make bond interest payments in January 1842 Although the Ohio State Auditor accused the Canal Fund Commission of fraud their actions avoided certain default 178 According to historian Harry N Scheiber Kelley likely approved the highly irregular advances because he was convinced that revenues from the soon to be finished canals would bring in substantial revenues a few months later that would allow these advances to be repaid swiftly 178 Canal Fund financial crisis of 1842 Edit nbsp A Canal Fund Commission stock certificate issued in 1842The Canal Fund s financial crisis continued through 1842 even though the depression was lifting 179 and the Hocking Canal Walhonding Canal Warren County Canal and the Muskingum Improvement a branch canal and a series of locks and dams designed to improve navigability on the Muskingum River were all completed which not only meant the need for less borrowing but the beginning of tax and toll revenues from these works 180 Canal contractors were owed 1 4 million 42 500 000 in 2022 dollars by February 1842 but only two payments were made to them during following 10 months Beginning in March 1842 the Canal Fund began issuing checks to non contractor businesses to which it owed money The checks were redeemable only in state bonds and were rarely cashed because banks and businesses discounted them 30 to 50 percent below par 174 Completion of these four canals was possible because work did not actually stop despite the lack of payment to contractors Some contractors declared bankruptcy and quit working but the unfinished canals could not be abandoned because rain snow floods and other factors would damage them To complete the works and leave them in a state where they could be left idle the Canal Commission was forced to hire new contractors at much higher rates of pay Some contractors avoided bankruptcy by taking out loans from banks in Michigan These banks paid in banknotes which proved nearly worthless but in many cases it was enough to keep the contractor solvent Other contractors kept working without pay They believed the state would eventually meet its obligations and perhaps even compensate them extra for being patient 164 Putting the Canal Fund Commission on a solid financial footing was paramount and Kelley and the other Canal Fund commissioners heavily lobbied the Ohio General Assembly to act It finally did so in March 1842 by repealing the Loan Law 181 With the Canal Fund still in deficit the legislation also authorized the commissioners to sell more than 500 000 15 200 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds so the fund could repay the Chillicothe and Franklin banks 175 af and to issue 500 000 in scrip so that contractors could be paid at least a portion of what they were owed To ensure that this scrip was accepted the legislature used its Wabash and Erie Canal lands as collateral Notably the law required the Canal Fund to issue scrip only in 100 3 032 in 2022 dollars denominations 182 Kelley and the other fund commissioners however turned a blind eye when Ohio banks issued scrip in smaller denominations to meet the needs of contractors and workers 178 The General Assembly also adopted legislation that suspended work on all branch and feeder canals and sidecuts except for final work on the Wabash and Erie Canal and on those canals already under contract About 1 5 million 45 500 000 in 2022 dollars was needed to fund this work In the past Canal Fund commissioners themselves traveled around the state and to New York City to sell these bonds Now however the legislature required these bonds to be sold through brokers The sale was successful although the bonds had to pay 7 percent interest 183 ag ah The General Assembly also agreed to the Canal Fund Commission s proposal to sell canal lands The sale of these lands had essentially ceased in 1836 ai A new law adopted on March 8 1842 permitted the sale of canal land at 2 50 76 in 2022 dollars an acre or its appraised value whichever was higher The value of some Miami Extension Canal lands which had sharply risen in value was reduced by law to 4 00 110 in 2022 dollars an acre The law required that land be purchased only in cash which meant specie banknotes from specie paying banks or state issued scrip 189 essentially allowing contractors paid in state issued scrip to redeem the scrip for valuable land Bonds still needed to be sold to raise revenue for the rest of 1842 and early 1843 and in April 1842 Kelley went to New York City to sell the bonds authorized by the legislature Initially he met with agents of overseas bond holders to see if they were interested They were not Kelley then offered to insure the interest payments on the bonds with his personal real estate as collateral for the insurance When the agents still hesitated Kelley signed a note in which he personally agreed to pay 10 000 300 000 in 2022 dollars of the July 1842 interest payment 178 The agents accepted the note bought the insurance and agreed to purchase the bonds he was selling 190 To further boost confidence Kelley also offered to accept canal bonds at par value in payment for any property he had for sale Since the state s bonds were selling well below par value at the time Kelley took considerable risk in making the offer 191 Kelley was forced to conceal how he had personally guaranteed the bonds and bond interest payments If word had gotten out it might have induced panic selling of canal fund bonds 190 aj Kelley also secured a 250 000 7 600 000 in 2022 dollars loan from New York City banks but once more only after personally guaranteeing the payment of interest 185 Kelley traveled to the United Kingdom in the spring of 1842 193 to sell canal bonds to cover the July 1842 and January 1843 interest payments on existing bonds Kelley personally conducted negotiations with Baring Brothers amp Co in attempt to sell bonds Through the Ohio Life and Trust Co Kelley had a pre existing relationship with Barings Baring Brothers had sold canal bonds on behalf of the Trust Company in Europe and Barings itself owned some canal bonds Kelley sold Baring Brothers 400 000 12 100 000 in 2022 dollars of canal bonds at a 40 percent discount netting 240 000 7 300 000 in 2022 dollars When word of the bond sale became known in Ohio Kelley s political opponents accused him of selling out the state in order to enrich his wealthy British business associates 191 End of the Canal Fund financial crisis Edit In February 1843 Kelley once more relied on his banking friends and colleagues to secure the canal fund s solvency 178 Kelley and the other canal fund commissioners traveled to New York City to sell 1 5 million 47 100 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds 183 They were unable to sell the bonds at first as investors expected Ohio to default on its debt The commissioners then wrote and jointly published a statement outlining the state s financial situation the financial status of the canal fund and the progress on the Canal Commission s public works 194 By once more pledging the 1836 surplus and raising the interest rate on the bonds from 6 to 7 percent they were able to sell all the securities 195 The 1843 bond sale greatly stabilized the finances of the Canal Fund Commission and the state of Ohio 174 195 Canal Fund Commission checks which were trading but still not being cashed at a 40 to 50 percent discount now rose almost to par 195 Contractors began to be paid in specie paying bank notes 174 ak With the crisis over the Ohio General Assembly reorganized the Canal Fund Commission in March 1843 and Kelley resigned from the board after the law passed 196 Despite the attacks on Kelley during the crisis conservative Democrats joined with Whigs in the General Assembly to pass a resolution retroactively approving every measure he had taken to avoid default by the Canal Fund Commission 197 He was widely known as savior of the state honor for successfully helping the state to avoid default 25 According to historian Harry N Scheiber it is highly doubtful that Ohio would have avoided default and bankruptcy had Kelley and the other canal fund commissioners not had exceptionally close ties to Ohio and New York bankers 197 al Second return to the state legislature EditKelley s role in the Canal Fund Commission financial crisis left him with strong views about the state s banking system His experience on the fund commission had not changed his belief in strong centralized state government However rather than heavily regulate Ohio s banks he now sought to strengthen state incentives for banks to engage in better decision making 199 Like minded individuals persuaded him to run for Ohio Senate in 1844 in order to pass banking reform legislation 200 Kelley ran for and won office to the state senate in 1844 201 and 1845 202 During the 1844 1845 legislative session Kelley was elected chairman of Ohio Senate s committee on currency 203 and was a member of its committee on finance 204 On January 7 1845 he introduced a bill to establish a State Bank of Ohio The state bank was authorized to establish branches throughout the state to provide new capital to local banks and the public The capital provided to local banks carried with it new requirements designed to strengthen and reform financial practices thus lessening the