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Manasseh
Cutler
1742-1823
B.A.
1765
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The Northwest Ordinance
(1787), which set forth the conditions for U.S. western expansion, has been
ranked close behind the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution as
a formative influence on the American nation. In any case, the Ordinance has
stood the test of time, as one territory after another fulfilled the conditions
for statehood.
A co-author of
the far-sighted document was the Reverend Manasseh Cutler, a Congregationalist
minister in Ipswich, Massachusetts. Whatever hours he could take from his
duties were devoted to what was then called natural history. Aside from following
the stars and planets, Cutler collected botanical samples and charted temperatures
and other weather phenomena, constantly borrowing thermometers and barometers
from friends and parishioners.
The Revolutionary
War provided Cutler with an unexpected opportunity. He signed on as a chaplain
in the army and was among a group of officers who founded the Ohio Company
in 1786 to lead a band of settlers westward. He joined with Nathan Dane, a
neighbor who had served on the Continental Congress, in drafting the Ordinance
of 1787.
Acting as negotiator
for the company, Cutler obtained government approval to settle an area of
1.5 million acres beyond the Ohio River. He kept a journal of the vicissitudes
of the journey to Marietta in 1788 with 45 fellow settlers, relating everything
from the rude diet to their relations with Native Americans.
Cutler went on
to serve in the Massachusetts legislature as well as the U.S. House of Representatives,
but never gave up his parish in Ipswich.
