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                        In 1843, the Wyandot tribe was forced to leave Ohio. They had to walk 150 miles from Upper Sandusky to Cincinnati, leaving behind all they built in the Sandusky River Valley.
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                        Members of the Wyandot Nation were the last Indigenous tribe to be removed from Ohio. Students from the University of Cincinnati worked with the tribe to help tell their story through a series of historical markers to be installed across the state.
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                        Stonewall Columbus' new marker tells the story of the organization's early work fighting for LGBTQ+ rights in the 1980s and 90s. At the time, it was called Stonewall Union.
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                        Before he created one of the most enduring television series, Rod Serling learned to write in Ohio.
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                        An Ohio Historical Marker will be placed on the campus of Antioch College in Yellow Springs to honor American author, screenwriter and Emmy award-winning television producer Rod Serling, who was a graduate of the college.
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                        County engineers in north central Ohio are re-surveying the line created by the Treaty of Greenville. It divided what’s now the state of Ohio in two: claiming the south for westward-bound American settlers and the north for a dozen indigenous nations.
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                        The documentary "Free Beer Tomorrow" will come out in 2025, telling the story of Jack's/Summit Station, a Columbus lesbian bar that opened in the 1970s and was in business until 2008.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
