Decennial Census of Population, 1900 to 2000, by Place

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Decennial Census of Population, 1900 to 2000, by Place DECENNIAL CENSUS OF POPULATION, 1900 TO 2000, BY PLACE FIPS Place Name County 2000 1990 1980 1970 1960 1950 1940 1930 1920 1910 1900 00142 Aberdeen village Brown County 1,603 1,329 1,566 1,165 774 551 497 452 477 568 711 00198 Ada village Hardin County 5,582 5,413 5,669 5309 3,918 3,640 2,368 2,499 2,321 2,465 2,576 00380 Adamsville village Muskingum County 127 151 229 174 167 164 175 190 151 176 201 00436 Addyston village Hamilton County 1,010 1,198 1,195 1,336 1,376 1,651 1,610 1,768 1,448 1,543 1,513 00450 Adelphi village Ross County 371 398 472 455 441 392 414 412 329 407 516 00464 Adena village Harrison/Jefferson Counties 815 842 1,062 1,134 1,317 1,517 1,703 1,286 724 570 -------- 01000 Akron city Summit County 217,074 223,019 237,177 275,425 290,351 274,605 244,791 255,040 208,435 69,067 42,728 01042 Albany village Athens County 808 795 905 899 629 525 551 471 465 546 548 01154 Alexandria village Licking County 85 468 489 588 452 464 425 450 415 414 420 01210 Alger village Hardin County 888 864 992 1,071 1,068 943 811 857 787 730 462 01420 Alliance city Mahoning/Stark Counties 23,253 23,376 24,315 26,547 28,362 26,161 22,405 23,047 21,603 15,083 8,974 01588 Alvordton village Williams County 305 298 362 351 388 335 327 247 277 402 482 01630 Amanda village Fairfield County 707 729 720 788 732 587 561 557 531 484 -------- 01672 Amberley village Hamilton County 3,425 3,108 3,442 4,761 2,951 885 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- 01742 Amelia village Clermont County 2,752 1,837 1,108 820 913 601 550 427 658 417 -------- 01784 Amesville village Athens County 184 250 247 295 255 269 286 298 273 267 -------- 01798 Amherst city Lorain County 11,797 10,332 10,638 9,902 6,750 3,542 2,896 2,844 2,485 2,106 1,758 01938 Amsterdam village Jefferson County 568 669 783 882 931 1,048 1,177 1,171 1,271 1,041 -------- 02050 Andover village Ashtabula County 1,269 1,216 1,205 1,179 1,116 1,102 945 906 921 902 815 02092 Anna village Shelby County 1,319 1,164 1,038 792 701 554 485 462 463 460 451 02120 Ansonia village Darke County 1,145 1,279 1,267 1,044 1,002 877 712 651 807 656 676 02148 Antioch village Monroe County 89 68 113 112 110 112 145 138 133 169 212 02204 Antwerp village Paulding County 1,740 1,677 1,765 1,735 1,465 1,162 1,086 1,024 1,096 1,187 1,206 02232 Apple Creek village Wayne County 999 860 741 784 722 548 510 459 382 400 387 02274 Aquilla village Geauga County 372 360 355 389 459 386 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- 02316 Arcadia village Hancock County 537 546 580 689 610 529 481 490 376 380 425 02330 Arcanum village Darke County 2,076 1,953 2,002 1,993 1,678 1,530 1,188 1,149 1,311 1,361 1,225 02344 Archbold village Fulton County 4,290 3,440 3,318 3,047 2,348 1,486 1,236 1,185 1,125 1,082 958 02400 Arlington village Hancock County 1,351 1,267 1,187 1066 955 825 752 701 666 798 738 02428 Arlington Heights village Hamilton County 899 1,084 1,082 1,403 1,355 1,312 1,222 1,214 730 468 360 02568 Ashland city Ashland County 21,249 20,079 20,326 19,872 17,419 14,287 12,453 11,141 9,249 6,795 4,087 02582 Ashley village Delaware County 1,216 1,059 1,057 1,034 907 798 762 734 786 706 700 02638 Ashtabula city Ashtabula County 20,962 21,633 23,449 24,313 24,559 23,696 21,405 23,301 22,082 18,266 12,949 02680 Ashville village Pickaway County 3,174 2,254 2,046 1,772 1,639 1,303 1,101 1,085 1,032 972 654 02722 Athalia village Lawrence County 328 346 367 287 341 307 263 205 233 226 346 02736 Athens city Athens County 21,342 21,265 19,743 24,168 16,470 11,660 7,696 7,252 6,418 5,463 3,066 02820 Attica village Seneca County 955 944 865 1,005 965 858 780 783 658 719 694 03086 Aurora city Portage County 13,556 9,192 8,177 6,549 4,049 571 518 -------- -------- -------- -------- 03352 Avon city Lorain County 11,446 7,337 7,241 7214 6,002 2,773 2,118 1,826 1,460 -------- -------- 03464 Avon Lake city Lorain County 18,145 15,066 13,222 12,261 9,403 4,342 2,274 1,610 904 -------- -------- 03562 