because indian is like Indiana
Indiana and Ohio
The first known inhabitants of Indiana were the Paleo-Indians. Around the 1600's, the Miami Indians, a part of the Algonquian group of Indians, lived in Indiana. In the Miami tribe, women planted the fields and grew crops and men hunted for meat.
No, and Miami, Florida is not named after the Miami Indians but instead after the Miami River in Florida whose name is derived from Lake Mayaimi in Florida. The Miami Indians lived along the Ohio River, and are currently headquartered in Miami, Oklahoma which is named for them. There are Miami Indians that doo live in Indiana and Ohio, but they are not recognized by the Federal Government as a tribal entity.
The Miami Indians are people who lived long ago in the forests which are now houses and buildings. They were driven out of Indiana by the white men which did not like the Indians because they thought they were taking over the land. So, today we do no longer have Indians in this state. Carly Myers age,9 Fort Wayne, Indiana
the Miami Indians traded stuff.
Treaty of Greenville
treaty of greenville
No, the Miami people originally lived near Green Bay Wisconsin and later moved westwards into the areas that became Michigan and Indiana. They are classified as eastern woodlands people.
The more popular nickname for the locals in Indiana is "Hoosier". "Indianan" or "Indianian" are also considered nicknames but are rarely used compared to "Hoosier".
The state soil of Indiana is Miami.
What was the furniture made out of that the Ohio Miami Indians had