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a compendium of facts about Ohio history by Dan Chabek
Sandusky, an Indian NameHowever, William Walker, principal chief of the Wyandot tribe at Upper Sandusky (1835-36), claimed it meant, "at the cold water," and should be sounded, "San-doos-tee." Sandusky County, formed in 1820, and three towns in Ohio took their name from the river. Although the town names of Sandusky and Upper Sandusky remain, Lower Sandusky had its name changed to Fremont before the Civil War. Lawyer Rutherford B. Hayes, who later became three-time governor of Ohio and president of the United States, petitioned to change the town name of Lower Sandusky to Fremont in honor of famous Rocky Mountain trail blazer John Charles Fremont. Judge Elisha W.
Howland, writer of humorous verse who lived in Lower Sandusky at the
time, objected to the proposed change and wrote a poem about it, but
it was to no avail. The verse read in part:
© 1997 Dan Chabek
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