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Prehistoric
Peoples in Indian Hill

Clues to the earliest inhabitants of the area now known as Indian Hill (northeastern
Hamilton County) come from archaeology. When the remains of mounds and surface sites are
examined, the story of past human cultures emerges. Native Americans, who predated the
Shawnee tribes who once hunted on Indian Hill, were present in this area from prehistoric
times (c. 7000-2000 B.C.) until about 1625.
Dr. Charles Metz (1847-1926), a Madisonville physician, proved the existence of
Mound Builders in southwestern Ohio. He became interested in the earthworks he observed on
his horseback trips to see patients in surrounding hamlets. Locals gave him tips about a
pottery field in present day Mariemont, where he unearthed bones and vessels. Forming the
Literary and Scientific Society of Madisonville, Metz and other men excavated and surveyed
various sites. They developed a Chart of the Prehistoric Monuments of the Little Miami
Valley, plotting local sites discovered in the 1870's and '80's. The Cincinnati Society of
Natural History offered support, with the understanding that the excavators would donate
some artifacts. These weekend archaeologists published their findings, attracting the
attention of Dr. Putnam of Harvard's Peabody Museum; and in 1881 this museum began to fund
excavations at the "Madisonville site" (now Mariemont.)
The records of the Madisonville Society, while not as precise as modern day excavators,
list thousands of artifacts and the location of many sites. By 1911
"Madisonville" alone yielded 1200 human burials and more than 1000 storage pits.
These sites yielded the remains of Native Americans and their culture: tools, vessels, and
religious effigies. Wooden implements had decayed, but bone and stone remnants were
salvaged, including axes, ceramic jars, arrow shaft wrenches (used to straighten arrows,)
armbands, harpoon heads of antler, spades, scrapers, flint knives, along with pipes, bone
rasps, and bird bone flutes. There is at the Cincinnati Museum of Natural History a
prehistoric grooved axe head (c. 2000 B.C.) found in Indian Hill.
In 1878 Dr. Metz documented a pair of Indian mounds on Drake Road near
Armstrong Chapel, describing each as "a circular embankment, about three feet high
and about 400 feet in circumference, enclosing a tumulus about four feet high." A
cluster of sites were also found near where Indian Hill Road descends to Terrace Park. Legend
recalls a large mound at the end of Walton Creek Road. Flint flakes and other remains have
been found on Remington Road, and a burial site was located on the east side of Miami
Road. Many earthworks once visible have been destroyed or altered to make way for roads,
farmers' fields, or clearing for houses and barns. Sometimes artifacts were removed from
sites by amateurs who never registered their findings. A 1958 Hamilton County survey
listed 295 known prehistoric sites, of which half were excavated or destroyed--a permanent
loss to archaeological research.
While the current settlement of Indian Hill has
lasted for only 200 years, Native Americans walked this area for over 11,000 years.
Artifacts left behind by these prehistoric humans document a vanished way of life--a part
of the legacy of this geographical area. |