Ottokee is an unincorporated community in Dover Township, Fulton County, Ohio, United States.
Ottokee was founded in 1850 with the driving of stakes to mark the geographic center of Fulton County, Ohio, and originally given the name "Centre.
The first, the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, laid in 1853, bypassed Ottokee to the south, and anointed Wauseon as a commercial center.
The LN built north from Lima through Napoleon and Wauseon, with a stop in Ottokee near the present county fairgrounds, then onto Oak Shade and Adrian, Michigan.
After World War I, Henry Ford bought the DT&I railroad, and in 1925, built a new, faster track east of Ottokee, that passed through Delta, Ohio, relegating the DT&I railway serving Ottokee to a mere spur, which was slowly abandoned in the late 1950s.
In March of that year the government buildings at Ottokee were turned over by the Country Commissioners to three new infirmary directors, who were James Riddle, Robert Lewis, and O.A.
Twenty years later the main building of the County Home was erected at a cost of $20,000-$40,000 (the amounts are in dispute).
A small cemetery plot lies south east of the home, with unmarked graves for past residents.
The Fulton County Home served dependents for 101 years, until its residents were moved to Detwiler Manor in nearby Wauseon, Ohio in 1975.
It is now the site of a cluster of government functions, including the Dog Warden and the Fulton County Highway Department.
On the grounds of the Fulton County Home was erected an obelisk as a notable and unusual monument to women in wartime.