The Andrew L. Tuttle Memorial Museum

The Andrew L. Tuttle Memorial Museum has been created to foster an understanding and appreciation of the history of the city of Defiance and its immediate surrounding area by responsibly collecting, preserving, interpreting and exhibiting items from the area’s natural and cultural history for the benefit of present and future generations.

“The Tuttle” is open on Thursdays from 10 - 4 and the first Sunday of each month from 1 - 4.

 

Town and Gown Series

Dwight D. Eisenhower Visits Defiance

Tuesday, October 11
Presenter – Barb Sedlock
Stroede Center for the Arts – 7:00 P.M.

The Stroede Center for the Arts is located at 319 Wayne Avenue. A venue accessible entrance is on Third Street.

Defiance Made

Tuesday, November 15
Presenter – Ethan Plummer
Stroede Center for the Arts – 7:00 P.M.

The Stroede Center for the Arts is located at 319 Wayne Avenue. A venue accessible entrance is on Third Street.

The Town and Gown programs are sponsored by the Andrew L. Tuttle Memorial Museum are open to the public and are free of charge.

Buggies and Wagons and Trucks, Oh My!
Presenters: Leon Jones and Ethan Plummer
Thursday, April 23, 2020
Stroede Center for the Arts 7:00 P.M.
319 Wayne Avenue

The Town and Gown programs are sponsored by the Andrew L. Tuttle Memorial Museum 

 

Andrew L. Tuttle

Memorial Museum

Times of War & Conflict

is a major exhibition illustrating the impact that the Great Black Swamp, the rivers, and the wars of national prominence had on the growth and development of Northwest Ohio and Defiance.

This exhibition is made up of several different exhibits. The first two exhibits look at the Great Black Swamp and the rivers near Defiance. A third exhibit is the Beaver Wars. These wars were actually a series of conflicts in Northwest Ohio and the Great Lakes region among Native Americans, the Dutch, the French and the British, fought between 1638 and 1700 to establish control of the lucrative beaver pelt trade.

With these exhibits find answers to what the Great Black Swamp was and how it impacted the area. Learn how important the rivers are to the region, and from the Beaver Wars exhibit why beaver pelts were so valuable to the Europeans, what items were being traded, and who was doing the trading. Learn who the voyageurs were. Discover the effect that the Beaver Wars had on area people. Learn how the Native Americans came to depend on the European traders.

The fourth exhibit in the Defiance in Times of War and Conflict is the American Revolution, 1774-1783. This exhibit features text, photos, and reproductions of art work to explain the impact of the American Revolutionary War had on Ohio and especially Northwest Ohio. The major events that took place in Northwest Ohio and the significant personalities from the Native Americans, the British, and the patriots are described.

The final exhibit of the exhibition highlights the Indian Wars, the War of 1812 and the Native American removal. The timeline of events show that the culmination of both the Indian Wars and the War of 1812 resulted in the transfer of control of the northwest Ohio territory to the young nation of the United States and forced the Native Americans from their ancestral home.

This major exhibition is designed to make the museum guests aware that all major conflicts in North America between 1628 and 1843 had some impact in Northwest Ohio and even the area near the confluence of the Maumee and Auglaize Rivers.

 

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