Lenape settlements
Lenape settlements are villages and other sites founded by Lenape people, a Native American tribe from the Northeastern Woodlands. Many of these sites are located in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Ohio.
Hell Town
is a village located on Clear Creek, known today as Clear Fork, near the abandoned town of Newville, Ohio. The site is on a high hill just north of the junction of Clear Creek and the Black Fork of the Mohican River. The reference to the village sitting on a "high hill" counters many popular misconceptions that the village was in low-lying areas that would later be submerged by the damming of the Clear Fork River to create Pleasant Hill Lake. Hell Town was located along a "war trail" used by Native Americans in the region, which ran from a point about south from Sandusky, Ohio, thence north-northeast into the Cuyahoga River valley. This trail was later used by white settlers and is today known as State Route 95. Rerouted in the 1940s, a portion of this old road and war path are buried under Pleasant Hill Lake.Helltown was situated a mile below Newville, on the Clear Fork of the Mohican, in what is known as the Darling settlement. In 1783, in the wake of the Gnadenhutten Massacre, Helltown was abandoned, and a new settlement was established on the Black Fork, where a better location for defence was secured.
Jerometown
A village of the Lenape which was located on the south side of the present-day Jerome Fork of the Mohican River. It was named for Jean Baptiste Jerome, a French-Canadian fur-trader ; however, it should perhaps have been more appropriately named " Pipe's town", after Captain Pipe, also known as Hopocan. According to the local histories, by 1808-09 early European-American settlers to the area of what is now Jeromesville in Ashland County, Ohio, on the Jerome Fork of the Mohican River found Lenape people living about three-fourths of a mile south-by-south-west of the present site of Jeromesville. Near that native village of "Jerometown" was the cabin of "Old Captain Pipe", who, with small remnants of a Lenape tribe, were still living near that village site until 1812.Mohican John's Town
Mohican John's town was said, by 19th-century historians, to have been the same as the native-village of "Jerometown", located just south of Jeromesville, Ohio.However, surveys done in the 1760s, located "Mohican John's town" in the vicinity of present-day Mifflin, Ohio. It is uncertain if the earlier "Mohican John's town" Indian village had perhaps been later moved to the alternate location before the 1800s; or if instead, local-historians merely misinterpreted the earlier "John's town" to be the same location as "Jerometown".
Regardless, the "Mohican John's town" of the 1760s, was undoubtedly upon the Black Fork of the Mohican River.
Knapp's History of Ashland County accurately refers to the native-village near present-day Jeromesville as being named "Jerometown" by 1808. But Knapp's History errs in attributing the original village of "Mohican John's Town" to be the same native village as Jerometown. The later historians never noticed Knapp's obvious contradiction, and they simply repeated his error.