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The grassy geometric earthen mounds of the restored Mound City Group enclosure at Hopewell Culture under a blue sky

National Park Service · Ohio

Hopewell Culture National Historical Park

Monumental 2,000-year-old earthworks built by the Hopewell culture near Chillicothe, including the restored Mound City Group, now part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

A mowed walking path leading along the earthwork embankment toward the rows of conical mounds

Field briefing

Hopewell Culture National Historical Park changes fast with season and elevation.

Before you go

Hopewell Culture is free, open daily 9 a.m.

to 4 p.m. at the visitor center, and centered on the restored Mound City Group beside the museum, which is the easiest place to understand what the Hopewell built 2,000 years ago. The park is one of several units now inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and the other earthwork groups are scattered around Chillicothe, so decide whether you are doing just Mound City or touring several sites. The walking is flat and grassy; foliage season over the mounds is the standout time.

Best window
April to October for warm weather, with fall foliage over the mounds especially good
Signature routes
Mound City Group, The other earthwork units
Pack focus
Water, weather checks, layers

The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.

Location
Ohio
Established
1923
Size
1,775 acres
Best time
April to October for warm weather, with fall foliage over the mounds especially good
Entrance
No entrance fee.
Nearest airport
Columbus (CMH) about 1.25 hours

When to go

Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.

Spring

Low crowds

Cool and green, with the earthworks framed by new growth.

Pack A light rain layer and comfortable shoes for the grass walkways.

Summer

Moderate crowds

Warm and humid, with full visitor-center hours and ranger programs.

Pack Water, sun protection, and bug spray for the open river-bottom land.

Fall

Moderate crowds

Crisp and colorful, the prettiest time over the geometric mounds.

Pack Light layers and a camera for foliage and low-angle light.

Winter

Low crowds

Cold and quiet, with open grounds and reduced indoor hours.

Pack Insulation and traction for snow and frost on the mound paths.

Top things to do

  • Mound City Group

    The only fully restored Hopewell earthwork, a grassy enclosure of 25 mounds beside the visitor center. The signature stop and the easiest to grasp.

  • The other earthwork units

    Hopeton, Hopewell Mound Group, Seip, and High Bank are separate sites scattered around Chillicothe with their own trails and interpretation.

  • Visitor center museum

    Exhibits and excavated artifacts that explain the scale and purpose of the geometric earthworks and the people who built them.

How long to spend

Make Mound City Group the timed anchor

Put the timed or highest-demand stop first, then keep the rest of the day close and low-friction. For one day in Hopewell Culture National Historical Park, time Mound City Group first, then keep The other earthwork units and Visitor center museum close enough that the visit still feels relaxed.

  1. 1Start with Mound City Group: The only fully restored Hopewell earthwork, a grassy enclosure of 25 mounds beside the visitor center. The signature stop and the easiest to grasp.
  2. 2Add The other earthwork units: Hopeton, Hopewell Mound Group, Seip, and High Bank are separate sites scattered around Chillicothe with their own trails and interpretation.
  3. 3Use Visitor center museum as the slower finish before leaving the area.

Plan your trip

Turn Hopewell Culture's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

Aerial-style view over the symmetrical earthwork mounds and surrounding river-bottom land in autumn

Build around conditions

Let season, elevation, and weather set the plan.

Plan your trip

2 quick tools, already seeded for Hopewell Culture National Historical Park. Tune the numbers around temperature swings, footing, layers, and how much margin the route needs.

  1. 01Size your water for a mild day on the trail
  2. 02Find the right daypack size for a day out

What to pack

Start with the gear decisions this park changes: footing, weather, camping, and water.

Pack planning

Decide what Hopewell Culture National Historical Park asks of your kit before you start checking boxes.

Use this as a constraint check while you are still shaping the trip. The active checklist becomes useful once your route, dates, and sleep plan are set.

  • First constraintHydration and exposureWater, hat, sunscreen, sunglasses, Navigationmap, downloaded GPS, or a GPS watch, 3 more
  • Route realityFooting and tractionHiking boots, Hiking socks, Trekking poles
  • Load choicePack and carry systemDaypack
  • Season checkLayers for conditionsMoisture-wicking base layers, Rain jacket, Insulated jacket, 2 more

Checklist mode

16 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.

  1. Dates and season are set.
  2. Primary route, campground, or lodge is chosen.
  3. Water, footwear, and overnight needs are sized.

Gear for Hopewell Culture

The buying guides that match what Hopewell Culture asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.

Where to stay

The park sits just outside Chillicothe, which has motels, food, and services within minutes of Mound City. For camping, nearby options include Scioto Trail State Park and Tar Hollow State Park in the hills south of town, plus the larger campgrounds around the region. The park itself is day-use only.

Camping reservations

Camping reservations

Free, day-use only. Stay in Chillicothe; camp at nearby Ohio state parks.

Hopewell Culture has no campground and no reservation system. The visitor center keeps daytime hours; the outlying earthwork units are open from dawn to dusk.

Reviewed June 11, 2026

Booking window

Check the official park camping page before choosing dates.

  • No entrance fee and no camping inside the park.
  • The visitor center and Mound City are open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; outlying units are dawn to dusk.
  • Nearest camping is at Scioto Trail and Tar Hollow state parks south of Chillicothe.

Where to book or verify

Search Recreation.gov

Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.

Campgrounds to know

Scioto Trail State Park

Details
Season
Generally spring through fall.
Sites
Developed and electric campsites in the forested hills south of Chillicothe.
A close, quiet base in the hills near the earthworks.

Tar Hollow State Park

Details
Season
Generally spring through fall.
Sites
Developed campsites and cabins in a large state forest.
More sites and trails a bit farther out for a longer stay.

Getting there and practical info

The grassy geometric earthen mounds of the restored Mound City Group enclosure at Hopewell Culture under a blue sky

Plan the handoff from arrival to shuttle.

Parking, pedestrian entrances, and shuttle timing decide how calmly the first morning starts.

Getting there

Get to Hopewell Culture National Historical Park, then remove the first-morning friction.

Nearest airport
Columbus (CMH) about 1.25 hours
Access rhythm
Plan the last mile
Region
Ohio
  1. Arrival note

    Hopewell Culture is just north of Chillicothe, Ohio, off State Route 104, about 75 minutes south of Columbus.

  2. Shuttle access

    The Mound City Group and visitor center share a single parking area; the other earthwork units are spread around the Chillicothe area and require short drives.

  3. Shuttle access

    Pick up a map at the visitor center to find them, as several are easy to miss without one.

Pair this with lodging: sleep where the park transfer is simple, especially if your route needs an early start.

LocationOhio

Frequently asked questions

Is there a fee to visit Hopewell Culture National Historical Park?

No. There is no entrance fee. The visitor center and the Mound City Group are open daily 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day, and the outlying earthwork units are open dawn to dusk.

What is the main thing to see at Hopewell Culture?

The Mound City Group, the only fully restored Hopewell earthwork, a grassy enclosure of 25 mounds right beside the visitor center. It is the easiest of the park's units to walk and to understand.

Is Hopewell Culture a World Heritage Site?

Yes. The park is one of several components of the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks, inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, recognizing the scale and sophistication of these 2,000-year-old geometric earthworks.

How long do you need at Hopewell Culture?

An hour or two covers the museum and the Mound City loop. Allow a half to full day if you want to drive to the other earthwork units, such as the Hopewell Mound Group, Hopeton, and Seip, around Chillicothe.

Keep planning