This 2016 aerial photograph of gives a sense of Shrum Mound’s circumference.
Photo by: Kevin Payravi/Wikimedia | CC BY-SA 4.0
Peoples of the Adena culture (800 B.C.–1 A.D.) constructed this burial mound approximately 2,000 years ago, between 500 B.C. and 400 A.D. The Adena culture was shared by many Indigenous groups in present-day Ohio, West Virginia, Indiana, Kentucky and Pennsylvania. The mounds were constructed over many generations, as burial rituals were repeated on the same site.
Named after Salmon P. Chase, former Ohio governor and U.S. Treasury Secretary under President Abraham Lincoln, Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery in...
Tom Parr, the former president of the North American Trap Collectors Association, has curated the Trap History Museum—an extensive collection of...
The Ohio State School for the Blind (OSB) was opened in Columbus, Ohio, in 1837, as the first state-supported residential school for youth who are...
The Great American Rail-Trail promises an all-new American experience. Through 12 states and the District of Columbia, the trail will directly serve nearly 50 million people within 50 miles of the route. Across the nation—and the world—only the limits of imagination will limit its use.
Learn MoreTrailLink is a free service provided by Rails-to-Trails conservancy
(a non-profit) and we need your support!