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GARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE ALLEN-SULLIVAN HOUSE The Allen-Sullivan House (more commonly, but erroneously known as the Hall-Sullivan House--no one named Hall ever owned or occupied the house) at 7218 Euclid Avenue is one of them. And it is also the one most threatened by demolition. Richard N. Allen (1827-1890) was a railroad engineer who invented the paper car wheel, which dampenedwheel
THE HOUSE OF WILLS
The House of Wills: The House of Wills was located on East 55th just south of Shiloh Baptist Church in Cleveland's Cedar-Central neighborhood from 1941 to 2005. The building was originally built as a German singing society's hall in 1899, the same year that J. Walter Wills came to Cleveland.MILLIONAIRES' ROW
Euclid Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" was home to some of the nation's most powerful and influential industrialists, including John D. Rockefeller. Around the turn of the twentieth century, Baedeker's Travel Guide dubbed Euclid Avenue the "Showplace of America" for its beautiful elm-lined sidewalks and ornate mansions situated amid lavishgardens.
SQUIRE'S CASTLE
Will all Cleveland-raised residents who have never visited Squire’s Castle please raise your hands! Not too many? We thought so. After all, Squire’s Castle isn’t just one of the Cleveland area’s most picturesque locations; for generations it’s also been a destination for untold thousands of hikers, nature lovers, bird watchers, geocachers, school groups and, yes, history lovers. PETER B. LEWIS BUILDING Designed by world-famous architect Frank Gehry, the Peter B. Lewis Building's unique architectural features symbolize the Case Western Reserve University Weatherhead School of Management's innovative approach to management education. Opened in 2002, the wavy, stainless-steel sheathed landmark takes its name from Peter B. Lewis, Chairman of the Progressive Insurance Company, whose PARMADALE | CLEVELAND HISTORICAL Parmadale Children's Village of St. Vincent de Paul opened its doors in 1925 on State Road in Parma, Ohio. With funding and organizational support from the Catholic Charities Corporation, Parmadale opened with the mission of caring for orphaned boys aged six to sixteen. Parmadale was among the first orphanages to move away from institutional care, implementing a cottage residential plan meant STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsMOSES CLEAVELAND
As you approach the southern side of Public Square you will see a bronze statue of a man. This famous figure stands frozen in time, keeping watch over the very town that bears his name. Moses Cleaveland (1754-1806) was born and raised in Connecticut. After studying law at Yale College, he served as a General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.ZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street. CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE ALLEN-SULLIVAN HOUSE The Allen-Sullivan House (more commonly, but erroneously known as the Hall-Sullivan House--no one named Hall ever owned or occupied the house) at 7218 Euclid Avenue is one of them. And it is also the one most threatened by demolition. Richard N. Allen (1827-1890) was a railroad engineer who invented the paper car wheel, which dampenedwheel
THE HOUSE OF WILLS
The House of Wills: The House of Wills was located on East 55th just south of Shiloh Baptist Church in Cleveland's Cedar-Central neighborhood from 1941 to 2005. The building was originally built as a German singing society's hall in 1899, the same year that J. Walter Wills came to Cleveland.MILLIONAIRES' ROW
Euclid Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" was home to some of the nation's most powerful and influential industrialists, including John D. Rockefeller. Around the turn of the twentieth century, Baedeker's Travel Guide dubbed Euclid Avenue the "Showplace of America" for its beautiful elm-lined sidewalks and ornate mansions situated amid lavishgardens.