Bailey Lakes village Ashland County 397 367 397 394 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- 03604 Bainbridge village Ross County 1,012 968 1,042 1,057 1,001 964 913 735 862 883 954 03646 Bairdstown village Wood County 130 130 151 138 182 188 176 172 158 240 298 03744 Baltic village Coshocton/Holmes/Tuscarawas Counties743 659 563 571 537 493 492 545 406 377 03758 Baltimore village Fairfield County 2,881 2,971 2,689 2,418 2,116 1,843 835 720 566 551 460 03828 Barberton city Summit County 27,899 27,623 29,751 33,052 33,805 27,820 24,028 23,934 18,811 9,410 4,354 DECENNIAL CENSUS OF POPULATION, 1900 TO 2000, BY PLACE FIPS Place Name County 2000 1990 1980 1970 1960 1950 1940 1930 1920 1910 1900 03926 Barnesville village Belmont County 4,225 4,326 4,633 4,292 4,425 4,665 5,002 4,602 4,865 4,233 3,721 03940 Barnhill village Tuscarawas County 364 313 327 339 350 392 394 438 513 506 811 04150 Batavia village Clermont County 1,617 1,700 1,896 1,894 1,729 1,445 1,320 1,119 1,088 1,034 1,029 04192 Batesville village Noble County 100 95 129 148 160 149 194 214 220 282 312 04402 Bay View village Erie County 692 739 804 798 802 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- 04416 Bay Village city Cuyahoga County 16,087 17,000 17,846 18,163 14,489 6,917 3,356 2,294 751 450 -------- 04458 Beach City village Stark County 1,137 1,051 1,083 1,133 1,151 940 812 725 658 671 364 04500 Beachwood city Cuyahoga County 12,186 10,677 9,983 9,631 6,089 1,073 372 249 225 -------- -------- 04542 Beallsville village Monroe County 423 464 601 452 441 410 372 479 555 564 554 04696 Beaver village Pike County 464 336 330 317 341 285 305 295 278 286 262 04720 Beavercreek city Greene County 37,984 33,626 31,589 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- 04752 Beaverdam village Allen County 356 467 492 525 514 450 377 360 394 455 477 04878 Bedford city Cuyahoga County 14,214 14,822 15,056 17,552 15,223 9,105 7,390 6,814 2,677 1,783 1,486 04920 Bedford Heights city Cuyahoga County 11,375 12,131 13,214 13,063 5,275 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- 05074 Bellaire city Belmont County 4,892 6,028 8,241 9,655 11,502 12,573 13,799 13,327 15,061 12,946 9,912 05102 Bellbrook city Greene County 7,009 6,511 5,174 1,268 941 425 410 389 286 283 352 05116 Belle Center village Logan County 807 796 930 985 949 889 835 861 909 889 962 05130 Bellefontaine city Logan County 13,069 12,142 11,888 11,255 11,424 10,232 9,808 9,543 9,336 8,238 6,649 05158 Belle Valley village Noble County 263 267 329 393 438 458 617 603 1,050 689 -------- 05228 Bellevue city Erie/Huron/Sandusky Counties 8,193 8,146 8,187 8,604 8,286 6,906 6,127 6,256 5,776 5,209 4,101 05284 Bellville village Richland County 1,773 1,568 1,714 1,685 1,621 1,355 1,199 987 998 1,056 1,039 05312 Belmont village Belmont County 532 471 714 666 563 638 697 674 680 572 422 05396 Belmore village Putnam County 171 161 205 319 232 216 238 251 269 298 334 05410 Beloit village Mahoning County 1,024 1,037 1,093 921 877 778 706 694 589 510 -------- 05424 Belpre city Washington County 6,660 6,796 7,193 7,189 5,418 2,451 1,717 1,724 1,317 1,249 -------- 05550 Bentleyville village Cuyahoga County 947 674 381 338 301 152 117 83 -------- -------- -------- 05662 Benton Ridge village Hancock County 315 351 343 329 325 337 304 245 240 352 359 05690 Berea city Cuyahoga County 18,970 19,051 19,567 22,465 16,592 12,051 6,025 5,697 2,959 2,609 2,510 05718 Bergholz village Jefferson County 769 713 914 914 955 1,035 1,122 918 1,215 1,011 -------- 05732 Berkey village Lucas County 265 264 306 294 257 239 248 261 201 -------- -------- 05900 Berlin Heights village Erie County 685 691 756 828 721 613 552 569 514 554 625 06068 Bethel village Clermont County 2,637 2,407 2,231 2,214 2,019 1,932 1,604 1,312 1,340 1,201 850 06138 Bethesda village Belmont County 1,413 1,161 1,429 1,157 1,178 1,158 1,127 1,159 1,182 -------- -------- 06194 Bettsville village Seneca County 784 752 752 833 776 687 692 656 451 486 492 06222 Beverly village Washington County 1,282 1,444 1,471 1,396 1,194 723 671 600 566 720 712 06278 Bexley city Franklin County 13,203 13,088 