Inscription
Archaeologists believe that this prehistoric mound, part of a complex of earthworks, was used for rituals by the Hopewell people and was probably built between 100 BC and 400 AD. Note the painted post tops marking the Hopewell pole house footprint. The mound is recorded on the National Register of Historic Places and was given to the Worthington Historical Society in 1974 in memory of Herman Plesenton Jeffers.
[Side B]: Blank
Location
Sources
More markers in Franklin
Iuka Ravine / The Neil Family in North Columbus
Columbus, OH
Iuka Ravine, developed on land from the “Indianola Farm” that belonged to the Neil Family, is significant for its early 20th century...
The Grant Family: Hugh and Catharine Barr Grant / The Grant Family: Six Generations at the Grant Homestead
Grove City, OH
Hugh Grant Sr. (1769-1806) owned a gristmill and land in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, during the 1790s.
Olde Methodist (Lincoln Street) Cemetery
Westerville, OH
Olde Methodist Cemetery, 66 West Lincoln Street, is the final resting place for two of Westerville’s pioneer families, the Sharps and...
Ovid Wellford Smith (9 November 1844-28 January 1868) / Medal of Honor Recipients At Green Lawn
Ovid Wellford Smith, aged 16, enlisted in the 2nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry as James Smith.
(B) Ohio-Erie Canal and Locks / The Columbus Feeder Canal
Lockbourne, OH
The Ohio-Erie Canal was built between 1825 and 1832 and extended 308 miles from Lake Erie at Cleveland to the Ohio River at Portsmouth.
