Online Encyclopedia

CHILLICOTHE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 162 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHILLICOTHE  , a

city and the county-seat of Ross county,
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Ohio, U.S.A., on the W.
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bank of the Scioto
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river, on the Ohio &
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Erie Canal, about 50 M . S. of Columbus . Pop . (189o) 11,288; (190o) 12,976, of whom 986 were negroes, and 910 were
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foreign-born; (1910 census) 14,508 . Chillicothe is served by the Baltimore & Ohio South-Western (which has railway shops here), and other
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railways . The city has two parks . There are several ancient mounds in the vicinity . Chillicothe is built on a plain about 30 ft. above the river, in the midst of a fertile agricultural region, and has a large trade in grain and
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coal, and in manufactures . The value of the city's factory products increased from $1,615,959 in 1900 to $3,146,890 in 1905, or 94.7% . Chillicothe was founded in 1796, and was first incorporated in 1802 . In 1800-1803 it was the capital of the North-West Territory, and in 1803-1810 and 1812-1816 the capital of Ohio . Three
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Indian villages
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bore the name Chillicothe, each being in turn the chief
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town of the Chillicothe, one of the four tribal divisions of the
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Shawnee, in their retreat before the whites; the
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village near what is now Oldtown in Greene county was destroyed by George Rogers Clark in 178o; that in
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Miami county, where
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Piqua is now, was destroyed by Clark in 1782; and the Indian village near the
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present Chillicothe was destroyed in 1787 by Kentuckians .

See

Henry Howe,
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Historical Collections of Ohio (Columbus, 1891) .

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