Woodland Indian and Whistling Swans symbolizes the Great Lakes area.
"A Woodland Indian, ready to release an arrow from his bow, pauses in awe before the beauty of nature as seen in the flight of swans."
The museum displays numerous exhibits on topics such as the geologic past, Civil War, the company town, and the Woodland Indians.
Also Woodland Indians, Huns and Elizabethans.
Current archaeology suggests that the site was built between 1,000 and 3,000 years ago by Woodland Indians.
Their culture declined after A.D. 800, and for the next few hundred years the region was the home of peoples known as the Late Woodland Indians.
The prehistoric Woodland Indians made their homes here.
Little is known about the housing of Paleo-Indian and Archaic periods, but Woodland Indians lived in wigwams.
Their living characteristics were more of a heritage from the Woodland Indians (McMichael 1968:49).
Woodland Indians were usually most at risk, as they would often encounter wolves suddenly, and at close quarters.