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Ohio Settlement Conference Scheduled for February 21-22 at 91̽

91̽ will host “Settling Ohio: First Nations and Beyond,” a conference highlighting the events and actions that shaped the State of Ohio, at Baker University Center from Friday, Feb. 21 to Saturday, Feb. 22. The conference will include presentations by historians, scholars, as well as the Chief of the Eastern Shawnee Nation. The event is free and open to the public.

The two-day conference organized by Dr. Brian Schoen, Associate Professor of History in 91̽’s College of Arts and Sciences and Dr. Tim Anderson, Associate Professor of Geography in 91̽’s College of Arts and Sciences will look at the many ways Ohio was shaped by its first settlers, including how they built the state’s government, economy, agriculture and homes. It will begin with a pre-conference conversation, “Preserving American History in Southeast Ohio,” at the Southeast Ohio History Center and continue with talks by several historians and experts from across the nation, including OHIO professors Schoen, Anderson and Dr. Joseph Gingerich, Assistant Professor of Anthropology in 91̽’s College of Arts and Sciences.

“The oldest university in the state is the perfect place to explore the early settlement of Ohio, a topic that has garnered recent national attention,” Schoen said. “We have assembled some of the best minds and speakers to Athens to do this,” Schoen continued, "and hope the public walks away with a sense of the diverse and dynamic processes that created this state, and left a lasting legacy for us today.”

Schoen will provide introductory remarks, with Gingerich following with a presentation on Ohio’s first people and the rise of the first settled villages. He will discuss the arrival of the first people in the Ohio Valley and how settlers eventually became more sedentary, where they domesticated some of the crops in eastern North America, leading them to become one of the only nine independent domestication events in the world.

Later in the conference, Anderson will talk about selective migration and the production of Ohio’s regional cultural landscapes. He’ll explain how during the state’s early, formative era of settlement, migrants from a variety of locations funneled into separate regions in Ohio, with each group bringing various characteristic values, ideals, and traditions.

“We see every day the influence other cultures have on our society, but how often do we think about the cultural influences that established our specific region?” Anderson wondered. “Historical and contemporary cultural landscapes reflect the legacy of the first settlers in Ohio, resulting in distinct regional cultural landscapes throughout the state.”

In Friday evening’s keynote, Anna-Lisa Cox will explore the often-hidden history of black settlement into an early frontier of freedom. Amongst the conference’s many highlights, Dr. William Kerrigan will use the figure and legend of Johnny Appleseed to examine the cultural practices common in the Old Northwest. Dr. Adam Nelson will provide a talk about how early Ohioans thought and argued over Public Education and its place within the Republic.

The conference will conclude with a keynote address by Chief Glenna J. Wallace, the first women elected as the Chief of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe, presenting on how to balance history and legacy. She will discuss how historical events that occurred over 200 years ago continue to affect our memory, perspectives, and values. 

The conference will also feature the following : John Bickers, Ann Fidler, Kim M. Gruenwald, Jessica Choppin Roney, Cam Shriver, and two OHIO Alumni, Joseph Ross and Bill Hunter.

Settling Ohio: First Nations and Beyond” is sponsored by the Office of the President of 91̽, The Central Regional Humanities Center at 91̽, The Charles J. Ping Institute for the Teaching of the Humanities, The College of Arts & Sciences departments of Geography and History, and the Southeast Ohio History Center. 

Visit /cas/ohio-settlement-conference for the conference schedule. Those interested in attending the conference can RSVP .

 

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Published
January 31, 2020
Author
Staff reports