likelihood of future bank failures This in turn would encourage outside investment in Ohio The second part of the bill concerned the issuance of new bank charters and the re issuing of charters to banks whose charters expired All state chartered banks henceforth would be required to participate in a form of deposit insurance limits were set on the rate of interest which could be charged to avoid usury and the size of loans given to any individual or firm were restricted to help rein in risk taking and reduce the likelihood that a single large loan default could ruin the bank 197 Although strongly attacked by Democrats 205 Kelley s banking bill was adopted by the legislature almost unchanged 206 The Kelley bank bill ended much banking chaos and confusion in Ohio 207 As predicted the banking legislation increased capital in Ohio at a time when it was sorely needed 205 and helped end much of the conflict of interest and mismanagement in the state s private banks 199 Kelley also sought to reform the state tax code 208 He authored a comprehensive report on the tax system which the finance committee submitted to the Ohio Senate on February 17 1845 209 As he had 26 years earlier Kelley proposed taxing property according to its value not its use This time he was successful The bill passed the General Assembly on March 2 1846 48 and the parameters of the bill governed Ohio s tax code for more than a century 208 Early involvement with railroads EditEven as Kelley was at work on the Ohio and Erie Canal railroads were beginning to be built in Ohio The first of these was the Erie and Kalamazoo Railroad 210 on April 22 1833 211 It was chartered by the Michigan Territory at a time when the border between the states of Michigan and Ohio was not settled A portion of the railroad ended up within the borders of Ohio after the settlement of the Toledo War in 1836 210 Interest in railroads increased significantly after the Panic of 1837 ended The state canal system was nearly overwhelmed with traffic and investors saw railroads as a means of augmenting the canal system 212 Eastern investors were particularly interested in creating a system of integrated railroads that would extend from the Iowa Territory to the Atlantic Ocean 213 Kelley first became involved with a railroad in 1836 when the Muskingum and Columbus Railroad was chartered by the Ohio General Assembly 214 215 This company intended to build a 55 mile 89 km line from Zanesville west through the Licking Valley to Columbus One of nine original incorporators of the company 216 Kelley became involved with the scheme because of the extensive construction management and financial knowledge he had gained while building the Ohio amp Erie Canal 217 As with many early railroads this one was never built 218 Columbus and Xenia Railroad Edit nbsp A Columbus amp Xenia Railroad stock certificate issued in 1849 bearing Alfred Kelley s signatureThe Columbus and Xenia Railroad C amp X was chartered by the state of Ohio on March 12 1844 219 The Little Miami Railroad chartered some years earlier was already under construction and would like Cincinnati and Xenia Ohio in 1845 220 The C amp X would link Xenia to Columbus creating the first rail link between Ohio s two largest cities 221 The incorporators of the C amp X had difficulty raising funds and initiating construction 222 and no survey of the route had been made by February 1847 223 Kelley agreed to become president of the railroad in 1847 224 at a salary of 500 15 704 in 2022 dollars a year 222 With private investors unwilling to take a risk on the line Kelley convinced city and county governments along the route to sell bonds and use the money to invest in the C amp X With this money in hand Kelley was able to convince East Coast financiers that the railroad was a sound investment 225 He personally went to New York City to sell C amp X bonds and raised enough money to not only complete construction of the railroad but also to buy locomotives and rolling stock to equip it 226 Kelley also accompanied engineer Sylvester Medbery 227 as he traveled the line s likely routes the two men essentially surveying them together Kelley then personally approved the route of the C amp X 226 For the track Kelley traveled to the United Kingdom 225 and contracted with Sir John Guest amp Co of Wales for T rails 228 The C amp X was one of the first railroads in Ohio to use T rails instead of strap rails 226 The 200 short tons 180 t of rails 229 did not arrive in Cleveland until July 1849 228 delaying the laying of track until the fall 229 Work on the road began in October 1847 230 just months after Kelley assumed the line s presidency The laying of track was complete on either February 19 231 or February 21 1850 232 and regular service began on February 27 231 233 The C amp X began generating substantial profits and Kelley personally negotiated an agreement with the Little Miami Railroad which ensured an excellent working relationship between the two lines for many years 225 Kelley stepped down as the C amp X s president some time between May 4 1852 and April 21 1853 234 235 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad EditElection as president of the line Edit The Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad CC amp C was chartered by the state of Ohio on March 14 1836 236 and authorized to construct a railroad from Cleveland to Cincinnati passing through the cities of Columbus and Wilmington 237 Fundraising failed no construction occurred and the charter lapsed 238 239 In 1845 a group of Cleveland business and civic leaders 240 succeeded in persuading the Ohio General Assembly to revive the charter on March 12 1845 237 Once more the company failed to raise funds for the venture 241 242 Financier Edmund Dwight representing the wealthy Dwight family of Massachusetts and New York 88 visited the city in August 1847 The Dwights and Kelleys had invested in the Commercial Bank of Lake Erie 124 and the Dwight family was strongly interested in Ohio railroads 104 Edmund Dwight told the board that improved investor confidence was needed to raise funds and this required that the board seek a new leader who could ensure the efficient and timely construction of a well built railroad 240 The president of the CC amp C resigned 243 and Alfred Kelley and Leonard Case Jr were elected to the board of directors 244 Kelley was appointed president on August 13 244 243 245 am Raising funds and constructing the road Edit Kelley immediately began speaking with his colleagues in the banking and finance fields and by early September 1847 indicated to the board that a favorable response had been found among investors in New York City 246 Kelley ordered construction of 10 miles 16 km of track near Cleveland to test new construction methods and railroad technology 247 To ensure that the new charter did not lapse on September 30 1847 Kelley and other members of the board of directors went to Cleveland s Scranton Flats and ceremoniously filled a wheelbarrow with earth to symbolize the start of construction The company hired an old man to work five days a week continuously digging this trench in order to prove to the state that construction was ongoing 243 248 249 Kelley also began to raise substantial funds He began his tenure as president by urging the board of directors composed of wealthy Ohioans to show faith in the business by purchasing company bonds By September 15 1847 the board had invested 100 000 3 100 000 in 2022 dollars in the CC amp C 250 Kelley heavily promoted the railroad in Cleveland and by April 15 1848 investors there had purchased 100 000 3 400 000 in 2022 dollars in company bonds with pledges to purchase another 100 000 when the company asked 251 Kelley traveled to Cleveland in early August 1848 delivering a rousing one hour speech which led listeners to purchase 73 000 2 500 000 in 2022 dollars more in stock 252 Kelley ordered the railroad s route resurveyed a process which began in October 1847 and concluded about the end of January 1848 253 Engineers issued a new report to the board on August 19 1848 254 The contract for construction was awarded to the firm of Stone Harbach and Witt on November 1 255 Harbach was one of the two engineers who had resurveyed the line in late 1847 and early 1848 Amasa Stone had worked with Harbach and another railroad engineer Stillman Witt 256 while building railroad bridges in New England 257 and Kelley knew Stone well from his visits selling bonds back east 257 Kelley reached out to Stone Harbach and Witt and asked them to build the railroad 258 The three men formed a company in late 1848 to do so 248 and agreed to take a portion of their pay in the form of railroad stock 258 Kelley personally traveled to the United Kingdom 255 259 260 in 1848 where he again contracted with Sir John Guest amp Co for T rails 228 an The 7 000 short tons 6 400 t of rail purchased was sufficient to lay half the road 262 263 Some 3 000 to 4 000 men were at work on the line at the end of July completing the grading constructing the track bed and beginning to lay rail With the cost of the main line appearing to hold steady at 2 5 million 87 900 000 in 2022 dollars Kelley personally went to New York City in July 1849 and sold another 400 000 14 100 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds