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A Shawnee Chief鈥檚 take on renaming the Wayne National Forest

A brown Forest Service sign announces the Ring Mill Campground in the Wayne National Forest. Behind the sign, a forest of trees are losing leaves in the fall and a muddy service road runs past an old brick building.
U.S. Forest Service 鈥 Wayne National Forest Facebook
The U.S. Forest Service is proposing renaming the Wayne National Forest to Buckeye National Forest, per the request of several indigenous nations.

The U.S. Forest Service is proposing renaming the Wayne National Forest to Buckeye National Forest.

The move comes at the request of nearly a dozen indigenous nations, including Delaware Nation, the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma, Osage Nation and the Shawnee Tribe.

They say the forest鈥檚 namesake, , violently removed indigenous people from their Ohio homelands.

The proposal has drawn criticism from some politicians, including Senator J.D. Vance who claims it鈥檚 a federal effort to remove the forest鈥檚 鈥渉istorically significant鈥 name.

鈥淚t would greatly benefit Ohioans and all Americans if our government could be counted on to defend our Founding Fathers, instead of capitulating to politically motivated renaming efforts,鈥 he wrote in to Tom Vilsack, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

But Chief Ben Barnes of the Shawnee Tribe says the founding fathers of the United States include people with names like Tecumsuh and Sitting Bull.

He joined the Ohio Newsroom鈥檚 Erin Gottsacker to talk about why the effort to rename the national forest matters.

A light green tent set up under towering pine trees and beside a glassy lake
Kyle Brooks
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U.S. Forest Service 鈥 Wayne National Forest Facebook
The Wayne National Forest is Ohio's only national forest. It encompasses more than 160,000 acres in Southeast Ohio.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity and brevity.

On the Shawnee Tribe鈥檚 involvement with renaming efforts

鈥淲e've been involved with the United States Forest Service ever since the creation of the United States Forest Service. We have formal consultations between our government and the United States government. And one of our best federal partners, at least for the Shawnee Tribe, has always been Region 9 of the United States Forest Service. That includes Monongahela in West Virginia, the Hoosier in Indiana, Mark Twain in Missouri, and of course, the Wayne National Forest in Ohio.鈥

On the importance of a name

, I think, begins with the [Department of the] Interior. Deb Haaland, [the Interior Secretary], recognizes the importance of names and the way things are named. Many other tribes have made these efforts over the years.鈥

鈥淚n regards to Anthony Wayne, even in his own time, he faced criticism from his own peers for being over-the-top in his murderous zealotry trying to rid the Ohio of indigenous people. Modern Ohio includes people of a great diversity, and it should represent all Ohioans, not just a town burner, destroyer of communities, and a murderer of women and children.鈥

"Whenever we celebrate a hero of that era 鈥 the guy who butchered women and children and Native villagers 鈥 we have to ask ourselves, 鈥楢re we celebrating a wrongheaded idea?鈥欌
Ben Barnes, Chief of the Shawnee Tribe

On the new name

鈥淚 think the National Forest Service and folks in the current administration like the name Buckeye National Forest, which I think is wonderful. Having grown up in southern Ohio, in Dayton in the seventies, I'm a huge, huge fan of the Cincinnati Bearcats, Cincinnati Reds, the Bengals. So I love Southern Ohio and I think renaming this forest is a wonderful idea.鈥

On opposition to the name change

鈥淵ou don't see the Shawnee Tribe or other tribal nations out there with pitchforks and torches screaming for name changes. I think communities recognize that there may have been some wrongheaded ideas and ill-informed errors in our nation in our nation's past. Those ill-informed notions were denying women the right to vote, those ill-informed notions were the practice of slavery, those ill-informed notions were deporting and depopulating the United States Native Americans. So whenever we celebrate a hero of that era, the guy who butchered women and children and Native villagers, we have to ask ourselves, 鈥楢re we celebrating a wrongheaded idea?鈥欌

On the tribe鈥檚 relationship with Ohio

鈥淲e're really excited about our participation in Ohio. We've seen Ohio make some great strides in recent years, especially with the that are going to be inscribed into a World Heritage site. That would have never happened without tribal nations coming together with the state of Ohio. Currently, Governor DeWine and the Shawnee tribes are working to open up a new , Ohio. So, these partnerships are important.鈥

Erin Gottsacker is a reporter for The Ohio Newsroom. She most recently reported for WXPR Public Radio in the Northwoods of Wisconsin.
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