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Fort Shawnee is adjacent to the city of Lima and the village of Cridersville in Auglaize County. In 2012, village residents voted to disincorporate the village. [ 5 ] According to the United States Census Bureau , the village had a total area of 7.25 square miles (18.78 km 2 ), of which 7.21 square miles (18.67 km 2 ) is land and 0.04 square ...
Part of Lima is located in northeastern Shawnee Township. Fort Shawnee is located in the township's eastern sections; currently unincorporated, it was a village until its dissolution in 2012. Name and history
Fort Ancient Monongahela cultures. Some scholars believe that the Shawnee descend from the precontact Fort Ancient culture of the Ohio region, although this is not universally accepted. The Shawnee may have entered the area at a later time and occupied the Fort Ancient sites.
Wakatomika was the name of two 18th century Shawnee villages in what is now the U.S. state of Ohio. The name was also spelled Wapatomica, Waketomika, Waketomica, and Waketameki, among other variations, but the similar name Wapakoneta was a different Shawnee village. Both Wakatomikas were destroyed in raids, the first by colonial Virginians in ...
Visitors to Old Shawnee Days, coming June 6-9, can see the changes to the museum. ‘History wasn’t in black and white.’ Here’s how Shawnee Town ‘changed’ its history
The Shawnee Lookout Archeological District is a historic district in the southwestern corner of the U.S. state of Ohio. [1] Located southwest of Cleves in Hamilton County's Miami Township, [2] the district is composed of forty-six archaeological sites spread out over an area of 2,000 acres (810 ha). [1]
2875 Fort Amanda Rd., southwest of Lima: Shawnee Township: An old farmstead, home to one of the area's first settlers 6: Beck and R.C. Cahill Buildings: Beck and R.C. Cahill Buildings: October 7, 1982 : 200-206 S. Main St.
Scholars generally believe that similarities in material culture, art, mythology, and Shawnee oral history link the historic tribe to the Fort Ancient people. [12] However, there is also evidence that the Algonquian Shawnee culture may have been more of an admixture or intrusion to the site, which may have previously been Siouan occupied.