Muskingum or Conchake
Msh-Kik-Wam or Cong-Sha-Keh | |
---|---|
Historic Native American village | |
Etymology: Unami: msh-kik-wam "swampy ground"[1] or Iroquoian languages: koshaxkink "river crossing"[2] | |
Coordinates: 40°16′4″N 81°51′24″W / 40.26778°N 81.85667°W | |
State | Ohio |
Present-day Community | Coshocton, Ohio |
Founded | 1748 |
Abandoned | 1759 |
Population | |
• Estimate (1750) | 300−400 |
Muskingum (also known as Conchake) was a Wyandot village in southeastern Ohio from 1747 to 1755.[3]: 288 It was an important trade center in the early 1750s, until it was devastated by smallpox in the winter of 1752. The town was repopulated for a short time afterwards, then abandoned again as a new community was established by Netawatwees a few miles to the east at Gekelukpechink. The city of Coshocton, Ohio was founded close to the site of the village in 1802.
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