Ipaki

Wapello Land & Water Reserve

Abantu bendawo abangu-2 bayatusa,

Amacebiso avela kubantu bendawo

Hailey
January 6, 2022
A 23 minute drive from the Aspen House, Wapello Land and Water Reserve in Hanover contains an abundant amount of signs of habitation by both the Woodland and Mississippian cultures and is still tied to the Oneota people. Mowed trails wind through the priarie in summer.
Moriah
July 11, 2017
Wapello is what Hanover, Illinois, was originally called, named for the chief of the Fox Indians, one of whose villages was located here. Many know this land as the “John Chapman Archaeological Site,” where the University of Illinois in 2003 excavated significant artifacts from two different American Indian cultures dating back to A.D. 1050. Based on its significance as a meshing point of two Native American cultures, this 79-acre site south of Hanover, Illinois, was accepted into the National Register of Historic Places. It now boasts one of the premier prairie restorations in the Midwest, so significant that the Field Museum has partnered with JDCF on several projects there.
Wapello is what Hanover, Illinois, was originally called, named for the chief of the Fox Indians, one of whose villages was located here. Many know this land as the “John Chapman Archaeological Site,” where the University of Illinois in 2003 excavated significant artifacts from two different America…

Izinto ongazenza ezehlukile eduzane

Ukugibela Amahhashi, i-Petting Zoo, & Ukuxhumana Namahhashi
Vakashela i-Mississippi Wildlife & Fish refuge nge-Canoe/Kayak
Indawo
8642 IL-84
Hanover, IL