13,405 14,888 14,319 12,378 8,705 7,396 1,342 682 -------- 06810 Blakeslee village Williams County 130 128 136 163 156 142 164 146 121 169 239 06908 Blanchester village Clinton/Warren Counties 4,220 4,206 3,202 3,080 2,944 2,109 1,785 1,597 1,671 1,813 1,788 07062 Bloomdale village Wood County 724 632 744 727 669 592 575 578 509 602 740 07188 Bloomingburg village Fayette County 874 769 869 895 719 623 567 543 552 610 636 07202 Bloomingdale village Jefferson County 221 227 254 289 284 324 339 -------- -------- -------- -------- 07286 Bloomville village Seneca County 1,045 949 1,019 884 836 759 750 700 645 754 819 07300 Blue Ash city Hamilton County 12,513 11,860 9,510 8,324 8,341 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- 07426 Bluffton village Allen/Hancock Counties 3,896 3,367 3,310 2,935 2,591 2,423 2,077 2,035 1,950 1,953 1,783 07594 Bolivar village Tuscarawas County 894 914 989 1,084 932 776 596 506 519 567 -------- 07790 Boston Heights village Summit County 1,186 733 781 846 831 646 369 309 -------- -------- -------- DECENNIAL CENSUS OF POPULATION, 1900 TO 2000, BY PLACE FIPS Place Name County 2000 1990 1980 1970 1960 1950 1940 1930 1920 1910 1900 07832 Botkins village Shelby County 1,205 1,340 1,372 1,057 854 608 502 488 557 579 420 07916 Bowerston village Harrison County 414 343 487 479 463 522 447 440 500 514 526 07930 Bowersville village Greene County 290 225 329 358 327 362 316 310 312 297 370 07972 Bowling Green
Recommended publications
  • In Search of the Indiana Lenape
    IN SEARCH OF THE INDIANA LENAPE: A PREDICTIVE SUMMARY OF THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL IMPACT OF THE LENAPE LIVING ALONG THE WHITE RIVER IN INDIANA FROM 1790 - 1821 A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS BY JESSICA L. YANN DR. RONALD HICKS, CHAIR BALL STATE UNIVERSITY MUNCIE, INDIANA DECEMBER 2009 Table of Contents Figures and Tables ........................................................................................................................ iii Chapter 1: Introduction ................................................................................................................ 1 Research Goals ............................................................................................................................ 1 Background .................................................................................................................................. 2 Chapter 2: Theory and Methods ................................................................................................. 6 Explaining Contact and Its Material Remains ............................................................................. 6 Predicting the Intensity of Change and its Effects on Identity................................................... 14 Change and the Lenape .............................................................................................................. 16 Methods ....................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • War and Legitimacy: the Securement of Sovereignty in the Northwest Indian War
    i ABSTRACT WAR AND LEGITIMACY: THE SECUREMENT OF SOVEREIGNTY IN THE NORTHWEST INDIAN WAR During the post-revolution period, the newfound constitutional government of the United States faced a crisis of sovereignty and legitimacy. The Old Northwest region, encompassing what is now Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, was disputed between several groups. The U.S. government under George Washington claimed the region and sought to populate the land with white settlers, British officials in North America wished to reestablish British hegemony in the Ohio River valley and Native-Americans wished to protect their ancestral homeland from foreign invasion. In the 1790s, war broke out between a British backed alliance of Native tribes and the United States of America. Historians have named this conflict the Northwest Indian War. Examining government records, personal correspondences between Washington administration officials and military commanders, as well as recollections of soldiers, officials