Who should replace Gov. Allen?


A Web site will be set up for you to cast a vote or nominate someone.

COLUMBUS (AP) — Lawmakers want schoolchildren to help recommend a new statue of a famous Ohioan to represent the state in the U.S. Capitol.

The recommendations will help lawmakers decide who should replace a statue of William Allen, a 19th century congressman and Ohio governor who portrayed blacks as savages and supported the rights of Southern slave owners.

Allen is one of two Ohioans in the National Statuary Hall, a large semicircular room in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., that honors historic figures from each state. Ohio donated Allen’s statue to the Capitol’s collection in 1887, where it joined that of James Garfield, the nation’s 20th president, who was assassinated in 1881.

“We figured it was probably time to bring Gov. Allen back home to Ohio and pick someone who better embodies the spirit of our state for the Capitol,” said state Rep. Mark Wagoner, a Republican from Toledo who is a member of a committee seeking to replace the statue.

Possibilities for new statues abound in Ohio’s rich history, Wagoner said.

Some possibilities

Olympic gold medal winner Jesse Owens or Toledo’s Michael Owens, who created a glass bottling empire that employed much of the northwestern part of the state in the early 1900s, are just a few examples, Wagoner said.

The six-member House-Senate committee has called on the Ohio Historical Society and the Department of Education to encourage as many Ohioans as possible to weigh in on a suitable statue.

Lawmakers hope fifth-graders, who have an Ohio history requirement in their curriculum, will be particularly active in suggesting famous figures.

The historical society is creating a Web site where people can cast a vote or nominate a favorite Ohioan from history.

The parameters for a nomination are wide open. The National Statuary Hall Collection requires only that the subject be a deceased U.S. citizen, known for “distinguished civic or military service.”

The committee hopes to collect names over the next six months and make a formal recommendation to the state Legislature by March 20, 2008.

An 1864 law allowed each state to erect statues of two people notable to its history, filling the Capitol with statesmen famous in that era.

In 2000, Congress enacted a law allowing legislatures to replace their statues with figures they felt better represented their state’s history.

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