About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 86. Chapters: Samuel Brady, Northwest Indian War, Serpent Mound, American pioneers to the Northwest Territory, St. Clair's Defeat, French Grant, Seven Ranges, Adena culture, Land Ordinance of 1785, Harmar Campaign, Ohio Country, Salt Reservations, Connecticut Western Reserve, Firelands, Congress Lands North of Old Seven Ranges, Ohio Company of Associates, Battle of Fallen Timbers, Congress Lands East of Scioto River, United States Military District, Chalahgawtha, Zane's Tracts, Mound Cemetery, Fort Washington, Cincinnati, Ohio, New Indian Ridge Museum, Seven Ranges Terminus, Treaty of Greenville, Fort Recovery, Congress Lands West of Miami River, Refugee Tract, College Lands, Virginia Military District, Fort Jefferson, Surveyor General of the Northwest Territory, Zane's Trace, Lower Shawneetown, Hell Town, Ohio, Donation Tract, Ohio Constitutional Convention, Dohrman Tract, Ministerial Lands, Scioto Company, Fort Laurens, Connecticut Land Company, School Lands, Hobson Site, Benjamin Van Cleve, Purchase on the Muskingum, Charlotina, Fort Defiance, Ephraim Kimberly Grant, Symmes Purchase, Ohio Lands, Pickaway Plains, Enabling Act of 1802, Treaty of Fort Harmar, Wakatomika, Nanfan Treaty, Campus Martius, Mad River Road, Leo Petroglyph, Yellow Creek Massacre, Logan's Raid, Picketed Point Stockade, Raid on Pickawillany, Upper Sandusky, Chillicothe Turnpike, Fort Greene Ville. Excerpt: Captain Samuel Brady (1756-1795) was a frontier scout and the subject of many legends in the history of western Pennsylvania and northeastern Ohio. He is best known for jumping across a gorge over the Cuyahoga River to escape pursuing Indians in what is present day Kent, Ohio. This jump is still remembered as "Brady's leap." Samuel Brady was born on May 5, 1756, in Shippensburg, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. He died on December 25, 1795, in Short...