Ohio History Journal

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EARTHWORKS OF FRANKLIN COUNTY, OHIO

EARTHWORKS OF FRANKLIN            COUNTY, OHIO.

EDITOR OF THE QUARTERLY

SIR: The following completes the list of mounds, etc.,

that exist in Franklin county, and that are known to me

and not mentioned in the "Bibliography of the Earth-

works of Ohio."

I will here state that the first work described in that list

as being in Franklin county, viz., "Embankment, etc.," is

in Delaware county, and is also described under the head

of Delaware county. I will also state that the second

described work of Franklin county, "Anc. Mon., p. 84,

Pl. xxxix, No. 3," is the same as the fourth work, viz.,

" Mound at Whittington. Trans. Amer. Antiq. Soc., Vol.

I., p. 174." It should read Worthington, not Whittington.

The only published descriptions of the work of the

Mound Builders in this county that I can refer to is the

History of Franklin and Pickaway counties, published by

Williams Bros. in 1880. It is there stated that Charles

Whittlesey describes in a Contribution to the Smithsonian

Publications, Vol. III., ancient remains about three miles

southwest of Columbus, on the Harrisburg pike. "There

were here plainly visible, a few years ago, two almost ex-

actly circular enclosures, one about 800 feet and the other

about 500 feet in diameter. The walls were only slight

elevations, and measured from the bottom of the ditch

(which was in this case exterior) to the top of the em-

bankment, the height was in no place over three feet."

Joseph Sullivant describes a small work at the mouth of

a run which empties into the Olentangy a short distance

above Worthington. " It is a low embankment in the form

of an arc of a circle, and runs from that of the river bank

to that of the creek. It is marked in the drawing as sit-

uated on the DeWolfe lot."

Upon the authority of Mr. Sullivant, it is also stated

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