SQUIRE'S CASTLE
Will all Cleveland-raised residents who have never visited Squire’s Castle please raise your hands! Not too many? We thought so. After all, Squire’s Castle isn’t just one of the Cleveland area’s most picturesque locations; for generations it’s also been a destination for untold thousands of hikers, nature lovers, bird watchers, geocachers, school groups and, yes, history lovers. PETER B. LEWIS BUILDING Designed by world-famous architect Frank Gehry, the Peter B. Lewis Building's unique architectural features symbolize the Case Western Reserve University Weatherhead School of Management's innovative approach to management education. Opened in 2002, the wavy, stainless-steel sheathed landmark takes its name from Peter B. Lewis, Chairman of the Progressive Insurance Company, whose PARMADALE | CLEVELAND HISTORICAL Parmadale Children's Village of St. Vincent de Paul opened its doors in 1925 on State Road in Parma, Ohio. With funding and organizational support from the Catholic Charities Corporation, Parmadale opened with the mission of caring for orphaned boys aged six to sixteen. Parmadale was among the first orphanages to move away from institutional care, implementing a cottage residential plan meant STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsMOSES CLEAVELAND
As you approach the southern side of Public Square you will see a bronze statue of a man. This famous figure stands frozen in time, keeping watch over the very town that bears his name. Moses Cleaveland (1754-1806) was born and raised in Connecticut. After studying law at Yale College, he served as a General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.ZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street.ALL STORIES
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share RESULTS FOR SUBJECT TERM "ENVIRONMENT" Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE KENTUCKY STREET RESERVOIR The next time you find yourself driving down historic Franklin Boulevard between Franklin Circle and West 50th Street, take time to notice what is different about the stretch of the Boulevard between West 32nd and West 38th Streets. It is entirely devoid of any grand houses--nineteenth century or otherwise. Relevant to this story, on the south side of that stretch just west of the FairviewTAYLOR BUILDING
The history of the Taylor Building highlights the rise and fall of Cleveland's downtown department stores as well as the recent revitalization of Euclid Avenue. It was part of the wave of department store closings that signaled the beginning of downtown's economic woes. The Taylor Department Store began with the partnership of William Taylor and Thomas Kilpatrick, both Scottish immigrants. OLD CITY HALL BUILDING Before moving to its current location, Clevelands council chambers were located in the Case Block, a building situated on what is now the location of the Cleveland Public Librarys main building. On February 18, 1875, city officials leased the $800 thousand building for $36 thousand per year to serve as Clevelands City Hall. Because the building was so large, the city rented STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsTEMPLE BETH-EL
On July 29, 1951, more than 500 guests of Temple Beth-El convened at the Hotel Hollenden ballroom in downtown Cleveland to witness the dedication of the congregation’s Sefer Torah. Speakers at the ceremony included Rabbi David L. Genuth of Temple Beth-El, Ohio Governor Frank Lausche, and Mayor John W. Barkley of Shaker Heights. Rabbi Genuth, spiritual leader and founding member of theZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street. HERMAN PIRCHNER'S ALPINE VILLAGE Herman Pirchner’s Alpine Village Theatrical Bar and Restaurant, located at 1614 Euclid Avenue (directly across the street from the Palace Theater) was the place to do it. Inspired by Pirchner’s childhood home in the Austrian Alps, the restaurant featured Tyrolean décor, mountain scenes and murals of PIONEERS, MANXMEN AND SHAKERS AT THE WARRENSVILLE WEST Located within a small business district at 3451 Lee Road, Warrensville West Cemetery offers a reminder of the individuals and communities that inhabited the area prior to the development of Shaker Heights. The headstones and markers adorning the small graveyard speak of an unfamiliar landscape, lost to time, that was the home of brave pioneer families and their descendants, immigrant settlers CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE ALLEN-SULLIVAN HOUSE The Allen-Sullivan House (more commonly, but erroneously known as the Hall-Sullivan House--no one named Hall ever owned or occupied the house) at 7218 Euclid Avenue is one of them. And it is also the one most threatened by demolition. Richard N. Allen (1827-1890) was a railroad engineer who invented the paper car wheel, which dampenedwheel
THE HOUSE OF WILLS
The House of Wills: The House of Wills was located on East 55th just south of Shiloh Baptist Church in Cleveland's Cedar-Central neighborhood from 1941 to 2005. The building was originally built as a German singing society's hall in 1899, the same year that J. Walter Wills came to Cleveland.MILLIONAIRES' ROW
Euclid Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" was home to some of the nation's most powerful and influential industrialists, including John D. Rockefeller. Around the turn of the twentieth century, Baedeker's Travel Guide dubbed Euclid Avenue the "Showplace of America" for its beautiful elm-lined sidewalks and ornate mansions situated amid lavishgardens.