to keep the work going 264 He sold another 100 000 14 100 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds to Ohio investors the same month 265 The first 35 miles 56 km of CC amp C track between Cleveland and Wellington Ohio opened about September 1 1849 264 A train carrying Kelley and several board members toured the completed 15 miles 24 km of track in mid March 1850 266 Alfred Kelley was reelected president of the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad in January 1850 267 With the company in need of more rail Kelley traveled to New York City in late May where he sold enough bonds to pay for the necessary iron 268 He then made a second trip to Britain to purchase more rail 259 He returned in mid June 269 having purchased another 5 000 short tons 4 500 t of rail 268 The CC amp C reached Shelby Ohio on November 12 1850 255 270 Celebratory completion trip Edit The Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad was completed on February 18 1851 At 7 A M on February 18 Alfred Kelley and a party consisting of the railroad s directors Columbus mayor Lorenzo English and a number of other business and civic leaders departed on a special northbound train from Columbus 271 Kelley and Mayor English each laid a final rail on the line 272 and then Kelley drove the last spike at noon 271 273 The party reboarded the train and after a salutary cannonade proceeded to Cleveland 272 The train gave three whistles as it entered the city which was returned by a three cannon salute 271 The CC amp C began freight and passenger operations on February 21 1851 274 To celebrate the event Kelley invited Ohio Governor Reuben Wood the entire Ohio General Assembly the mayors and city councils of Cincinnati and Columbus and numerous other local politicians and business leaders 275 to travel at the railroad s expense on a four day excursion trip from Columbus to Cleveland and back The excursion train and its 425 passengers left Columbus on February 21 276 The following day the excursionists watched a parade in Cleveland s Public Square Although several politicians and local leaders spoke 277 Kelley declined to address the crowd 277 The excursion train returned to Columbus on February 24 278 The completion of the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad created the first direct rail link between Cleveland and Cincinnati 279 Cleveland Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad EditElection as first president of the railroad Edit In 1847 a group of businessmen from Ashtabula Cuyahoga and Lake counties undertook an effort to build Cleveland s railroad link to the east 280 and on February 18 1848 they received a state charter for the Cleveland Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad CP amp A The line had authority to build a railroad from Cleveland to some point on the Ohio Pennsylvania border 281 282 The stockholders met for the first time on August 1 1849 and elected Herman B Ely George G Gillett Alfred Kelley Tappan Lake David R Paige Peleg P Sanford and Samuel L Selden to the initial board of directors Kelley was elected president but due to other pressing business had to temporarily step aside Herman Ely was named acting president until such time as Kelley could take up his duties 283 Frederick Harbach surveyed the route for the CP amp A in late 1849 and early 1850 In his report issued at end of March 1850 284 he proposed two routes 285 Kelley reviewed both and chose the northern route 286 To construct the road Kelley once more turned to the firm of Harbach Stone amp Witt which won the CP amp A construction contract on July 26 1850 287 Financing for the road was never an issue and construction proceeded swiftly Regular trains began running on the 71 mile 114 km line 288 on November 20 1851 289 Role in creating the Franklin Canal Company railroad Edit The CP amp A did not have the legal authority to build a railroad in Pennsylvania 290 The railroad soon discovered that the Franklin Canal Company FCC had been empowered by the Pennsylvania state legislature to build a railroad in April 1849 291 Railroad historian Anthony Churella says the CP amp A s New York City based financial backers first realized the value of the FCC s charter 290 However Kelley biographer James L Bates and Cleveland historian Harland Hatcher both claim it was Alfred Kelley who did so 292 293 On July 5 1849 the FCC issued 500 000 17 600 000 in 2022 dollars in stock 294 295 with the CP amp A purchasing 448 500 of it 289 296 In addition to building north to the city of Erie Pennsylvania the FCC also intended to build a 25 5 mile 41 0 km branch line along the shore of Lake Erie from Erie west to the Ohio Pennsylvania border 297 Completion of this branch line the Lake Shore Division would connect the CP amp A with the Erie and North East Railroad E amp NE and bring the FCC significant income with which to build its main line 298 On January 10 1850 Kelley agreed to connect the CP amp A with the FCC at the Ohio Pennsylvania border 299 This was superseded by a new agreement on August 26 1850 under which the CP amp A not only committed to connecting with the FCC but also to building and operating its lakeshore line 300 Kelley was able to commit to these agreements because the CC amp C was generating large revenues Kelley used these revenues to subsidize the construction of other important railroads in Ohio which in turn gave him leverage to forge operating agreements with the CC amp C once they opened 225 The CC amp C was completed in February 1851 271 and Alfred Kelley took up the CP amp A presidency the following month 301 As the cost of building the FCC rose the canal company decided to sell bonds to raise the necessary funds Kelley offered to have the CP amp A guarantee the bonds 302 303 The CP amp A began construction on the Lake Shore Division shortly after November 1851 289 and the line was completed 12 months later 294 304 305 Role in the Erie Gauge War Edit People in Pennsylvania were angry that the FCC s track gauge was the same as that of connecting railroads in New York and Ohio This meant passengers and freight did not have to be transshipped at Erie 306 and threatened to allow the railroads to largely bypass Erie 307 308 The Erie Gauge War erupted in which state and local authorities as well as mobs attempted to prevent completion of the Lake Shore Division The Attorney General of Pennsylvania filed suit on October 12 1852 to enjoin the Franklin Canal Company from opening its nearly completed railroad 309 This threatened the CP amp A s investment as construction had only reached as far west as Crooked Creek 295 Although the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania overturned the injunction in January 1853 the court interpreted the FCC s charter to preclude the construction of any railroad within 5 5 miles 8 9 km of the Ohio border 310 311 312 313 Alarmed that the Lake Shore Division might not reach the state border Alfred Kelley personally purchased the 5 5 mile 8 9 km right of way 295 314 ao Pennsylvania law permitted private individuals to construct lateral railroads to connect their factories farms mines or other real estate to state chartered railroads ap Kelley initially proposed that several less prominent directors of and investors in the CP amp A and FCC purchase the land and build this lateral railroad with funds provided by the CP amp A but none were willing to take the risk Kelley went forward with the project on his own using funds secretly provided by the CP amp A 319 Kelley personally visited landowners along the route making friends with them and buying the land he needed In some cases he was required to purchase entire farms He also won passage of local ordinances permitting his lateral railroad to cross public roads 320 Kelley then had the line graded and constructed and conveyed the lateral railroad to the FCC 27 295 Kelley s actions did not end the Gauge War By April 1853 the situation had so deteriorated that Kelley considered bypassing Erie altogether and connecting the CP amp A to existing railroad lines which routed traffic through Pittsburgh 321 The people of Erie were further alarmed when the CP amp A took over operation of the FCC s Lake Shore Division on December 1 1853 295 On December 7 322 mobs tore up the FCC s track demolished several of its bridges and assaulted railroad officials 323 324 325 Kelley threatened to raise a private militia to protect FCC property if the state could or would not do so 326 Rioters tore up railroad track again in January 1854 327 Tensions died down considerably when on January 28 1854 the Pennsylvania General Assembly enacted legislation repealing the FCC s charter 291 328 Pennsylvania Governor William Bigler seized the FCC on January 30 and appointed William F Packer as the company s superintendent 329 The CP amp A continued to operate the FCC on behalf of the state forwarding 47 percent of all revenues generated by the Lake Shore Division to the state treasury 330 Resignation Edit To further placate certain Pennsylvanians Kelley resigned as president of the CP amp A in February 1854 and was replaced by William Case 331 The state of Pennsylvania had no interest in running a railroad 329 and in May 1854 the Pennsylvania General Assembly enacted new