Ohio History Journal

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ANCIENT WORK NEAR OXFORD, OHIO

ANCIENT WORK NEAR OXFORD, OHIO.

In the first volume of Smithsonian "Contributions to

Knowledge," Mr. McBride gives a cut and description of

this work.1 But both plat and description vary so widely

from the facts, that it seems desirable to bring the case up

again. Mr. MacLean in his "Mound Builders," repro-

duces the figure and copies the chief points of the gen-

eral statement. They differ as to the locality, McBride

being entirely right, but McLean putting it in the wrong

township. The work lies wholly in lot 6, section 31, town-

ship 5, range 2, east of the Miami Meridian.2

The Smithsonian plat (Plate XI., No. 2) gives the area

enclosed as "25 acres;" the text says "20 acres."  Mr.

MacLean copies the text. A careful survey, made under my

personal supervision, by Christian Pann, H. L. Kramer, and

P. W. Jenkins, of the Engineers' Class, gives eight acres.

An inspection of the cut in the Smithsonian publication or

in the "Mound Builders" shows that no survey had been

made, and only the wildest kind of guesswork could have

produced a plat so far out of the way in respect to size, shape,

and position.  For a full understanding of this description,

it will be necessary to use the plate given herewith.

Mr. McBride says the bluff is 60 feet high. A careful

application of the level and rod shows that the point marked

C is 95 feet above the level of the creek near by; and

the point B, 90 feet. At N the old channel of the creek

was closed by glacial drift many thousand years ago. Imme-

diately beyond this obstruction, to the eastward, is the buried

 

1Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley, pp. 29-30.

2In the technical description of land in this corner of the State the word

north must not be used. In the location of the mounds of Butler county, as

given in the first number of the QUARTERLY this mistake of using N. (north)

occurs nine times; and the mounds as thus described lie in Paulding and

Defiance counties-not in Butler at all. The work described in this article

is on the Miami University lands, and all these lands have the sections

divided into six lots-not into quarters, as elsewhere.

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