SQUIRE'S CASTLE
Will all Cleveland-raised residents who have never visited Squire’s Castle please raise your hands! Not too many? We thought so. After all, Squire’s Castle isn’t just one of the Cleveland area’s most picturesque locations; for generations it’s also been a destination for untold thousands of hikers, nature lovers, bird watchers, geocachers, school groups and, yes, history lovers. PETER B. LEWIS BUILDING Designed by world-famous architect Frank Gehry, the Peter B. Lewis Building's unique architectural features symbolize the Case Western Reserve University Weatherhead School of Management's innovative approach to management education. Opened in 2002, the wavy, stainless-steel sheathed landmark takes its name from Peter B. Lewis, Chairman of the Progressive Insurance Company, whose PARMADALE | CLEVELAND HISTORICAL Parmadale Children's Village of St. Vincent de Paul opened its doors in 1925 on State Road in Parma, Ohio. With funding and organizational support from the Catholic Charities Corporation, Parmadale opened with the mission of caring for orphaned boys aged six to sixteen. Parmadale was among the first orphanages to move away from institutional care, implementing a cottage residential plan meant STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsMOSES CLEAVELAND
As you approach the southern side of Public Square you will see a bronze statue of a man. This famous figure stands frozen in time, keeping watch over the very town that bears his name. Moses Cleaveland (1754-1806) was born and raised in Connecticut. After studying law at Yale College, he served as a General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.ZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street. CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE ALLEN-SULLIVAN HOUSE The Allen-Sullivan House (more commonly, but erroneously known as the Hall-Sullivan House--no one named Hall ever owned or occupied the house) at 7218 Euclid Avenue is one of them. And it is also the one most threatened by demolition. Richard N. Allen (1827-1890) was a railroad engineer who invented the paper car wheel, which dampenedwheel
THE HOUSE OF WILLS
The House of Wills: The House of Wills was located on East 55th just south of Shiloh Baptist Church in Cleveland's Cedar-Central neighborhood from 1941 to 2005. The building was originally built as a German singing society's hall in 1899, the same year that J. Walter Wills came to Cleveland.MILLIONAIRES' ROW
Euclid Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" was home to some of the nation's most powerful and influential industrialists, including John D. Rockefeller. Around the turn of the twentieth century, Baedeker's Travel Guide dubbed Euclid Avenue the "Showplace of America" for its beautiful elm-lined sidewalks and ornate mansions situated amid lavishgardens.
SQUIRE'S CASTLE
Will all Cleveland-raised residents who have never visited Squire’s Castle please raise your hands! Not too many? We thought so. After all, Squire’s Castle isn’t just one of the Cleveland area’s most picturesque locations; for generations it’s also been a destination for untold thousands of hikers, nature lovers, bird watchers, geocachers, school groups and, yes, history lovers. PETER B. LEWIS BUILDING Designed by world-famous architect Frank Gehry, the Peter B. Lewis Building's unique architectural features symbolize the Case Western Reserve University Weatherhead School of Management's innovative approach to management education. Opened in 2002, the wavy, stainless-steel sheathed landmark takes its name from Peter B. Lewis, Chairman of the Progressive Insurance Company, whose PARMADALE | CLEVELAND HISTORICAL Parmadale Children's Village of St. Vincent de Paul opened its doors in 1925 on State Road in Parma, Ohio. With funding and organizational support from the Catholic Charities Corporation, Parmadale opened with the mission of caring for orphaned boys aged six to sixteen. Parmadale was among the first orphanages to move away from institutional care, implementing a cottage residential plan meant STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsMOSES CLEAVELAND
As you approach the southern side of Public Square you will see a bronze statue of a man. This famous figure stands frozen in time, keeping watch over the very town that bears his name. Moses Cleaveland (1754-1806) was born and raised in Connecticut. After studying law at Yale College, he served as a General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.ZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street.ALL STORIES
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share RESULTS FOR SUBJECT TERM "ENVIRONMENT" Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE KENTUCKY STREET RESERVOIR The next time you find yourself driving down historic Franklin Boulevard between Franklin Circle and West 50th Street, take time to notice what is different about the stretch of the Boulevard between West 32nd and West 38th Streets. It is entirely devoid of any grand houses--nineteenth century or otherwise. Relevant to this story, on the south side of that stretch just west of the FairviewTAYLOR BUILDING
