Ohio History Journal

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Forty-First Annual Meeting 641

Forty-First Annual Meeting            641

 

PRELIMINARY REPORT ON THE WORK OF RESTOR-

ING AND PARKING OF THE MOUND CITY GROUP,

IN CAMP SHERMAN, ROSS COUNTY, OHIO

Under instruction of the Director, the Curator of Archae-

ology spent the month of October, 1925, on the preliminary work

of restoring the Mound City Group of Prehistoric Earthworks,

located in Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, Ohio, preparatory to con-

verting the area, turned over to the Society by the War Depart-

ment, into a State Park.

This area, approximately fifty-seven acres in extent, ex-

tends eastward from the public highway to the Scioto River,

with East Liverpool Street its northern, and Portsmouth Street

its southern boundary; in other words, the area comprises the

Camp Sherman Sections N and O.

Conditions of the tract of land at the time of beginning the

work of reconstruction were briefly as follows: In those portions

of Sections N and O where the mounds and their accompanying

earthwork are located, there remained as obstructions the con-

crete bases of the latrines; the greasetraps, and a great deal of

rubbish resulting from razing of barracks. On the area border-

ing the river were more than twenty large dead trees, killed as a

result of picketing horses thereto. The entire area was grown up

in weeds, brush and saplings, approximately three acres being

heavily covered with Virginia creeper of large size.

The concrete bases in Section N were broken up and hauled

to the sites of adjacent mounds to be restored; several of these

bases in Section O were similarly disposed of, and the remainder

are being handled as explained later on in this report.

Approximately eighty wagon-loads of trash and debris were

gathered up and dumped into ravines and washes adjacent to the

river.

The acreage grown up with Virginia creeper was grubbed

over with mattocks, and locust and other heavy brush were

similarily disposed of, to prepare the area for plowing. In order

to destroy as much weed seed as possible, as much of the area

was burned over as would lend itself to this procedure.

The dead trees adjacent to the river were cut down and

burned.

Section N, that is the portion thereof on which the mounds

are located, and the entire strip of land lying between the rail-

road and the river, from East Liverpool Street south to Blue-

field Street, was deep-plowed, the object of this being three-

fold; the procedure serves to locate the sites of undetermined

mounds and the presence of any archaeological evidences not here-

Vol. XXXV--41.