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    The trailblazing history of Ohio's Scioto Trail

    By Tyler Buchanan,

    2024-04-04

    Our Franklin County Historical Marker tour brings us to Upper Arlington for a trail once considered the most important in the Old Northwest.

    The marker: Scioto Trail, on the path just south of 2875 Lane Road.


    Flashback: Native Americans built trails following waterways like this one that runs alongside the Scioto River.

    • The trail once stretched all the way from Lake Erie to the Ohio River.
    • It was used for warfare, trade and migration, the marker reads, and much later it guided the building of Route 33 through Franklin County.
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0SIDf0_0sFPt4mj00
    A map of the former Scioto Trail through Ohio.

    Today, a newer route called the Scioto Trail travels along the river and through parts of downtown.

    The intrigue: Near the marker is the burial site of Kihue (also known as Bill Moose), whose epitaph calls him the "last of the Wyandots" in the area.

    • Kihue died in 1937 at 99 years old and a 9-foot memorial structure was built using boulders from the nearby river.

    4️⃣3️⃣ down, 85 to go .

    Thanks to our series sponsor Ohio History Connection . Sponsorship has no influence on editorial content.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1pi83Z_0sFPt4mj00
    A memorial for Bill Moose next to the marker.
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