The history of the Taylor Building highlights the rise and fall of Cleveland's downtown department stores as well as the recent revitalization of Euclid Avenue. It was part of the wave of department store closings that signaled the beginning of downtown's economic woes. The Taylor Department Store began with the partnership of William Taylor and Thomas Kilpatrick, both Scottish immigrants. OLD CITY HALL BUILDING Before moving to its current location, Clevelands council chambers were located in the Case Block, a building situated on what is now the location of the Cleveland Public Librarys main building. On February 18, 1875, city officials leased the $800 thousand building for $36 thousand per year to serve as Clevelands City Hall. Because the building was so large, the city rented STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsTEMPLE BETH-EL
On July 29, 1951, more than 500 guests of Temple Beth-El convened at the Hotel Hollenden ballroom in downtown Cleveland to witness the dedication of the congregation’s Sefer Torah. Speakers at the ceremony included Rabbi David L. Genuth of Temple Beth-El, Ohio Governor Frank Lausche, and Mayor John W. Barkley of Shaker Heights. Rabbi Genuth, spiritual leader and founding member of theZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street. HERMAN PIRCHNER'S ALPINE VILLAGE Herman Pirchner’s Alpine Village Theatrical Bar and Restaurant, located at 1614 Euclid Avenue (directly across the street from the Palace Theater) was the place to do it. Inspired by Pirchner’s childhood home in the Austrian Alps, the restaurant featured Tyrolean décor, mountain scenes and murals of PIONEERS, MANXMEN AND SHAKERS AT THE WARRENSVILLE WEST Located within a small business district at 3451 Lee Road, Warrensville West Cemetery offers a reminder of the individuals and communities that inhabited the area prior to the development of Shaker Heights. The headstones and markers adorning the small graveyard speak of an unfamiliar landscape, lost to time, that was the home of brave pioneer families and their descendants, immigrant settlers CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE ALLEN-SULLIVAN HOUSE The Allen-Sullivan House (more commonly, but erroneously known as the Hall-Sullivan House--no one named Hall ever owned or occupied the house) at 7218 Euclid Avenue is one of them. And it is also the one most threatened by demolition. Richard N. Allen (1827-1890) was a railroad engineer who invented the paper car wheel, which dampenedwheel
MILLIONAIRES' ROW
Euclid Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" was home to some of the nation's most powerful and influential industrialists, including John D. Rockefeller. Around the turn of the twentieth century, Baedeker's Travel Guide dubbed Euclid Avenue the "Showplace of America" for its beautiful elm-lined sidewalks and ornate mansions situated amid lavishgardens.
THE HOUSE OF WILLS
The House of Wills: The House of Wills was located on East 55th just south of Shiloh Baptist Church in Cleveland's Cedar-Central neighborhood from 1941 to 2005. The building was originally built as a German singing society's hall in 1899, the same year that J. Walter Wills came to Cleveland.SQUIRE'S CASTLE
Will all Cleveland-raised residents who have never visited Squire’s Castle please raise your hands! Not too many? We thought so. After all, Squire’s Castle isn’t just one of the Cleveland area’s most picturesque locations; for generations it’s also been a destination for untold thousands of hikers, nature lovers, bird watchers, geocachers, school groups and, yes, history lovers. HOTEL WINTON / CARTER HOTEL Hotel Winton was a twelve-story hotel designed by architect Max Dunning of Chicago and built at a cost of nearly $2.5 million. Named after Cleveland’s automotive pioneer, Alexander Winton, the hotel opened its doors on December 20, 1917, on Prospect Avenue just east of East 9th Street on the edge of what would become the theater district of Cleveland’s downtown. PETER B. LEWIS BUILDING Designed by world-famous architect Frank Gehry, the Peter B. Lewis Building's unique architectural features symbolize the Case Western Reserve University Weatherhead School of Management's innovative approach to management education. Opened in 2002, the wavy, stainless-steel sheathed landmark takes its name from Peter B. Lewis, Chairman of the Progressive Insurance Company, whose STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsMOSES CLEAVELAND
As you approach the southern side of Public Square you will see a bronze statue of a man. This famous figure stands frozen in time, keeping watch over the very town that bears his name. Moses Cleaveland (1754-1806) was born and raised in Connecticut. After studying law at Yale College, he served as a General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.ZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street. CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE ALLEN-SULLIVAN HOUSE The Allen-Sullivan House (more commonly, but erroneously known as the Hall-Sullivan House--no one named Hall ever owned or occupied the house) at 7218 Euclid Avenue is one of them. And it is also the one most threatened by demolition. Richard N. Allen (1827-1890) was a railroad engineer who invented the paper car wheel, which dampenedwheel
MILLIONAIRES' ROW
Euclid Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" was home to some of the nation's most powerful and influential industrialists, including John D. Rockefeller. Around the turn of the twentieth century, Baedeker's Travel Guide dubbed Euclid Avenue the "Showplace of America" for its beautiful elm-lined sidewalks and ornate mansions situated amid lavishgardens.