legislation permitting the CP amp A to build a line from the Ohio Pennsylvania border east to Erie 332 333 The law allowed the CP amp A to purchase the FCC provided that the CP amp A invested in a nearby Pennsylvania railroad 332 The CP amp A which already owned the FCC assumed title to the Lake Shore Division 334 With the CP amp A link between Cleveland and Erie and the east coast complete Kelley negotiated a contract under which the CC amp C and CP amp A jointly operated the CP amp A s line 335 Third return to the state legislature EditHealth problems Edit Kelley took a leave of absence from the CC amp C presidency in early October 1851 336 He resigned his position at the railroad about May 24 1853 and was replaced by Henry Payne who had unofficially been acting president for some time already 337 Kelley retained his directorships on the CC amp C and CP amp A until his death 338 Having long suffered from malaria contracted while working on canal system 96 Kelley was in extremely poor health after six years leading three railroads After stepping down as CP amp A president he went to Europe for an extended vacation not returning until early May 1854 339 Final legislative term Edit nbsp Grave of Alfred Kelley at Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus OhioAfter returning from Europe Kelley was offered the presidency of several railroads on Ohio He declined all opportunities feeling that these railroads were parochial efforts that would not benefit the state was a whole 340 The deteriorating national political situation led Kelley to re enter politics The U S Supreme Court heard oral argument in the case of Dred Scott v Sandford 60 U S 19 How 393 1857 in February 1856 Deeply alarmed by the worsening political discourse concerning slavery and worried by Ohio s deteriorating state finances Kelley once more decided to seek election to the Ohio General Assembly 341 He sought and won a seat in the Ohio Senate in 1856 342 becoming the oldest legislator in either branch of the General Assembly in the 1856 1857 term 343 Kelley led an investigation into whether Ohio could impose due process requirements on the federal Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 but this led to no legislation being introduced As chair of the Senate finance committee he forced an investigation into Ohio State Treasurer William Harvey Gibson Extensive evidence of check kiting conflict of interest embezzlement and fraud were uncovered 344 and Gibson resigned in disgrace 345 Kelley sponsored two successful bills which placed tighter controls on the state treasurer 346 but had few other legislative accomplishments that term 217 Personal life EditKelley married Mary Seymour Welles of Lowville New York on either August 25 347 or August 27 1816 25 348 He purchased a one horse chaise in Lowville 25 and drove to Buffalo in it Their schooner for Cleveland was not yet ready to sail so they traveled to Niagara Falls Upon their return they discovered the ship had sailed so they rode in the chaise from Buffalo to Cleveland 349 Theirs was the first carriage ever seen in Cleveland 25 348 The Kelleys had had 11 children 25 24 Maria 1818 1887 Jane 1820 1897 Charlotte 1822 1828 Edward 1824 1825 Adelaide June September 1826 Henry 1828 1830 Helen April 3 1831 Frank 1834 1838 Annie 1836 1888 Alfred 1839 1909 and Katherine 1841 1918 350 Death and legacy EditFor portions of 1856 Kelley was severely ill and confined to home 343 His health noticeably declined during his last term in the state legislature 351 and he was once more confined to his home several times in 1857 343 Physicians could not determine the nature of Kelley s illness even as he lost weight and his energy declined 351 From 1857 to 1859 he became increasingly paralyzed 352 He was feeble for the last few months before his death 353 and fell into a coma on November 28 354 He died at his home in Columbus on December 2 1859 338 355 Kelley was interred at Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus Ohio 356 His estate was worth 250 000 8 100 000 in 2022 dollars 357 Historians consider Kelley one of the most dominant commercial financial and political people in the state of Ohio in the first half of the 1800s 27 He is widely considered the architect of Ohio s canal and railroad systems 335 References EditNotes Oneida County was later split into several new counties Lowville is now in Lewis County 6 Connecticut later abandoned its claim to 500 000 acres 2 000 km2 of land on the western end of the Western Reserve turning these areas over to certain coastal towns in the state as reparations for damages suffered during the Revolutionary War 13 The rest of the Kelley family followed Alfred to Cleveland over the next few years 15 Daniel Kelley made the move to Cleveland in 1814 He was the village s second president mayor and first postmaster and played an important in the early history of Cleveland 1 There were 12 voters 20 Daniel Kelley was appointed his successor 22 and held the office until 1819 23 Jemima Kelley died in September 1815 26 Daniel Kelley died on August 7 1831 26 This building later served as a hotel Irad Kelley demolished it in 1850 and built a much larger structure known as the Kelley Block on the site The first floor of the Kelley Block contained retail but the second floor was a ballroom known as Kelley s Hall Some of the most important concerts public dances and lectures of the mid 1800s in Cleveland took place there The Athenaeum Theater later took over the Kelley Block and became an important stage and later movie theater in Cleveland 29 Financier George Bancroft invested 200 000 4 200 000 in 2022 dollars in the bank to aid the reorganization This was one of Kelley s earliest links to important East Coast financiers 37 Members of the Ohio House of Representatives at this time served one year terms The House began meeting about December 1 of the year of election It adjourned in mid February in 1815 and 1816 and January 28 in 1817 Kelley even accompanied engineer James Geddes in 1822 as he made the initial surveys of the five proposed canal routes 72 There was significant opposition to the canal from other Lake Erie cities particularly Sandusky Declining to specify a northern terminus may have been a political decision calculated to defuse some of this tension even though Cleveland was clearly the intended northern terminus 75 Brown and Buckingham declined to serve hence the new commission membership 81 Kelley had a very hands on management style He personally handled contractor complaints and mediated disputes on his engineering staff He also performed tasks contractors might be expected to carry out such as locating sources of lime or potential quarries along the route and acting as a quality inspector 83 Many donations came from real estate developers who wanted to steer the canal toward their lands so they could later reap huge profits 86 Three other factors also helped make the bond sale successful First Erie Canal bonds were selling very well which helped assuage investor nervousness about the riskiness of the Ohio canal bonds Second investors knew that traffic on the Erie Canal would increase significantly once goods began moving on the Ohio amp Erie Canal Thus building the Ohio amp Erie Canal was a way of improving the value of their existing investment in the New York state canal Third the state of Ohio had pledged to use its tax revenues to guarantee payment of bond interest and principal 90 Completing segments that connected to market outlets like Cleveland was the highest priority These segments would generate significant toll revenue If future bond sales failed canal tolls on these segments could keep construction going 86 This canal extended from Dayton to the Wabash and Erie Canal at Junction Ohio 93 Before the adoption of the United States Constitution in 1790 the federal government had no power to levy taxes or coin money It authorized banks to issue scrip a promise by the government to pay Scrip became essentially paper currency 119 Congress defined the United States dollar as the standard money unit in 1792 120 but banks continued to issue scrip both as bills of credit guaranteed by the federal government and as representative of specie deposits made by customers Scrip was not universally accepted however Scrip that was easily counterfeited or issued by a bank without an extremely strong reputation for honoring scrip was often not accepted 121 It was not until 1866 that a federal tax essentially put an end to the practice of bank issued scrip 122 The Dwights lived primarily in Geneva New York and Springfield Massachusetts 88 The associates included Benjamin Franklin Butler Lot Clark Jonathan Goodhue Gould Hoyt James G King James Boyles Murray John Ward brother of financier Samuel Ward III and Stephen Whitney 131 Whittlesey had been elected to the Ohio General Assembly in 1820 and to the U S House of Representatives in 1823 He was a prominent Whig banker and land speculator and was still serving in the House in 1834 On the advice of Kelley Whittlesey had some years earlier bought extensive land in Toledo Ohio which later was chosen as the northern terminus of the Wabash and Erie Canal 133 President Andrew Jackson had vetoed a bill renewing the charter of the Second Bank of the United States 