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Hopewell Culture National Historical ParkArtist's rendering of a Hopewellian ceremony.
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Hopewell Culture National Historical Park
History & Culture
 
Mound City Group.
 

The present Hopewell Culture National Historical Park evolved in part from the former Mound City Group National Monument. The national monument was established by a proclamation signed by President Warren G. Harding in 1923 to preserve prehistoric mounds of "great historic and scientific interest." In 1980 Congress expanded the monument by adding a portion of the nearby Hopeton Earthworks and authorized the investigation of other regional archeological sites to determine their suitability for preservation. The National Park Service recommended four additional sites. Hopewell Culture National Historical Park was thus established in 1992 by a law that renamed Mound City Group National Monument, expanding boundaries at Hopeton Earthworks, and included High Bank Works, Hopewell Mound Group, and Seip Earthworks.

The park protects the prehistoric remains of a dynamic social and ceremonial phenomenon that flourished in the woodlands of eastern North America between 200 B.C. and A.D. 500. The term Hopewell describes a broad network of economic, political, and spiritual beliefs and practices among different Native American groups. The culture is characterized by the construction of enclosures made of earthen walls, often built in geometric patterns and mounds of various shapes. The culture is known for a network of contacts with other groups, which stretched from the Atlantic coast to the Rocky Mountains. This network brought materials such as mica, shark's teeth, obsidian, copper, and shells to Ohio.

Researchers learn more about the Hopewell each year.
Hopewell Archeology Newsletter
Learn about the latest Hopewellian research from the newsletter.
more...
Learn about the park's unique history.
Amidst Ancient Monuments
Read Ron Cockrell's Administrative History of the park.
more...
Magnetometers can locate subsurface archeological features.
Archeological Prospection Workshop
Learn about archeological prospection at a workshop in Natchitoches, Louisiana in May 2009.
more...
Ship during the Battle of Lake Erie.  

Did You Know?
British soldiers captured at the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812 were marched to a prison camp located near present day Mound City Group unit, Hopewell Culture National Historical Park.

Last Updated: August 03, 2006 at 13:56 EST