and civilians this thesis explores the geopolitical causes and ramifications of the Northwest Indian War. These sources demonstrate how the war was a reflection of a crisis which threatened the legitimacy to American sovereignty in the West. Furthermore, they also demonstrate how the use of a professional federal standing army was used by Washington’s government to secure American legitimacy. Michael Anthony Lipe August 2019 ii WAR AND LEGITIMACY: THE SECUREMENT OF SOVEREIGNTY IN THE NORTHWEST INDIAN WAR by Michael Anthony Lipe A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History in the College of Social Sciences California State University, Fresno August 2019 APPROVED For the Department of History: We, the undersigned, certify that the thesis of the following student meets the required standards of scholarship, format, and style of the university and the student's graduate degree program for the awarding of the master's degree.
    [Show full text]
  • History of Mingo Junction
    History Of Mingo Junction Let us go back in history and follow the trail English claimed their charters granted them all the that emerges out of the dim past of the 1600's. The land from "sea to sea." first steps can be guided only by a misty thread of During this conflict, the Indian tribes had their legend. From the shores of the Great Lakes to the claims to the Ohio Valley and were also fighting North were the homes of many Indian tribes. among themselves. Before the English arrived at Data has been obtained as to the race of people Jamestown, the Iroquois had completely subjugated inhabiting what now constitutes the state of Ohio. the Delawares, who, with other tribes of Pennsyl- This territory, between Lake Erie on the north and vania, were ruled by a chief sent by the Iroquois the Ohio River on the south, was a vast wilderness for that purpose. Among them was the Cayuga chief covered with deep, dense wooded hills and great Skikellmus, father of the famous Chief Logan, who rivers. was born at Shomokin on the Susquehanna. With the discovery of America by Columbus in One writer says, "At the commencement of the 1492 and then nearly two hundred years later the eighteenth century, the territory now Ohio was English settlement at Jamestown in 1607, these derelect except for the indomitable Indians of the English colonies grew and prospered along the North, who made it a trail of further hostilities or Atlantic Coast from Massachusetts to the tip of roamed its hunting grounds." But it is certain that Florida to the south.
    [Show full text]
  • The Emergence and Decline of the Delaware Indian Nation in Western Pennsylvania and the Ohio Country, 1730--1795
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by The Research Repository @ WVU (West Virginia University) Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports 2005 The emergence and decline of the Delaware Indian nation in western Pennsylvania and the Ohio country, 1730--1795 Richard S. Grimes West Virginia University Follow this and additional works at: https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd Recommended Citation Grimes, Richard S., "The emergence and decline of the Delaware Indian nation in western Pennsylvania and the Ohio country, 1730--1795" (2005). Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports. 4150. https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd/4150 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by the The Research Repository @ WVU with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you must obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in WVU Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports collection by an authorized administrator of The Research Repository @ WVU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Emergence and Decline of the Delaware Indian Nation in Western Pennsylvania and the Ohio Country, 1730-1795 Richard S. Grimes Dissertation submitted to the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences at West Virginia University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Mary Lou Lustig, Ph.D., Chair Kenneth A.
