Kimball Village

Kimball Village is an archaeological site located in the vicinity of Westfield, Iowa, United States.

[3] The site, located on a terrace overlooking the Big Sioux River, has well-preserved features, including earth lodge and storage pits, and evidence of fortifaction.

The site is identifiable as a mound rising in the floodplain, and occupies an area of just under 2 acres (0.81 ha).

Charles R. Keyes, a professor at Cornell College in Iowa, his assistant Ellison Orr, and 14 workers from the Works Progress Administration first excavated the site in 1939, after Keyes heard that artifact hunters were finding objects in this area.

As of its designation as a National Historic Landmark in 2016, the site was described as remarkably well preserved, having suffered little erosion damage.