134 and federal officials shut down the bank s branches in Ohio in October 1833 135 leaving the state with much less capital and specie 134 The General Assembly could have chartered a state bank to take the place of the Second Bank but declined to do so 136 These included Henry James Anderson Walter Bowne 139 Isaac Carrow George Griswold Peter Harmony 140 Pierre Lorillard II 139 Thomas B Olcott 141 and Enos T Throop 139 and companies such as John Ward and Company Nevins Townsend and Company and Prime Ward amp King 140 Bonds are sold with a par or face value and an interest rate Bond sellers can sell the bond for below par effectively raising the yield of the bond Selling the bond below par however means the bond seller does not raise as much money as expected In the worst case scenario the Canal Fund Commission would not only sell bonds below par but also fail to sell all the bonds it needed as investors worried by the drop in face value lost faith in the bonds and stopped purchasing them These included the Hocking Canal Walhonding Canal Warren County Canal and the Muskingum Improvement 155 A feeder canal is a canal primarily used to convey water into the main canal although it may also carry boat traffic 156 A branch canal is a canal of short to medium length designed to penetrate a geographic or market area adjacent to the main canal and bring traffic in agricultural products raw materials or finished goods to the main canal 157 A sidecut is a short canal similar to a branch canal but intended to link a specific village town or city to the main canal 158 Beginning in 1838 and ending in 1844 more than 900 000 28 300 000 in 2022 dollars in new borrowing bonds and loans was made to meet interest payments alone 165 The legislature authorized the Canal Fund Commission to seek 1 million 28 400 000 in 2022 dollars in loans to complete the Miami Canal Extension Muskingum Improvement Wabash and Erie Canal and Walhonding Canal authorized the commission to obtain 581 000 16 500 000 in 2022 dollars in loans to pay existing debts to contractors and authorized the commission to float 480 000 13 600 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds to meet required investments under the Loan Law 167 The loan had to be repaid swiftly 100 000 in principal had to be repaid on May 1 1842 200 000 in principal on December 1 1842 100 000 in principal on March 1 1843 and the remaining principal on May 1 1843 169 This loan also had to be repaid swiftly 50 000 in principal had to be repaid on November 1 1841 100 000 in principal on May 1 1842 100 000 in principal on December 1 1842 and 200 000 in principal on June 1 1843 170 Even with the loans payments to contractors were irregular and sometimes infrequent 174 Kelley was able to sell these bonds in New York City in April The amount of bonds sold was more than 667 000 because buyers would only purchase them at a 33 percent discount 175 To handle a federal budget surplus in 1836 Congress deposited with each state a percentage of the federal budget surplus Ohio received about 2 million 53 300 000 in 2022 dollars Technically the states were to pay this money back on demand In practice Ohio treated the money as a grant It gave the money to each county with the proviso that they use them for building schools or infrastructure Although these funds had almost all been spent by 1842 the state pledged it as collateral for this bond sale which is why the sale proved successful 184 There is disagreement among sources as to how the work stoppage occurred Historian Harry N Scheiber says that Kelley and the other Canal Fund commissioners ordered the construction halt 181 Political scientist Ernest L Bogart however points to the legislature as the source of the work stoppage 183 In its January 1842 annual report probably written by Kelley himself 185 the Canal Fund Commission unanimously and expressly opposed a suspension of work on public infrastructure 168 even though a majority of the commissioners want to halt work on all but the Wabash and Erie Canal and for the state to begin selling canal lands to fund that work 186 The Ohio General Assembly had been selling federally ceded canal land at 1 25 34 in 2022 dollars an acre for Miami Extension Canal lands and 2 50 69 in 2022 dollars an acre for Wabash and Erie Canal lands Both were beneath the market rate The collapse of real estate prices a precursor to the Panic of 1837 brought a halt to canal land sales in 1836 To raise funds in 1838 the legislature required that all canal lands be appraised Canal lands could now only be sold at their appraised price or 3 00 82 in 2022 dollars an acre whichever was higher With the depression caused by the Panic of 1837 continuing there were no buyers 187 Additionally title to some lands were in dispute between February 1838 and late 1840 as the state of Ohio and the federal government argued about which lands Congress had ceded to the state These title disputes also inhibited canal land sales 188 The legislature actively considered a bill which barred the canal commissioners from raising any funds to pay off the temporary loans made by the New York City banks This bill passed the Ohio House and passed the Ohio Senate with amendments some time between midnight and 6 AM on March 7 1842 The House asked for a conference committee but the legislature adjourned at noon on March 7 Had the bill passed it would have essentially bankrupted the canal commission fund Deeply alarmed by the pending legislation Kelley submitted a bill during the Senate s final hours in which the state pledged not only to pay its debts but also to reduce spending and issue such stock as necessary to pay off the debt This legislation passed both chambers and greatly improved the state s financial standing with Eastern investors 192 The Canal Fund Commission issued another 210 000 6 600 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds in 1844 and paid off all outstanding contractor debt 174 As the economy began growing swiftly again Ohio was easily able to refinance its high interest debt and permanently resolve its fiscal emergency 198 Work on the Miami Extension Canal was finished in 1845 which also greatly reduced the state s need for money 198 152 All other new canal construction ended in 1847 155 Kelley had previously worked closely with three members of the board William Dennison Jr 227 and Samuel Medary 231 were both incorporators of the Columbus and Xenia Railroad and were involved in bringing Kelley aboard as president of that line Truman P Handy was a director of the Commercial Bank of Lake Erie alongside Kelley 213 All of the railroad s rails came from the United Kingdom 261 Although the FCC had enough funds in hand in December 1850 to purchase this land 315 it apparently had not yet done so The right to construct lateral railroads was granted in May 1932 in An Act Regulating Lateral Railroads although they were restricted to 3 miles 4 8 km in length 316 and could only be constructed in Lycoming Luzerne Northumberland and Schuylkill counties 317 The law was amended in March 1840 to permit lateral railroads up to 6 miles 9 7 km in length in A Supplement to the Act Entitled An Act Regulating Lateral Railroads 318 The state legislature extended the right to build lateral railroads to all parts of the state in April 1848 in An Act Relative to Margaret Parthmore and Relative to Lateral Railroads Etc 317 Citations a b Fess 1937 p 59 Kelley 1897 p 46 Kelley 1897 p 10 Kelley 1897 p 13 Kelley 1897 p 24 a b Kelley 1897 p 28 a b Bates 1888 p 2 Kelley 1897 p 34 a b c d e Avery 1918b p 11 a b Kelley 1897 p 37 Kelley 1897 p 35 a b c Wickham 1914 p 155 a b c d Lupold amp Haddad 1988 p 6 Ayers et al 2006 p 174 a b Kelley 1897 p 38 Bates 1888 p 3 Rose 1990 p 93 a b Rose 1990 p 73 Rose 1990 p 74 a b Avery 1918a p 98 Whittlesey 1867 p 469 a b Whittlesey 1867 p 466 Avery 1918a p 100 a b c d e Kennedy 1886 p 557 a b c d e f g h i Avery 1918b p 12 a b Memorial Record 1894 p 225 a b c Havighurst 1977 p 79 Korenko 2009 pp 37 45 Rose 1990 p 236 Rose 1990 p 82 Ingham 1893 pp 233 234 a b Wickham 1914 p 227 Jarboe Michelle June 11 2017 Forest City to sell Scranton Peninsula land to investor group eyeing development The Plain Dealer Retrieved May 18 2018 a b c d e f Kennedy 1886 p 553 a b Rose 1990 p 78 Wickham 1914 p 169 a b c d Rose 1990 p 127 Rose 1990 p 80 Avery 1918a pp 105 106 Ohio Secretary of State 1885 p 76 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a pp 78 79 a b c d Scheiber 1978 p 368 Kennedy 1886 p 551 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a pp 82 83 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a pp 84 85 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a pp 94 96 Bates 1888 pp 12 13 a b Cole 2001 p 71 Bates 1888 pp 14 17 Galbreath 1925 p 448 Bates 1888 p 11 a b Kennedy 1886 p 552 a b Cole 2001 p 34 Bates 1888 p 19 Bates 1888 p 9 Rothbard 2012 p 17 Rothbard 2012 p 25 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a pp 107 108 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a p 111 a b Scheiber 1978 p 369 United States Congress Ethan Allen Brown id B000914 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Muskingum County Ohio 1892 pp 399 405 United States Congress Jeremiah Morrow id M001003 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress