Historical Marker Search

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM8HO_dawes-arboretum-hedge_Heath-OH.html
"Dawes Arboretum"Hedge Lettering, 2,040 ft.planted 1930 & 40; replanted 1990 & 91 The Dawes ArboretumThese evergreens forming the word "Dawes"were planted by and dedicated toVolunteers of the Dawes ArboretumOctober 14, 1990
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM8HN_beard-green-cemetery-in-the-dawes-arboretum_Heath-OH.html
Spring, 1800, Benjamin Green and family become the first legal settlers in Licking County, followed by the Stadden family; Col. John Stadden marries Elizabeth Green on Christmas Day. Spring, 1801, clearings cut for cabins on Hog Run; Johnny Apples…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM8CT_licking-township-fallen-firemen_Newark-OH.html
In Memory ofFallen Firemen
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM46L_great-circle-earthworks_Heath-OH.html
The Great Circle Earthworks,one remnant of the largest complex of geometric earthen enclosures ever built. The Newark Earthworks, situated on a high terrace between the South Fork of the Licking River and Raccoon Creek, once covered more than four…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM3T1_the-newark-earthworks_Newark-OH.html
The Newark Earthworks is truly one of the most magnificent prehistoric Indian sites in the eastern United States. Covering an area two miles square, it once was the largest earthworks complex in Ohio. the main components of the site are the large …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMWG_ohio-canal-ground-breaking_Heath-OH.html
At this site on July 4, 1825, Governor DeWitt Clinton of New York turned the first shovelful of dirt for the Ohio Canal. The ceremony was attended by area citizens of Master Masons. In the early 1840's James A. Garfield, who was to become the …
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