    [Show full text]
  • Native Americans, Europeans, and the Raid on Pickawillany
    ABSTRACT “THE LAND BELONGS TO NEITHER ONE”: NATIVE AMERICANS, EUROPEANS, AND THE RAID ON PICKAWILLANY In 1752, the Miami settlement at Pickawillany was attacked by a force of Ottawa and Chippewa warriors under the command of a métis soldier from Canada. This raid, and the events that precipitated it, is ideally suited to act as a case study of the role of Native American peoples in the Ohio Country during the first half of the eighteenth century. Natives negotiated their roles and borders with their British and French neighbors, and chose alliances with the European power that offered the greatest advantage. Europeans were alternately leaders, partners, conquerors and traders with the Natives, and exercised varying levels and types of control over the Ohio Country. Throughout the period, each of the three groups engaged in a struggle to define their roles in regards to each other, and to define the borders between them. Pickawillany offers insights into this negotiation. It demonstrates how Natives were not passive victims, but active, vital agents who acted in their own interest. The events of the raid feature a number of individuals who were cultural brokers, intermediaries between the groups who played a central, but tenuous, role in negotiations. It also exhibits the power of ritual violence, a discourse of torture and maiming that communicated meanings to friends and rivals alike, and whose implications shaped the history of the period and perceptions of Natives. Luke Aaron Fleeman Martinez May 2011 “THE LAND BELONGS TO NEITHER ONE”:
    [Show full text]
  • Floods of August and September 2004 in Eastern Ohio: FEMA Disaster Declaration 1556
    Floods of August and September 2004 in Eastern Ohio: FEMA Disaster Declaration 1556 By Andrew D. Ebner, David E. Straub, and Jonathan D. Lageman In cooperation with the Ohio Emergency Management Agency Open-File Report 2008–1291 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior DIRK KEMPTHORNE, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey Mark D. Myers, Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2008 For product and ordering information: World Wide Web: http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod Telephone: 1-888-ASK-USGS For more information on the USGS—the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment: World Wide Web: http://www.usgs.gov Telephone: 1-888-ASK-USGS Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. Although this report is in the public domain, permission must be secured from the individual copyright owners to reproduce any copyrighted materials contained within this report. Suggested citation: Ebner, A.D., Straub, D.E., and Lageman, J.D., 2008, Floods of August and September 2004 in eastern Ohio— FEMA Disaster Declaration 1556: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2008–1291, 104 p. iii Contents Abstract ...........................................................................................................................................................1 Introduction.....................................................................................................................................................1
    [Show full text]
  • Along the Ohio Trail
    Along The Ohio Trail A Short History of Ohio Lands Dear Ohioan, Meet Simon, your trail guide through Ohio’s history! As the 17th state in the Union, Ohio has a unique history that I hope you will find interesting and worth exploring. As you read Along the Ohio Trail, you will learn about Ohio’s geography, what the first Ohioan’s were like, how Ohio was discovered, and other fun facts that made Ohio the place you call home. Enjoy the adventure in learning more about our great state! Sincerely, Keith Faber Ohio Auditor of State Along the Ohio Trail Table of Contents page Ohio Geography . .1 Prehistoric Ohio . .8 Native Americans, Explorers, and Traders . .17 Ohio Land Claims 1770-1785 . .27 The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 . .37 Settling the Ohio Lands 1787-1800 . .42 Ohio Statehood 1800-1812 . .61 Ohio and the Nation 1800-1900 . .73 Ohio’s Lands Today . .81 The Origin of Ohio’s County Names . .82 Bibliography . .85 Glossary . .86 Additional Reading . .88 Did you know that Ohio is Hi! I’m Simon and almost the same distance I’ll be your trail across as it is up and down guide as we learn (about 200 miles)? Our about the land we call Ohio. state is shaped in an unusual way. Some people think it looks like a flag waving in the wind. Others say it looks like a heart. The shape is mostly caused by the Ohio River on the east and south and Lake Erie in the north. It is the 35th largest state in the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • How Native Racial Practice Affected Kinship in the Borderlands of the Old Northwest, 1778-1813 Alexis Helen Smith University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
    University of Wisconsin Milwaukee UWM Digital Commons Theses and Dissertations August 2014 A Different Kind of Race: How Native Racial Practice Affected Kinship in the Borderlands of the Old Northwest, 1778-1813 Alexis Helen Smith University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.uwm.edu/etd Part of the History Commons, and the Indigenous Studies Commons Recommended Citation Smith, Alexis Helen, "A Different Kind of Race: How Native Racial Practice Affected Kinship in the Borderlands of the Old Northwest, 1778-1813" (2014). Theses and Dissertations. 763. https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/763 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by UWM Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of UWM Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A DIFFERENT KIND OF RACE: HOW NATIVE RACIAL PRACTICE AFFECTED KINSHIP IN THE BORDERLANDS OF THE OLD NORTHWEST, 1778-1813 by Alexis Smith A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in History at The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee August 2014 ABSTRACT A DIFFERENT KIND OF RACE: HOW NATIVE RACIAL PRACTICE AFFECTED KINSHIP IN THE BORDERLANDS OF THE OLD NORTHWEST, 1778-1813 by Alexis Smith The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 2014 Under the Supervision of Professor Benjamin H. Johnson This thesis discusses changes in native racial practice in the Ohio River Valley and lower Great Lakes from 1778-1813. In this region, Native peoples altered their identities and racial practices in order to navigate an environment where Euro-Americans threatened their way of life and their land.
