The Columbus Dispatch

RIVER TOWN

Marietta preserves its past as Ohio’s oldest city

- By Steve Stephens |

MARIETTA, Ohio — Few places in Ohio are as picturesqu­e as the town at the confluence of the Ohio and Muskingum rivers. None is as historic.

Marietta is the oldest city in the Buckeye State, founded in 1788 at a time when crossing the Ohio River from the east meant hacking through the wilderness on the other side and entering the frontier.

Visitors nowadays will have an easier time traveling to Marietta, but they can still see the home of Rufus Putnam, a Revolution­ary War general and friend of George Washington’s who was one of the town founders.

Putnam’s log house was part of Campus Martius, a stockade built to protect the first settlers. The house has been preserved on its original foundation within the Campus Martius Museum.

The rest of the large, three-story museum tells the story of the old Northwest Territory from prehistori­c times through the flood of migration into Ohio.

Just outside the museum building is the Ohio Company Land Office, where the first settlers recorded their claims. The building, constructe­d in 1788, might be the oldest structure in the state.

Another fine museum, the Ohio River Museum, is located on the Muskingum River but is close enough to the Ohio that visitors could hear a steam whistle there. The museum concentrat­es on the golden age of the steamboat and includes the restored W.P. Snyder Jr., the last stern-wheeled towboat in the United States.

Visitors who want to ride a sternwheel­er can stop next door. The Valley Gem offers narrated sightseein­g cruises and a series of special excursions throughout the summer and into the fall. I love hearing the slap of the stern-wheel paddles against the waters of the Ohio and Muskingum as the boat cruises past verdant islands and under huge bridges.

In downtown Marietta, visitors will find many interestin­g shops, inviting restaurant­s and a couple of historic hotels, including the venerable and comfortabl­e Lafayette, located on the Ohio River near the mouth of the Muskingum.

The Lafayette’s wellappoin­ted Gun Room restaurant and Riverview Lounge are both reminders of elegant riverboat days. Guests can even stay in rooms made to resemble riverboat passenger cabins.

Craft beer lovers should stop at the Marietta Brewing Co., which offers tasty brew in an attractive old building decorated with colorful murals.

For fine Mediterran­ean fare, try the Buckley House Restaurant in a historic house across the street from Muskingum Park. Other good restaurant options downtown include Jeremiah’s Coffee House on Front Street; the Galley restaurant in the Hackett, a historic boutique hotel; and Austyn’s, across from the Lafayette hotel.

Hidden Marietta Tour Co., located in the Lafayette, offers walking tours of the city, including a spooky Ghost Trek tour.

In fact, Marietta offers plenty of delightful places to walk off a good meal, including a scenic 3.3-mile walking and bike path along both rivers. But I’d suggest a stroll through Mound Cemetery and the surroundin­g neighborho­od.

The cemetery takes its name from the ancient Indian mound at its center, a reminder of the people who lived in Marietta before Putnam and his fellow settlers. Around the mound are hundreds of graves, some dating to the earliest days of settlement — including more than three dozen Revolution­ary War veterans, Putnam included.

The neighborho­od surroundin­g the cemetery contains some magnificen­t old homes, including the Castle, one of the best examples of Gothic Revival architectu­re in the state. The house, built in 1855, is now a museum owned by the city. Among the many interestin­g features is a notable fireplace of scagliola, a beautiful imitation marble made of painted plaster.

From the Castle, visitors will certainly note the triple towers of the Spanish Renaissanc­e-style Basilica of St. Mary of the Assumption, built in 1904. The magnificen­tly decorated and lovingly restored Catholic church is definitely worth a stop. Visitors will find self-guided tour brochures just inside the front doors.

For another great stroll, cross the downtown pedestrian bridge over the Muskingum River to Historic Harmar Village, a cute neighborho­od with several restaurant­s and shops and a few small museums.

On the high bluff above Harmar is another cozy lodging, the House on Harmar Hill bed and breakfast, with a view from the front porch that’s one of the most dramatic in the state.

That same view can be admired from Lookout Point on Bellevue Street just off Route 7. From there, the panorama soars out across the city and both rivers, encompassi­ng the breathtaki­ng confluence where civilizati­on and wilderness once met.

 ??  ?? The Basilica of St. Mary of the Assumption
The Basilica of St. Mary of the Assumption
 ??  ?? The Castle, a house turned museum
The Castle, a house turned museum
 ?? [STEVE STEPHENS/DISPATCH PHOTOS] ?? The Washington County Courthouse and other historic buildings in Marietta
[STEVE STEPHENS/DISPATCH PHOTOS] The Washington County Courthouse and other historic buildings in Marietta
 ??  ?? A room meant to resemble a steamboat cabin at the historic Lafayette hotel
A room meant to resemble a steamboat cabin at the historic Lafayette hotel
 ??  ?? A memorial to westward migration
A memorial to westward migration

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