THE HOUSE OF WILLS
The House of Wills: The House of Wills was located on East 55th just south of Shiloh Baptist Church in Cleveland's Cedar-Central neighborhood from 1941 to 2005. The building was originally built as a German singing society's hall in 1899, the same year that J. Walter Wills came to Cleveland.SQUIRE'S CASTLE
Will all Cleveland-raised residents who have never visited Squire’s Castle please raise your hands! Not too many? We thought so. After all, Squire’s Castle isn’t just one of the Cleveland area’s most picturesque locations; for generations it’s also been a destination for untold thousands of hikers, nature lovers, bird watchers, geocachers, school groups and, yes, history lovers. HOTEL WINTON / CARTER HOTEL Hotel Winton was a twelve-story hotel designed by architect Max Dunning of Chicago and built at a cost of nearly $2.5 million. Named after Cleveland’s automotive pioneer, Alexander Winton, the hotel opened its doors on December 20, 1917, on Prospect Avenue just east of East 9th Street on the edge of what would become the theater district of Cleveland’s downtown. PETER B. LEWIS BUILDING Designed by world-famous architect Frank Gehry, the Peter B. Lewis Building's unique architectural features symbolize the Case Western Reserve University Weatherhead School of Management's innovative approach to management education. Opened in 2002, the wavy, stainless-steel sheathed landmark takes its name from Peter B. Lewis, Chairman of the Progressive Insurance Company, whose STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsMOSES CLEAVELAND
As you approach the southern side of Public Square you will see a bronze statue of a man. This famous figure stands frozen in time, keeping watch over the very town that bears his name. Moses Cleaveland (1754-1806) was born and raised in Connecticut. After studying law at Yale College, he served as a General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.ZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street.ALL STORIES
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share RESULTS FOR SUBJECT TERM "ENVIRONMENT" Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share THE KENTUCKY STREET RESERVOIR The next time you find yourself driving down historic Franklin Boulevard between Franklin Circle and West 50th Street, take time to notice what is different about the stretch of the Boulevard between West 32nd and West 38th Streets. It is entirely devoid of any grand houses--nineteenth century or otherwise. Relevant to this story, on the south side of that stretch just west of the FairviewTAYLOR BUILDING
The history of the Taylor Building highlights the rise and fall of Cleveland's downtown department stores as well as the recent revitalization of Euclid Avenue. It was part of the wave of department store closings that signaled the beginning of downtown's economic woes. The Taylor Department Store began with the partnership of William Taylor and Thomas Kilpatrick, both Scottish immigrants. OLD CITY HALL BUILDING Before moving to its current location, Clevelands council chambers were located in the Case Block, a building situated on what is now the location of the Cleveland Public Librarys main building. On February 18, 1875, city officials leased the $800 thousand building for $36 thousand per year to serve as Clevelands City Hall. Because the building was so large, the city rented STOUFFER RESTAURANTS Stouffer Corp. was purchased by Litton Industries in 1967 and six years later Litton sold Stouffer’s to Nestlé. For a time (1966-1972), Vernon Stouffer (1901-1974) owned the Cleveland Indians—hardly a great business proposition during the Tribe’s “Sad 60s.”. By 1990 the Stouffer’s name was attached to 68 restaurants and 40 resortsZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street.WHITE CITY PARK
During the 1970s the area that now occupies the western edge of Cleveland’s Easterly Wastewater Treatment Plant was still known as White City Park. The tract of land bordered by Bratenahl Village to the west and the city sewer authority property to the east existed as a public park in various incarnations since 1900. Lake Shore Boulevard bounded its entrance to the south at East 140th StreetS. S. CANADIANA
