In addition to the artefact finds, there is a comb ceramic residence in Korkeakoski and a younger burial site in Sammu village, as well as some cemeteries.
Researchers have concluded that the Huittinen got their first inhabitants mainly from the northwest, from the direction of the lower course of the Kokemäenjoki.
Archbishop Erkki Kaila's father, Jonatan Johansson, served as assistant keeper of Huittinen in the 1860s.
[8] Lauttakylä, the center of Huittinen, became Southwest Finland's most important land transport hub long before the age of cars.
[11] In terms of surface forms, Huittinen is mostly flat and the lowest areas are located along the rivers in the central part of the city.
The highest hills, reaching more than 100 meters above sea level, are located in the south in the direction of Vampula.
[15] There is no train station in Huittinen, but there is a section of the Tampere-Pori railway line of about one hundred meters running in the municipality's territory – at the northern end of Kuukinmaantie.