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The Trail of Courage Living History Festival began in 1976, bringing frontier Indiana alive with foods cooked over wood fires, historic camps, tents & teepees, two stages of pre-1840 music & dance, Indian dances, traditional crafts such as basketry, spinning & weaving, blacksmiths, muzzle loading shooting contests, tomahawk throws, mountain man tug-of-war, canoe rides on Tippecanoe River, blanket trading & big tents with everything needed to live on the frontier; clothing, knives, beads, kettles, jewelry, toys, lanterns and more. On Friday, school buses bring over a thousand kids to learn and hear stories from the re-enactors. The event is open to the public on Saturday September 17 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and on Sunday, September 18 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Each year, a different Potawatomi family is honored for having ancestors on the 1838 Trail of Death forced removal. Northern Indiana was Potawatomi Territory and this event portrays 1832. Frontier fun for everyone!
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