91探花

lithograph of Hopeton earthworks
Ohio鈥檚 First Humanists

A Legacy in Place Names

Ohio鈥檚 First Humans

The first humans in what is now Ohio were not Europeans but rather the distant descendants of people who migrated east and south from Asia and began to create complex societies. By the 17th and 18th centuries, the region north of the Ohio River and west of the Appalachian Mountains had become a haven for a number of eastern Indigenous groups who pushed west to avoid war and pursue trade. Their influence continues to be seen throughout our region, evidenced in the diverse place names that linguists have traced to the many Native American groups who lived in or passed through the region.

	 A map of Ohio Indian village sites and trails, done by H.C. Shetrone and R.B. Sherman of the Ohio Historical Society. Also included on the map are American and European posts, the Greenville Treaty line, and notations for whether an Indian town was associated with the Delaware, Wyandot, Shawnee or Miami tribe. A chronology printed on either side of the map covers Ohio's history and settlement, as well as interactions between American Indians and settlers, from 1669 until 1842. Shetrone was Curator of Arch
A map of Ohio Indian village sites and trails, done by H.C. Shetrone and R.B. Sherman of the Ohio Historical Society. Also included on the map are American and European posts, the Greenville Treaty line, and notations for whether an Indian town was associated with the Delaware, Wyandot, Shawnee or Miami tribe. A chronology printed on either side of the map covers Ohio's history and settlement, as well as interactions between American Indians and settlers, from 1669 until 1842. Shetrone was Curator of Archaeology for the Ohio Historical Society between 1921 and 1928 and served as the Society's director from 1928 until 1947. Courtesy of .

Place Names Tell a Story

The name 鈥淥hio'' comes from a Seneca (Iroquois) word, which means 鈥済ood鈥 or 鈥済reat river.鈥 The state鈥檚 major rivers, including the Muskingum and the Miami, continue to bear the names that different Native American groups gave them, written down by European traders, settlers, and early mapmakers.

Lenape or Delaware people forced west by European settlement named the river that begins near Lancaster and meanders through Southeastern Ohio to the Ohio River, 鈥淗okhokken鈥 or 鈥淗okhochen.鈥 This meant 鈥渂ottle鈥 or "gourd-shaped," an apparent reference to the shape of the waterfall near its source. English-speaking settlers called it the Hockhocking River, and by the 19th century, most Athenians knew it simply as the 鈥淗ocking River.鈥

The names of 14 of Ohio鈥檚 88 counties draw from Native American words, including Ashtabula (Algonquian), Coshocton (Delaware), and Pickaway (Shawnee). Other counties are named after entire groups like the Huron, Ottawa, Seneca, Tuscarawas, and Wyandot.

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