NEWARK, Ohio (WCMH) — For the first time in more than a century, the Octagon Earthworks in Newark, part of Ohio’s first and only UNESCO World Heritage Site, is fully accessible to the public.
John Low is a Ohio State professor and director of the Newark Earthworks Center, he shares the cultural significance of the site. "It's a circle with earthworks that surround it, about 15 to 20 feet ...
In a few months, when our calendars turn to 2025, a new era will begin at the Octagon Earthworks in Newark. Rest assured, the ...
NEWARK − It will be a new day, a new year and a new experience on Jan. 1 at the Octagon Earthworks, when golf is gone and access to the historic mounds is open to the public. The Ohio History ...
At the start of the new semester, the Denison Museum installed its latest exhibit, “Echoes of Ohio’s Indigenous Legacy: ...
The Cleo Redd Fisher Museum’s Speaker Series resumes this month with Ohio’s top archaeologist joining the museum on Monday, ...
NEWARK − Golfers will be replaced by visitors touring the ancient Octagon Mounds. The clubhouse will become Octagon Earthworks Visitor Center. Instead of the quiet atmosphere of golf, there will be ...
High school basketball highlights from around Central Ohio, including Liberty at Upper Arlington (boys), Dublin Coffman at Orange (boys), Jonathan Alder at London (boys), Africentric at South ...