    [Show full text]
  • 12986 Federal Register / Vol
    12986 Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 44 / Wednesday, March 8, 2017 / Notices electronic, mechanical, or other DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR receipt requested or by personal technological collection techniques or delivery. See 25 CFR 23.11. other forms of information technology, Bureau of Indian Affairs If the identity or location of the e.g., permitting electronic submission of [178A2100DD/AAKC001030/ child’s parents, the child’s Indian responses. A0A501010.999900 253G] custodian, or the Tribes in which the Indian child is a member or eligible for Overview of This Information Indian Child Welfare Act; Designated membership cannot be ascertained, but Collection Tribal Agents for Service of Notice there is reason to know the child is an Indian child, notice of the child-custody (1) Type of Information Collection AGENCY: Bureau of Indians Affairs, proceeding must be sent to the Request: Revision of a Currently Interior. appropriate Bureau of Indian Affairs Approved Collection. ACTION: Notice. (BIA) Regional Director (see (2) Title of the Form/Collection: SUMMARY: The regulations implementing www.bia.gov). See 25 CFR 23.111. Freedom of Information/Privacy Act the Indian Child Welfare Act provide No notices, except for final adoption Request. that Indian Tribes may designate an decrees, are required to be sent to the (3) Agency form number, if any, and agent other than the Tribal chairman for BIA Central Office in Washington, DC. the applicable component of the DHS service of notice of proceedings under This notice presents, in two different sponsoring the collection: G–639; the Act. This notice includes the current formats, the names and addresses of USCIS.
    [Show full text]
  • A Native History of Kentucky
    A Native History Of Kentucky by A. Gwynn Henderson and David Pollack Selections from Chapter 17: Kentucky in Native America: A State-by-State Historical Encyclopedia edited by Daniel S. Murphree Volume 1, pages 393-440 Greenwood Press, Santa Barbara, CA. 2012 1 HISTORICAL OVERVIEW As currently understood, American Indian history in Kentucky is over eleven thousand years long. Events that took place before recorded history are lost to time. With the advent of recorded history, some events played out on an international stage, as in the mid-1700s during the war between the French and English for control of the Ohio Valley region. Others took place on a national stage, as during the Removal years of the early 1800s, or during the events surrounding the looting and grave desecration at Slack Farm in Union County in the late 1980s. Over these millennia, a variety of American Indian groups have contributed their stories to Kentucky’s historical narrative. Some names are familiar ones; others are not. Some groups have deep historical roots in the state; others are relative newcomers. All have contributed and are contributing to Kentucky's American Indian history. The bulk of Kentucky’s American Indian history is written within the Commonwealth’s rich archaeological record: thousands of camps, villages, and town sites; caves and rockshelters; and earthen and stone mounds and geometric earthworks. After the mid-eighteenth century arrival of Europeans in the state, part of Kentucky’s American Indian history can be found in the newcomers’ journals, diaries, letters, and maps, although the native voices are more difficult to hear.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic American Indian Tribes of Ohio 1654-1843