United States Congress Benjamin Tappan id T000039 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress United States Congress Thomas Worthington id W000750 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Brown 1998 pp 234 244 Bates 1888 p 63 a b Bates 1888 pp 60 61 Scheiber 1978 pp 370 371 a b Scheiber 1978 p 372 Bates 1888 p 60 a b Scheiber 1978 p 370 a b c d Bates 1888 p 64 Scheiber 1978 pp 369 370 a b c d e Scheiber 1978 p 373 Scheiber 1978 pp 370 373 Bates 1888 p 69 73 Huntington C C McClelland C P 1905 History of the Ohio Canals Their Construction Cost Use and Partial Abandonment Columbus Ohio Press of F J Heer p 18 OCLC 7004707 Morrow 1883 pp 359 360 Hill 1957 generally a b Bates 1888 p 74 75 a b Bates 1888 p 76 a b Scheiber 1978 pp 374 375 a b c d e Scheiber 1978 p 374 Scheiber 1978 pp 373 374 a b Gieck 1988 p xv Weiner 2005 pp 12 14 a b c d Haeger 1981 p 39 Gieck 1988 p xiv Gieck 1988 pp xiv xv Scheiber 1978 p 379 a b c d Scheiber 1978 p 380 Oeters amp Gulick 2014 p 53 Chapman Charles K December 1918 Ohio Canals Journal of Geography 154 Retrieved May 26 2018 Bates 1888 p 78 a b Bates 1888 p 186 Bates 1888 pp 78 79 a b c Scheiber 1978 p 376 Bates 1888 pp 83 84 Myers amp Cetina 2015 p 15 a b Bates 1888 p 94 a b Cole 2001 p 101 Cole 2001 p 89 a b c d e f Scheiber 1978 p 382 Martin 1858 pp 300 301 Kennedy Cohen amp Piehl 2017 p 178 Norton et al 2015 p 348 Waldstreicher 2013 pp 269 270 Remini 1991 pp 234 272 Rutland 1995 p 2 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 266 Scheiber 1978 pp 376 377 a b Scheiber 1978 p 378 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a pp 171 173 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a pp 176 177 a b Gold 2004 p 98 a b Scheiber 1978 p 384 Bates 1888 p 95 Hurst 2001 p 5 Hurst 2001 p 32 Hurst 2001 pp 35 38 46 47 49 53 Hurst 2001 p 53 Bennett 1904 p 212 a b Huntington 1915 p 362 Haeger 1981 pp 39 44 Scheiber Harry N Spring 1966 The Commercial Bank of Lake Erie 1831 1843 The Business History Review 40 1 47 65 doi 10 2307 3112301 JSTOR 3112301 S2CID 153481665 a b c Marvin Walter Rumsey February 1960 Alfred Kelley Museum Echoes 12 Lee 1892 p 400 Hooper 1920 p 248 Haeger 1981 p 45 Haeger 1981 pp 39 43 Haeger 1981 p 40 a b c Haeger 1981 p 44 a b c Haeger 1981 p 51 Remini 1984 p 105 a b Haeger 1981 p 43 a b c d e f Spiegelman 1948 p 247 Haeger 1981 pp 52 53 a b c Haeger 1981 p 53 a b Haeger 1981 p 52 Haeger 1981 p 226 Haeger 1981 pp 53 54 a b c d e Haeger 1981 p 54 Stampp 1992 pp 221 222 Huntington 1915 p 391 Commercial The North American November 13 1839 p 1 Wittke et al 1941 p 352 Scheiber 1978 pp 382 383 Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland 1976 p 18 a b c Scheiber 1978 p 383 Bates 1888 p 102 a b Gieck 1988 p 125 Miller amp Baxter 1906 p 187 Gieck 1988 p 199 a b Bogart 1911 p 257 Woods 1995 p 12 Woods 1995 p 7 Woods 1995 p 32 Scheiber 1978 pp 383 384 Roy 1999 pp 62 63 a b Roy 1999 p 64 a b Bogart 1911 p 260 a b Cole 2001 p 38 a b Way 2009 p 208 a b Bogart 1911 pp 259 260 Bogart 1911 pp 260 261 a b c Bogart 1911 p 261 a b c Canal Fund Commission 1842a p 5 a b Canal Fund Commission 1842a pp 5 6 a b c Canal Fund Commission 1842a p 6 Bogart 1911 p 262 a b c Canal Fund Commission 1842a p 7 Canal Fund Commission 1842a p 8 a b c d e Way 2009 p 209 a b c Bogart 1911 p 263 Bates 1888 pp 104 105 Bates 1888 pp 105 106 a b c d e f Scheiber 1978 p 385 Scheiber 1975 p 88 Canal Fund Commission 1842b p 9 a b Scheiber 1978 pp 384 385 Scheiber 1968 p 151 a b c Bogart 1911 p 264 Bogart 1911 pp 258 259 265 a b Cole 2001 p 39 Canal Fund Commission 1842a p 11 Scheiber 1975 pp 88 89 Scheiber 1975 p 90 Scheiber 1975 p 91 a b Bates 1888 p 118 a b Scheiber 1978 p 386 Bates 1888 pp 118 124 Bates 1888 p 124 Bogart 1911 pp 264 265 a b c Bogart 1911 p 265 Bates 1888 p 127 a b c Scheiber 1978 p 387 a b Scheiber 1975 p 92 a b Scheiber 1978 pp 387 388 Bates 1888 p 129 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a p 213 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a p 217 Bates 1888 p 131 Bates 1888 p 139 a b Cole 2001 p 70 Bates 1888 p 136 Rose 1990 pp 171 172 a b Scheiber 1978 p 388 Bates 1888 p 142 a b Vernon 1873 p 470 Meints 1992 pp 72 73 Scheiber 1978 pp 389 390 a b Scheiber 1978 p 390 Taylor amp Taylor 1899a p 171 Lee 1892 p 239 Acts of a Local Nature Passed By the General Assembly Ohio 1836 p 529 a b Scheiber 1978 p 389 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906 pp 56 57 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906 p 57 Schwieterman 2001 p 248 Churella 2013 p 267 a b Cole 2001 p 52 Railway Statistics The Cleveland Herald February 23 1847 p 2 Marvin 1954 p 263 a b c d Scheiber 1978 p 391 a b c Bates 1888 p 175 a b Hooper 1920 p 225 a b c Receipts of Railroad Iron at Cleveland for Nine Years The Merchants Magazine and Commercial Review May 1858 p 631 Retrieved May 29 2018 a b Railroad Matters Daily National Intelligencer August 22 1849 p 3 Columbus and Xenia Rail Road The Cleveland Herald October 21 1847 p 3 a b c Cole 2001 p 53 The Columbus and Xenia Railroad The Daily Ohio Statesman February 22 1850 p 3 The Railroad Trip The Daily Ohio Statesman February 28 1850 p 3 Report of Proceedings 1852 p 8 Cincinnati Hamilton and Dayton Railroad 1854 p 6 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1901 p 55 a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1874 p 68 Lee 1892 p 250 Vernon 1873 p 419 a b The Arrival Daily True Democrat February 22 1851 p 2 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road Company The Cleveland Herald April 15 1847 p 3 Retrieved May 31 2018 The Crisis The Cleveland Herald May 22 1847 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2018 Railroads Cleveland Weekly Herald April 21 1847 p 4 a b c Thomas 1920 p 107 a b Railroad News Gleanings Locomotive Engineers Monthly Journal March 1907 p 255 Retrieved May 31 2018 Alfred Kelley The Cleveland Herald August 14 1847 p 3 Retrieved May 31 2018 Delaware County The Cleveland Herald September 9 1847 p 3 Retrieved May 31 2018 Extract from the Minutes of the Board of the C C amp R R Cleveland Sept 7 1847 The Cleveland Herald September 15 1847 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2018 a b Rose 1990 p 145 Avery 1918a p 217 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road The Cleveland Herald September 15 1847 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2018 Railroad Matters American Railroad Journal April 15 1848 p 241 hdl 2027 uva x002211471 Retrieved May 31 2018 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road Meeting The Cleveland Herald August 3 1848 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2018 C C and C Rail Road The Plain Dealer January 15 1848 p 2 Harbach amp Childe 1848 p 3 a b c Thomas 1920 p 108 Haddad 2007 p 6 a b Hatcher 1988 p 171 a b Kennedy 1896 p 323 a b Scheiber 1978 pp 390 391 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road The Cleveland Herald June 1 1849 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2018 Rail Road Iron at Cleveland Daily True Democrat December 31 1852 p 2 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad The Cleveland Herald April 7 1849 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2018 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad American Railroad Journal May 12 1849 p 295 hdl 2027 uva x002211472 Retrieved May 31 2018 a b The N Y Tribune of Saturday Milwaukee Sentinel and Gazette July 24 1849 p 2 Retrieved May 31 2018 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad The Ohio Observer July 25 1849 p 3 Retrieved May 31 2018 The Ride Daily True Democrat March 18 1850 p 2 Ohio Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad American Railroad Journal February 9 1850 p 89 hdl 2027 umn 31951000877135t Retrieved June 26 2018 a b Whither We Are Tending Bangor Daily Whig and Courier May 20 1850 p 1 Retrieved June 26 2018 Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Rail Road Cleveland Herald June 12 1850 p 2 Retrieved June 26 2018 The Railroad Will Be Complete to Shelby To Day Daily True Democrat November 2 1850 p 2 Shelby The Plain Dealer November 2 1850 p 2 a b c d Moving Events C C and C Rail Road Completed The Plain Dealer February 18 1851 p 2 a b The Steam Whistle and the Boom of the Cannon Daily True Democrat February 19 1851 p 2 Matters at Columbus The Plain Dealer February 21 1851 p 2 Ohio Legislature Going to Cleveland The Daily Ohio Statesman February 19 1851 p 3 Retrieved June 27 2018 The First Through Trip to Cleveland The Daily Ohio Statesman February 25 1851 p 3 Retrieved June 27 2018 Camp 2007 p 53 a b The 22nd In Cleveland The Daily Ohio Statesman February 25 1851 p 3 Retrieved June 27 2018 Back Again The Daily Ohio Statesman February 25 1851 p 3 Retrieved June 27 2018 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868a p 117 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1871 p 224 Bates 1888 pp 178 183 Ohio Secretary of State 1848 pp 184 185 Cleveland and Buffalo Rail Road The Plain Dealer August 2 1849 p 2 Ohio American Railroad Journal April 6 1850 pp 246 247 hdl 2027 mdp 39015013032118 Harbach 1850 p 3 Bates 1888 p 179 Orth 1910a pp 738 739 Rose W R September 23 1924 All in the Day s Work The Plain Dealer p 10 a b c Ohio American Railroad Journal November 29 1851 p 757 Retrieved