Ross County Ohio has 44 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 4 places of National significance and 16 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Adena (Thomas Worthington House), Hopeton Earthworks, Hopewell Mound Group, Mound City Group National Monument and Adena (Thomas Worthington House).
Prehistoric cultural affiliation(s) include Adena, Fort Ancient, Baum Phase, Hopewell, Middle Mississippian, Ft Ancient Tradition: Baum Phase, Scioto Hopewell and Archaic dating back to 12999 BC.
Several famous people are associated with these Ross County historic places including Thomas Worthington, George Renick, Dard Hunter and Joseph Harness.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Ross County places including Benjamin H. Latrobe, John Cook, H.S. Fullerton Rev., G.W. Dun, Gershon Anderson, Presley Morris, Robert Matthews, Garlinghouse Company, John Jr. Buchwalter and Smith Bridge Comp.. Prominent architectural styles found in Ross Country are Greek Revival, Federal and Colonial Revival.
Historic Significance:
Person, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Latrobe,Benjamin H.
Architectural Style:
Federal
Historic Person:
Worthington,Thomas
Significant Year:
1807, 1806
Area of Significance:
Politics/Government, Architecture, Landscape Architecture
Period of Significance:
1800-1824
Historic Function:
Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Museum
Adena, the historic estate of Thomas Worthington, is one of Ohio's most politically and architecturally significant properties. Constructed between 1806 and 1807 near Chillicothe, the mansion was the home of Thomas Worthington, a pivotal figure in early Ohio history who served as one of the state's first U.S. Senators and its sixth governor, earning him the moniker "Father of Ohio Statehood." The estate is architecturally distinguished as one of the few surviving residential designs by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, the first professionally trained architect in the United States and a key designer of the U.S. Capitol. Latrobe's design for the main house seamlessly blends Federal-style elegance with Jeffersonian Neoclassical influences, featuring a symmetrical native sandstone facade, a hipped roof, and a layout that prioritized both formal entertaining and functional domestic life on what was then the American frontier.
Beyond its architectural pedigree and its association with Worthington's political leadership, Adena holds a singular place in Ohio's cultural identity. The panoramic view of the Scioto River Valley and the distant Mount Logan range from the mansion's front lawn served as the direct inspiration for the Great Seal of the State of Ohio. Now operated as a state historic site, the beautifully restored mansion, formal gardens, and surrounding outbuildings provide a vivid window into the early nineteenth-century socio-political elite of the Northwest Territory. Designated as a National Historic Landmark, Adena stands as a monument to the transition of Ohio from a rugged wilderness into a cornerstone of the expanding American republic.
Historic Significance:
Information Potential
Area of Significance:
Prehistoric
Cultural Affiliation:
Hopewell
Period of Significance:
499-0 BC, 499-0 AD
Historic Function:
Religion
Historic Sub-function:
Ceremonial Site
Current Function:
Agriculture/Subsistence
Current Sub-function:
Agricultural Fields
The Hopeton Earthworks, situated on a high terrace overlooking the Scioto River in Ross County, Ohio, is an exceptionally significant ceremonial site constructed by the Hopewell culture during the Middle Woodland period (circa 100 BCE to 500 CE). Added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1966, this monumental complex covers over 100 acres and is characterized by its massive, conjoined geometric enclosures: a near-perfect circle and a square, each enclosing approximately 20 acres. The site also features several smaller circular enclosures and a pair of parallel earthen walls that stretch nearly a half-mile toward the river. The scale and geometric precision of these structures demonstrate the extraordinary engineering capability, architectural planning, and mathematical sophistication of the Hopewell people, who hand-carried millions of cubic feet of soil to shape their sacred landscape.
