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  1. Apr 27, 2023 · A map prepared by Ohio’s State Auditor depicts these complicated groupings of surveys and grants. Northern Ohio drew many settlers by way of Lake Erie from New England and New York. From the Northeast, many came to the Steubenville area including Zanesville, Columbus, Springfield, Dayton, and often went on west.

  2. Jul 23, 2011 · As Milchan grew the business, he had come to the attention of up-and-coming politician Shimon Peres, who introduced Milchan to Benjamin Blumberg, nicknamed Israel’s “prince of silence,” the ...

  3. Significant European migration into the Ohio River Valley occurred from the mid-18th century to the early 19th century and this website presents approximately 15,000 pages of related materials. Resources include books, pamphlets, newspapers, periodicals, journals, letters, legal documents, images, maps, and ledgers. The site includes a special ...

  4. Jul 25, 2022 · But the most significant political figure in Milchan's life was undoubtedly Shimon Peres; indeed, the producer even named one of his children after him. Peres, by virtue of his position as deputy minister of defense and later as minister of defense, was the one who forged the connection between Milchan and the intelligence community and specifically with Lakam (the Hebrew acronym for the ...

  5. Washington also witnessed how this area connected with lands even further west. On the afternoon of November 13, 1770, Washington's group met two bateaus and a large canoe travelling toward the Illinois country, bringing provisions for troops located at Fort Chartres, on the east side of the Mississippi River, acquired by the British from the French in 1763 at the close of the French and ...

  6. Introduction. In 1753, the French were building forts around the Ohio River Valley to take firm possession of that territory against any expansion by the English. Virginia governor Robert A. Dinwiddie dispatched twenty-one-year-old George Washington to deliver a message to the French asserting Britain’s territorial claims.

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  8. The best we can tell from archaeological research is that the native peoples of what became Ohio left this area by the year 1650, but we don’t know where they went. And, because this time preceded the arrival of any Europeans, no one was around to record their tribal names and cultures. By default, we archaeologists assign rather arbitrary ...

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