January 29 2018 a b Churella 2013 p 187 a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1874 p 91 Bates 1888 p 181 Hatcher 1988 p 172 a b Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 1853 p 142 a b c d e Franklin Canal Company The Plain Dealer February 6 1854 p 2 Cleveland Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad Company v Franklin Canal Company et al 5 Fed Cas 1044 1045 W D Pa 1853 Franklin Canal Company 1851 pp 3 4 Franklin Canal Company 1853 p 358 Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 1853 pp 143 148 Franklin Canal Company 1851 pp 4 5 Ninth Annual Report of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern 1879 p 55 Franklin Canal Company 1851 p 5 Pennsylvania American Railroad Journal May 31 1851 p 341 Retrieved February 26 2018 Franklin Canal Company 1853 p 355 Michigan Railroad Commission 1877 p lxiv Kent 1948 pp 253 254 256 259 And Coming Down Erie Weekly Gazette February 2 1854 p 3 Grinde 1974 p 16 Commonwealth v Franklin Canal Company 9 Harris 117 118 Pa 1853 Franklin Canal Rail Road Hurrah for Judge Lewis The Plain Dealer January 29 1853 p 2 Hatcher 1988 p 173 Lake Shore Railroad The New York Times January 11 1853 p 4 Commonwealth v Franklin Canal Company 9 Harris 117 Pa 1853 Bates 1888 pp 181 182 Pennsylvania American Railroad Journal December 7 1850 pp 772 773 hdl 2027 mdp 39015013032118 Ball 1884 pp 5 11 a b Ball 1884 p 40 Ball 1884 pp 20 21 Bates 1888 p 182 Hatcher 1988 pp 173 174 Retaliatory The New York Times April 29 1853 p 4 Rhodes 1919 p 21 Churella 2013 pp 187 188 Kent 1948 pp 253 266 Grinde 1974 p 18 Erie Affairs The New York Times December 24 1853 p 4 The Latest from Erie The New York Times January 9 1854 p 1 The Erie War The New York Times January 14 1854 p 2 Rejoicings At Erie The Plain Dealer January 30 1854 p 3 a b Kent 1948 p 269 Terms of the Agreement Erie Weekly Gazette February 16 1854 p 2 Alfred Kelley The Plain Dealer February 20 1854 p 3 Cleveland Painesville Ashtabula The Plain Dealer August 20 1854 p 3 a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1874 pp 91 92 Breaking Up of Parties Perrysburg Journal May 6 1854 p 67 Vernon 1873 p 211 a b Scheiber 1978 p 392 Hon Alfred Kelley has been relieved The Daily Scioto Gazette October 10 1851 p 2 Change in the C C amp C Railroad The Daily Cleveland Herald May 25 1853 p 2 a b Avery 1918b p 13 O S Journal The Daily Cleveland Herald May 9 1854 p 2 Bates 1888 p 185 Bates 1888 pp 186 187 Taylor amp Taylor 1899b p 31 a b c Bates 1888 p 197 Bates 1888 p 187 191 Wikoff 1875 p 75 Bates 1888 pp 193 195 Bates 1888 p 10 a b Kennedy 1886 p 556 Kennedy 1886 pp 555 557 Kelley 1897 p 75 a b Johnson 1879 p 365 Bates 1888 p 200 Illness of Alfred Kelley The Plain Dealer November 29 1859 p 3 Kennedy 1886 p 555 Telegraphic News The Plain Dealer December 2 1859 p 2 Phillips David E October 1907 Monumental Inscriptions From Green Lawn Cemetery Columbus Ohio The Old Northwest Genealogical Quarterly 357 Retrieved July 13 2018 Alfred Kelley s Will The Plain Dealer December 13 1859 p 3 Bibliography EditActs of a Local Nature Passed at the First Session of the Thirty Fourth General Assembly of the State of Ohio Volume 34 Columbus Ohio James B Gardiner State Printer 1836 Avery Elroy McKendree 1918 A History of Cleveland and Its Environs The Heart of New Connecticut Volume 1 Chicago Lewis Publishing Co Avery Elroy McKendree 1918 A History of Cleveland and Its Environs The Heart of New Connecticut Volume II Chicago Lewis Publishing Co Ayers Edward L Gould Lewis L Oshinsky David M Soderland Jean R 2006 American Passages A History of the United States Boston Mass Wadsworth Cengage Learning ISBN 9780618914067 Ball George W I 1884 General Railroad and Telegraph Laws of the State of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Allen Lane amp Scott Bates James L 1888 Alfred Kelley His Life and Work Columbus Ohio Press of R Clarke amp Co Bennett William A 1904 Banking in Cleveland Annals of the Early Settlers Association of Cuyahoga County Volume V Cleveland Early Settlers Association of Cuyahoga County Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Muskingum County Ohio Chicago The Goodspeed Publishing Co 1892 Bogart Ernest L April 1911 The State Debt of Ohio Journal of Political Economy 19 4 249 266 doi 10 1086 251838 S2CID 154531921 Retrieved May 26 2018 Brown Marion A 1998 The Second Bank of the United States and Ohio 1803 1860 A Collision of Interests Lewiston N Y Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 9780773483545 Camp Mark J 2007 Railroad Depots of Northeast Ohio Charleston S C Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738551159 Canal Fund Commission January 21 1842 Annual Report of the Commissioners of the Canal Fund of the State of Ohio Made to the Fortieth General Assembly Doc No 49 Columbus Ohio Samuel Medary State Printer hdl 2027 chi 78251504 Canal Fund Commission December 27 1842 Annual Report of the Commissioners of the Canal Fund of the State of Ohio Made to the Forty First General Assembly Doc No 29 Columbus Ohio Samuel Medary State Printer hdl 2027 osu 32435074906009 Case of the Franklin Canal Company Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Commenced at Harrisburg Tuesday the Fourth Day of January In the Year of Our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Fifty Three Volume II Harrisburg Pa Theo Fenn amp Co Printers to the State 1853 Churella Albert J 2013 The Pennsylvania Railroad Volume 1 Building an Empire 1846 1917 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812243482 Cincinnati Hamilton and Dayton Railroad 1854 Statement of the Existing Controversy Between the Two Lines of Railroads From Cincinnati to Lake Erie Cincinnati Ohio Cincinnati Gazette Company Printer hdl 2027 chi 26452099 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cole Chester 2001 A Fragile Capital Identity and the Early Years of Columbus Ohio Columbus Ohio Ohio State University Press ISBN 9780814208533 Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland 1976 Annual Report 1976 Report Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland Fess Simeon D 1937 Ohio A Four Volume Reference Library on the History of a Great State Volume 4 Ohio s Three Hundred Chicago Lewis Publishing Co Franklin Canal Company 1851 Pennsylvania Section of the Erie and Cleveland Railroad New York William W Rose stationer hdl 2027 ien 35556042945196 Franklin Canal Company 1853 Report of the Franklin Canal Company Journal of the Senate of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Commenced at Harrisburg Tuesday the Fourth Day of January In the Year of Our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Fifty Three Volume II Report Harrisburg Pa Theo Fenn amp Co Printers to the State pp 355 359 Galbreath Charles B 1925 History of Ohio Volume 2 Chicago The American Historical Society hdl 2027 mdp 39015070269074 Gieck Jack 1988 A Photo Album of Ohio s Canal Era 1825 1913 Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9780873383530 Gold David M 2004 The General Assembly and Ohio s Constitutional Culture In Benedict Michael Les Winkler John F eds The History of Ohio Law Athens Ohio Ohio University Press ISBN 9780821415467 Grinde Donald A Jr January 1974 Erie s Railroad War A Case Study of Purposive Violence for a Community s Economic Advancement Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine 15 23 Retrieved March 10 2018 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Haddad Gladys 2007 Flora Stone Mather Daughter of Cleveland s Euclid Avenue and Ohio s Western Reserve Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9780873388993 Haeger John Dennis 1981 The Investment Frontier New York Businessmen and the Economic Development of the Old North West Albany N Y State University of New York Press ISBN 9780873955317 Harbach Frederick 1850 Report on the Preliminary Surveys for the Cleveland Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad Company Cleveland Sanford amp Hayward Harbach Frederick Childe John 1848 Report on the surveys estimates and income of the Cleveland Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad Cleveland Smead amp Cowles hdl 2027 njp 32101066800754 Hatcher Harlan 1988 Building the Railroads In Lupold Harry Forrest Haddad Gladys eds Ohio s Western Reserve A Regional Reader Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9780873383639 Havighurst Walter 1977 Ohio A Bicentennial History New York Norton ISBN 9780393056136 Heidler David S Heidler Jeanne T 2010 Henry Clay The Essential American New York Random House ISBN 9781588369956 jackson Hill Leonard U 1957 John Johnston and the Indians In the Land of the Three Miamis Columbus Ohio Stoneman Press Hooper Osman Castle 1920 History of the City of Columbus Ohio From the Founding of Franklinton in 1797 Through the World War Period to the Year 1920 Columbus Ohio Memorial Publishing Co Huntington C C 1915 A History of Banking and Currency in Ohio Before the Civil War Ohio Archaeological and Historical Publications Cleveland Fred J Herr Hurst James Willard 2001 A Legal History of Money in the United States 1774 1970 Washington D C Beard Books ISBN 9781587980985 Ingham Mary Bigelow 1893 Women of Cleveland and Their Work Philanthropic Educational Literary Medical and Artistic Cleveland Ingham Clarke amp Co Johnson