Beyond its architectural grandeur, the Hopeton Earthworks served as a vital regional center for ritual, social gathering, and cosmological alignment. Archaeological research indicates that the walls of the enclosures were precisely aligned with key astronomical events, including the solstices and the complex cycles of the moon, illustrating the Hopewell culture's advanced understanding of astronomy and its integration into their spiritual life. Unlike permanent villages, Hopeton was a sacred space used for periodic ceremonies that drew people from vast distances across North America. Today, as a key component of the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park and a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site, Hopeton Earthworks stands as a globally significant testament to the rich heritage, complex social organization, and intellectual achievements of ancient Native American societies.
Historic Significance:
Information Potential
Area of Significance:
Prehistoric
Cultural Affiliation:
Hopewell
Period of Significance:
499-0 BC, 499-0 AD
Historic Function:
Funerary, Religion
Historic Sub-function:
Ceremonial Site, Graves/Burials
Current Function:
Agriculture/Subsistence
Current Sub-function:
Agricultural Fields
The Hopewell Mound Group, located in Ross County, Ohio, is the preeminent type site for the prehistoric Hopewell culture, which flourished during the Middle Woodland period from approximately 100 BCE to 500 CE. This sprawling archaeological site spans over 100 acres and originally featured a massive earthen wall enclosure in the shape of a rough parallelogram, conjoined with a smaller square enclosure, containing more than thirty earthen mounds. Among these, Mound 25 stands out as one of the largest and most complex burial mounds ever constructed by the Hopewell people. The sheer scale and precise geometry of these earthworks demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of engineering and astronomy, indicating that the site served as a monumental ceremonial, religious, and social epicenter for a highly organized, non-urban society.
The site is globally renowned for the extraordinary wealth of ceremonial artifacts excavated from its mounds, which redefined contemporary understanding of prehistoric Native American trade, artistry, and social complexity. Archaeological excavations revealed exquisitely crafted objects fashioned from exotic materials sourced from across North America-including obsidian from the Rocky Mountains, copper from Lake Superior, mica from the Appalachian Mountains, and marine shells from the Gulf of Mexico-illustrating the vast reach of the Hopewell Interaction Sphere. Today, preserved as a key unit of the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park and designated as part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Hopewell Mound Group remains an invaluable testament to the cosmological devotion, artistic genius, and continental influence of the indigenous peoples of the Ohio River Valley.
Historic Significance:
Information Potential, Event
Area of Significance:
Transportation, Prehistoric, Religion
Cultural Affiliation:
Hopewell
Period of Significance:
499-0 BC, 499-0 AD, 1000-500 AD
Historic Function:
Funerary, Religion
Historic Sub-function:
Ceremonial Site, Graves/Burials
Current Function:
Landscape
Current Sub-function:
Park
The Mound City Group, situated along the Scioto River in Ross County, Ohio, is one of the most culturally significant and visually striking prehistoric earthwork sites associated with the Hopewell culture (circa 200 BCE to 500 CE). Covering approximately 13 acres, the site features a low, rectangular earthen wall that encloses 23 burial mounds-a concentration of ceremonial mounds unparalleled in any other known Hopewellian complex. Rather than serving as a residential area, Mound City was a sacred mortuary landscape where indigenous people gathered to conduct complex funerary rituals, cremations, and subsequent mound construction. The precise geometry of the enclosure and the deliberate placement of the mounds reflect a highly sophisticated understanding of architectural planning, mathematics, and cosmological alignments.
The site's archaeological significance was first brought to international attention through the landmark 1846 survey by Ephraim George Squier and Edwin Hamilton Davis, which became the Smithsonian Institution's inaugural publication. Subsequent excavations revealed an extraordinary array of ceremonial artifacts, including exquisitely crafted stone effigy platform pipes, hammered copper ornaments, obsidian blades, and marine shells. These exotic materials demonstrate the existence of a vast, continent-spanning interaction sphere and trade network that stretched from the Rocky Mountains to the Gulf Coast. Proclaimed a National Monument by President Warren G. Harding in 1923, and later designated as the headquarters of the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park, Mound City Group remains an enduring testament to Native American artistic genius and engineering, a legacy further cemented by its inscription as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2023.