    Historic American Indian Tribes of Ohio 1654-1843 Ohio Historical Society www.ohiohistory.org $4.00 TABLE OF CONTENTS Historical Background 03 Trails and Settlements 03 Shelters and Dwellings 04 Clothing and Dress 07 Arts and Crafts 08 Religions 09 Medicine 10 Agriculture, Hunting, and Fishing 11 The Fur Trade 12 Five Major Tribes of Ohio 13 Adapting Each Other’s Ways 16 Removal of the American Indian 18 Ohio Historical Society Indian Sites 20 Ohio Historical Marker Sites 20 Timeline 32 Glossary 36 The Ohio Historical Society 1982 Velma Avenue Columbus, OH 43211 2 Ohio Historical Society www.ohiohistory.org Historic American Indian Tribes of Ohio HISTORICAL BACKGROUND In Ohio, the last of the prehistoric Indians, the Erie and the Fort Ancient people, were destroyed or driven away by the Iroquois about 1655. Some ethnologists believe the Shawnee descended from the Fort Ancient people. The Shawnees were wanderers, who lived in many places in the south. They became associated closely with the Delaware in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Able fighters, the Shawnees stubbornly resisted white pressures until the Treaty of Greene Ville in 1795. At the time of the arrival of the European explorers on the shores of the North American continent, the American Indians were living in a network of highly developed cultures. Each group lived in similar housing, wore similar clothing, ate similar food, and enjoyed similar tribal life. In the geographical northeastern part of North America, the principal American Indian tribes were: Abittibi, Abenaki, Algonquin, Beothuk, Cayuga, Chippewa, Delaware, Eastern Cree, Erie, Forest Potawatomi, Huron, Iroquois, Illinois, Kickapoo, Mohicans, Maliseet, Massachusetts, Menominee, Miami, Micmac, Mississauga, Mohawk, Montagnais, Munsee, Muskekowug, Nanticoke, Narragansett, Naskapi, Neutral, Nipissing, Ojibwa, Oneida, Onondaga, Ottawa, Passamaquoddy, Penobscot, Peoria, Pequot, Piankashaw, Prairie Potawatomi, Sauk-Fox, Seneca, Susquehanna, Swamp-Cree, Tuscarora, Winnebago, and Wyandot.
    [Show full text]
  • Myaamia Scholars Present Papers at the 43Rd Algonquian Conference By
    RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED RETURN SERVICE MIAMI, OK 74355 MIAMI NATION An Official Publication of the Sovereign Miami Nation BOX 1326 P.O. STIGLER, OK 74462 PERMIT NO 49 PERMIT PAID US POSTAGE PR SRT STD PR SRT Vol. 10, No. 3 myaamionki teekwaaki 2011 Myaamia Scholars Present Papers at the 43rd Algonquian Conference By George Strack The 43rd Annual Algonquian Conference was held Oc- veloped through the collaborative efforts of the Myaamia tober 20-23, 2011 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Tribal mem- Project and Miami Tribe of Oklahoma. David presented on bers Dr. Wesley Leonard, George Ironstrack and Andrew his continuing research of language materials that he and Strack, along with Myaamia Project linguist Dr. David Daryl Baldwin are utilizing to develop language materials Costa, presented at this year’s conference. for our community. All four of the presentations illustrated The conference is held annually in various locations to conference attendees how the work of dedicated Miami throughout the United States and Canada and is intended tribal members and Myaamia Project staff, with the sup- to bring together a broad spectrum of community scholars port of the Miami Nation, has enabled the Myaamia lan- whose work focuses on the languages and cultures of Al- guage to once again to spoken and heard within our tribal gonquian peoples. community. Conference program and highlights can be Wes, George and Andrew gave separate presentations found on the website listed below. that highlighted the programs, activities and initiatives de- http://2011.algonquian.org/en/program/ TRIBAL NEWS Chief Reports Pg 2 Theobald Interns Pg 3 Winter Gathering Pg 3 Genomics Pg 6 Employee Spotlight Pg 9 Archery Grant Pg 12 Eiteljorg Pg 12 Community Artist, Cathy Mowry Pg 5 Member Spotlight: Eugene Brown Pg 7 Resource Advisory Pg 13 Deaths Pg 14 Births Pg 15 Culture & History Eewansaapita, OK Pg 4 Pictured above are Myaamia participants at the 43rd Algonquian Conference, held October 20-23 in Ann Arbor, MI.
    [Show full text]