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The Ohio History Connection has one of the nation’s largest collections of Indigenous remains. The nonprofit and tribes are working under the Native American Graves Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) to return them.
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Today, Ohio has no federally recognized tribes headquartered within its borders. Still, representatives from American Indian nations whose homelands are in the state gathered recently for a two-day event.
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In our upcoming series, we will provide a perspective on the history of the region we now call Ohio that very few of us learned in school. We'll put the experiences of Miami, Shawnee, Wyandotte, and other American Indian people at the center of a refreshed version of the state’s complicated past and undecided future.
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The Ohio Country is a 12-episode podcast from the public media station WYSO about American Indian people reconnecting with their homelands in the Ohio River Valley.
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Cedar Bog is home to 40% of Ohio’s rare species, in one location, according to Ohio History Connection.
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The nonprofit said an estimated 7,600 people's data and information was potentially breached and is working to give support to those impacted.
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New archaeological research highlights how artisans modified animal bones using blades to create ceremonial objects two thousand years ago in what is now called the Miami Valley.
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The Serpent Mound in Adams County is probably the most famous of Ohio’s many sacred earthworks constructed by prehistoric Native American peoples. As part…