Crisfield 1879 History of Cuyahoga County Ohio Cleveland D W Ensign amp Co Kelley Hermon Alfred 1897 A Genealogical History of the Kelley Family Descended From Joseph Kelley of Norwich Connecticut With Much Biographical Matter Concerning the First Four Generations and Notes of Inflowing Female Lines Cleveland H A Kelley Kennedy James Harrison March 1886 Alfred Kelley Magazine of Western History pp 550 557 Retrieved May 11 2018 Kennedy James Harrison 1896 A History of the City of Cleveland Its Settlement Rise and Progress 1796 1896 Cleveland Imperial Press Kennedy David M Cohen Lizbeth Piehl Mel 2017 The Brief American Pageant A History of the Republic Boston Cengage Learning ISBN 9781285193298 Kent Donald H October 1948 The Erie War of the Gauges Pennsylvania History 253 275 Korenko Leslie 2009 Kelleys Island The Courageous Poignant and Often Quirky Lives of Island Pioneers 1810 1861 Kelleys Island Ohio The Wine Press ISBN 9780981961217 Larick Roy Gibbons Bob Siplock Edward 2005 Euclid Creek Charleston S C Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738539539 Lee Alfred E 1892 History of the City of Columbus Capital of Ohio Volume 1 New York Munsell amp Co Lupold Harry Forrest Haddad Gladys 1988 Conquest and Settlement Native Americans to New Englanders In Lupold Harry Forrest Haddad Gladys eds Ohio s Western Reserve A Regional Reader Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9780873383639 Martin William T 1858 History of Franklin County A Collection of Reminiscences of the Early Settlement of the County Columbus Ohio Follett Forster amp Co Marvin Walter Rumsey July 1954 Ohio s Unsung Penitentiary Railroad Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly 254 269 Retrieved May 27 2018 Meints Graydon M 1992 Michigan Railroads and Railroad Companies East Lansing Mich Michigan State University Press ISBN 9780870133183 Memorial Record of the County of Cuyahoga and City of Cleveland Ohio Chicago The Lewis Publishing Co 1894 Michigan Railroad Commission 1877 Fifth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads of the State of Michigan for the Year Ending December 31 1876 Report of the Commissioner of Railroads Lansing Mich W S George and Co State Printers and Binders 34 v hdl 2027 njp 32101066784305 Miller Charles C Baxter Samuel A 1906 History of Allen County Ohio and Representative Citizens Chicago Richmond amp Arnold Morrow Josiah 1883 The History of Brown County Ohio Chicago W H Beers amp Co Myers John Cetina Judith G 2015 Irish Cleveland Charleston S C Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9781467113496 Ninth Annual Report of the President and Directors of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company to the Stockholders for the Fiscal Year Ending December 31 1878 Report Cleveland Fairbanks amp Co 1879 Norton Mary Beth Kamensky Jane Sheriff Carol Blight David W Chudacoff Howard 2015 A People and a Nation A History of the United States Stamford Conn Cengage Learning ISBN 9781133312727 Oeters Bill Gulick Nancy 2014 Miami and Erie Canal Charleston S C Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9781467112536 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs to the Governor of the State of Ohio for the Year 1867 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs to the Governor of the State of Ohio for the Year Columbus Ohio L D Myers amp Bro State Printers 38 v in 39 hdl 2027 njp 32101066796929 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1871 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs for the Year Ending June 30 1870 In Two Volumes Volume II Columbus Ohio Nevins and Myers State Printers Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1874 Seventh Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs of Ohio for the Year Ending June 30 1873 Columbus Ohio Nevins and Myers State Printers Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1888 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs to the Governor of the State Ohio for the Year 1887 Columbus Ohio The Westbote Company State Printers Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1901 The Thirty Fourth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs to the Governor of the State Ohio for the Year 1901 Columbus Ohio F J Heer State Printer Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906 The Thirty Eighth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs to the Governor of the State Ohio for the Year 1905 Columbus Ohio The Springfield Publishing Company State Printers Ohio Secretary of State 1848 Acts of a General Nature Passed By the Forty Sixth General Assembly of the State of Ohio Volume XLVI Columbus Ohio Chas Scott s Steam Press Ohio Secretary of State 1885 Annual Report of the Secretary of State to the Governor of Ohio for the Year 1884 Columbus Ohio The Westbote Co State Printers Orth Samuel Peter 1910 A History of Cleveland Ohio Volume I Chicago S J Clarke Publishing Co Orth Samuel Peter 1910 A History of Cleveland Ohio Volume II Biography Chicago S J Clarke Publishing Co Remini Robert V 1984 Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Democracy 1833 1845 New York Harper amp Row ISBN 9780060152796 Remini Robert V 1991 Henry Clay Statesman for the Union New York W W Norton ISBN 9780393030044 Report of the Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates From Railroad Companies Held in Columbus May 4 1852 Columbus Ohio Scott amp Bascom Printers 1852 hdl 2027 miun aft9076 0001 001 Rhodes James Ford 1919 History of the United States From the Compromise of 1850 Volume 3 New York Harper amp Bros Rose William Ganson 1990 Cleveland The Making of a City Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9780873384285 Rothbard Murray N 2012 The Panic of 1819 Reactions and Policies Auburn Ala Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 9781933550084 Roy William G 1999 Socializing Capital The Rise of the Large Industrial Corporation in America Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691010342 Rutland Robert Allen 1995 The Democrats From Jefferson to Clinton Columbia Mo University of Missouri Press ISBN 9780826210340 Scheiber Harry N 1968 The Ohio Canal Era A Case Study of Government and the Economy 1820 1861 Athens Ohio Ohio University Press Scheiber Harry N Summer 1975 Land Reform Speculation and Government Failure The Administration of Ohio s State Canal Lands 1836 1860 Prologue The Journal of the National Archives 85 89 hdl 2027 uc1 b5181423 Retrieved May 26 2018 Scheiber Harry N Autumn 1978 Alfred Kelley and the Ohio Business Elite 1822 1859 Ohio History 354 392 Retrieved May 11 2018 Schwieterman Joseph P 2001 When the Railroad Leaves Town American Communities in the Age of Rail Line Abandonment Kirksville Mo Truman State University Press ISBN 9780943549989 Spiegelman Mortimer July 1948 The Failure of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company 1857 Ohio History Journal 247 265 Retrieved May 22 2018 Stampp Kenneth Milton 1992 America in 1857 A Nation on the Brink New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195074819 Taylor William Alexander Taylor Aubrey Clarence 1899 Ohio Statesmen and Annals of Progress From the Year 1788 to the Year 1900 Volume I Columbus Ohio Press of the Westbote Co Taylor William Alexander Taylor Aubrey Clarence 1899 Ohio Statesmen and Annals of Progress From the Year 1788 to the Year 1900 Volume II Columbus Ohio Press of the Westbote Co Thomas William B Fall 1920 Early History of the Old Bee Line R R and Its Completion By Hon Alfred Kelley in 1851 Firelands Pioneer 104 122 Retrieved June 1 2018 Vernon Edward 1873 American Railroad Manual for the United States and the Dominion American Railroad Manual Philadelphia J B Lippincott amp Co hdl 2027 njp 32101066799089 Voight Norman R 2017 Transportation Depth Reference Manual for the Civil PE Exam Belmont Calif Professional Publications ISBN 9781591264682 Waldstreicher David 2013 A Companion to John Adams and John Quincy Adams Malden Mass Wiley Blackwell ISBN 9780470655580 Way Peter 2009 Common Labour Workers and the Digging of North American Canals 1780 1860 Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521102650 Weiner Ronald R 2005 Lake Effects A History of Urban Policy Making in Cleveland 1825 1929 Columbus Ohio Ohio State University Press ISBN 9780814209899 Whittlesey Charles 1867 Early History of Cleveland Cleveland Fairbanks Benedict amp Co Printers Wickham Gertrude Van Rensselaer 1914 The Pioneer Families of Cleveland 1796 1840 Volume 1 Cleveland Evangelical Publishing House Wikoff Allen T 1875 Annual Report of the Secretary of State to the Governor of the State of Ohio for the Year 1874 Columbus Ohio Nevins amp Myers State Printers Wittke Carl Frederick Bond Beverley W Utter William T Weisenburger Francis P Roseboom Eugene H Jordan Philip D Lindley Harlow 1941 The History of the State of Ohio Volume 3 The Passing of the Frontier 1825 1850 Columbus Ohio Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society Woods Terry K 1995 The Ohio and Erie Canal A Glossary of Terms Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9780873385220 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alfred Kelley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfred Kelley amp oldid 1175504540, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.