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The first report of trail marker trees, in what is now the State of Illinois, appeared in a document called Map of Ouilmette Reservation with its Indian Reminders dated 1828–1844. [15] This map shows actual drawings and locations of existing trail marker trees.
Buffalo Heart refers specifically to this ancient tree as 'Grandfather' out of respect for the tree and its significance to her people. Buffalo Heart remembers numerous Trail Marker Trees located throughout White County from her Childhood". [1]. Much of the early research in this area in Indiana was done by historian Marilyn Abbott, according ...
The Sauk Trail was originally a Native American trail running through what are present-day Illinois, Indiana and Michigan in the United States. From west to east, the trail ran from Rock Island on the Mississippi River to the Illinois River near modern Peru then along the north bank of that river to Joliet , and on to Valparaiso, Indiana .
This Trail Marker Tree was one in a long line of Trees that helped lead the Native Americans of the area from the Highland Park area on towards West Lake Forest and Mettawa towards the Chain of Lakes and Antioch, and finally directing them on to Lake Geneva, WI. Trail trees
On October 24, 1999, Iroquois chieftain Jake Swamp oversaw a ceremonial planting of an Iroquois "Tree of Peace" alongside the route of the Great Osage Trail, a few yards south of Lexington Street in Independence, Missouri, on the property of the Community of Christ's Independence Temple and on the site of the Latter-day Saint "Temple Site ...
The Great Trail (also called the Great Path) was a network of footpaths created by Algonquian and Iroquoian-speaking indigenous peoples prior to the arrival of European colonists in North America. It connected the areas of New England and eastern Canada , and the mid-Atlantic regions to each other and to the Great Lakes region.
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