The S. S. Canadiana was originally built in 1910 to ferry passengers from Buffalo, New York to the Crystal Beach Amusement Park in Crystal Beach, Ontario. It made the circuit up to six times a day for over 40 years. However, by the 1950s revenue declined. Hastening its retirement, a fight broke out onboard the Canadiana on May 30, 1956. Dubbed “The Crystal Beach Boat Race Riot”, theNIKE SITE CL-59
By the year 1956, the United States and the Soviet Union had been engaged with one another in the Cold War for almost a decade. Although there was no direct confrontation between the two world superpowers, the development of weapons and defense systems was heating up heading into the 1950s. Cleveland and its surrounding suburbs played a part in the Cold War narrative due to the fact that eight CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to shareMILLIONAIRES' ROW
Euclid Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" was home to some of the nation's most powerful and influential industrialists, including John D. Rockefeller. Around the turn of the twentieth century, Baedeker's Travel Guide dubbed Euclid Avenue the "Showplace of America" for its beautiful elm-lined sidewalks and ornate mansions situated amid lavishgardens.
HOLLENDEN HOTEL
Thousands of stories emanated from the venerable Hollenden Hotel. This hotel, located in downtown Cleveland on Superior, Bond, and Vincent Streets, was considered one of the city's most luxurious hotels. It attracted many diverse people, including several presidents of the United States, celebrities, and professional athletes, as well as prominent local organizations. OLD CITY HALL BUILDING Before moving to its current location, Clevelands council chambers were located in the Case Block, a building situated on what is now the location of the Cleveland Public Librarys main building. On February 18, 1875, city officials leased the $800 thousand building for $36 thousand per year to serve as Clevelands City Hall. Because the building was so large, the city rentedTAYLOR BUILDING
The history of the Taylor Building highlights the rise and fall of Cleveland's downtown department stores as well as the recent revitalization of Euclid Avenue. It was part of the wave of department store closings that signaled the beginning of downtown's economic woes. The Taylor Department Store began with the partnership of William Taylor and Thomas Kilpatrick, both Scottish immigrants. VALLEYVIEW HOMES ESTATES In Cleveland, several public housing projects (Cedar-Central, Outhwaite, Lakeview Terrace) preceded the development of Valleyview Homes Estates. However, Valleyview was among the first (along with Woodhill and Carver Park) to actually be built and overseen by the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA). Completed in 1940 on a bluff overlooking the Cuyahoga Valley in southeastern PARK SYNAGOGUE, CLEVELAND HEIGHTS Park Synagogue, Cleveland Heights. In 1917, Anshe Emeth—an Orthodox congregation founded by Polish Jews near Woodland and Broadway Avenues (and later located on East 37th Street)—merged with congregation Beth Tefilo and bought land on East 105th Street in Glenville. Spearheaded by Rabbi Samuel Benjamin, the resultant building(completed in
HERMAN PIRCHNER'S ALPINE VILLAGE Herman Pirchner’s Alpine Village Theatrical Bar and Restaurant, located at 1614 Euclid Avenue (directly across the street from the Palace Theater) was the place to do it. Inspired by Pirchner’s childhood home in the Austrian Alps, the restaurant featured Tyrolean décor, mountain scenes and murals of THE CLEVELAND UNION STOCKYARDS Youre driving south on West 65th Street in your Ford Model T, sometimes called a Tin Lizzie. You pass St. Colman Roman Catholic Church on your left, then the Cleveland Trust bank building on the corner of Lorain Avenue, and just a little later Gordon Elementary School on your right. Youre behind a trolley on this cold Monday morning, January 24, 1927. Traffic is moving even slower 75,000-WATT LIGHT BULB, 1966 75,000-Watt Light Bulb, 1966. Produced in 1954 to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the Edison lamp, GE's 75,000-watt bulb was the world's largest. Equivalent to the light produced by 2,874 60-watt bulbs, this innovation was the antithesis of today's trend toward energy-savingbulbs.
CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to shareMILLIONAIRES' ROW
Euclid Avenue's "Millionaires' Row" was home to some of the nation's most powerful and influential industrialists, including John D. Rockefeller. Around the turn of the twentieth century, Baedeker's Travel Guide dubbed Euclid Avenue the "Showplace of America" for its beautiful elm-lined sidewalks and ornate mansions situated amid lavishgardens.
HOLLENDEN HOTEL
Thousands of stories emanated from the venerable Hollenden Hotel. This hotel, located in downtown Cleveland on Superior, Bond, and Vincent Streets, was considered one of the city's most luxurious hotels. It attracted many diverse people, including several presidents of the United States, celebrities, and professional athletes, as well as prominent local organizations. OLD CITY HALL BUILDING Before moving to its current location, Clevelands council chambers were located in the Case Block, a building situated on what is now the location of the Cleveland Public Librarys main building. On February 18, 1875, city officials leased the $800 thousand building for $36 thousand per year to serve as Clevelands City Hall. Because the building was so large, the city rentedTAYLOR BUILDING
The history of the Taylor Building highlights the rise and fall of Cleveland's downtown department stores as well as the recent revitalization of Euclid Avenue. It was part of the wave of department store closings that signaled the beginning of downtown's economic woes. The Taylor Department Store began with the partnership of William Taylor and Thomas Kilpatrick, both Scottish immigrants. VALLEYVIEW HOMES ESTATES In Cleveland, several public housing projects (Cedar-Central, Outhwaite, Lakeview Terrace) preceded the development of Valleyview Homes Estates. However, Valleyview was among the first (along with Woodhill and Carver Park) to actually be built and overseen by the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA). Completed in 1940 on a bluff overlooking the Cuyahoga Valley in southeastern PARK SYNAGOGUE, CLEVELAND HEIGHTS Park Synagogue, Cleveland Heights. In 1917, Anshe Emeth—an Orthodox congregation founded by Polish Jews near Woodland and Broadway Avenues (and later located on East 37th Street)—merged with congregation Beth Tefilo and bought land on East 105th Street in Glenville. Spearheaded by Rabbi Samuel Benjamin, the resultant building(completed in
HERMAN PIRCHNER'S ALPINE VILLAGE Herman Pirchner’s Alpine Village Theatrical Bar and Restaurant, located at 1614 Euclid Avenue (directly across the street from the Palace Theater) was the place to do it. Inspired by Pirchner’s childhood home in the Austrian Alps, the restaurant featured Tyrolean décor, mountain scenes and murals of THE CLEVELAND UNION STOCKYARDS Youre driving south on West 65th Street in your Ford Model T, sometimes called a Tin Lizzie. You pass St. Colman Roman Catholic Church on your left, then the Cleveland Trust bank building on the corner of Lorain Avenue, and just a little later Gordon Elementary School on your right. Youre behind a trolley on this cold Monday morning, January 24, 1927. Traffic is moving even slower 75,000-WATT LIGHT BULB, 1966 75,000-Watt Light Bulb, 1966. Produced in 1954 to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the Edison lamp, GE's 75,000-watt bulb was the world's largest. Equivalent to the light produced by 2,874 60-watt bulbs, this innovation was the antithesis of today's trend toward energy-savingbulbs.
ALL STORIES
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share RESULTS FOR SUBJECT TERM "ENVIRONMENT" Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share ERIE STREET CEMETERY On East 9th Street, enclosed by a 19th century iron fence and Gothic gateway, is the Erie Street Cemetery - the final resting place of some of Cleveland's most notable pioneers and combatants. Located right next door to Progressive Field, even the popular baseball stadium is easily forgotten once you find yourself surrounded by the many weathered gravestones. PURITAS SPRINGS PARK Puritas Springs Park was the first amusement park on the west side of Cleveland. It stood next to a deep ravine overlooking the Rocky River valley. This created a wooded picturesque setting. While being unique because of its location, the amusement park was similar to all other parks in one way in that it was situated along the streetcar lines that connected Cleveland to its suburbs. HOTEL WINTON / CARTER HOTEL Hotel Winton was a twelve-story hotel designed by architect Max Dunning of Chicago and built at a cost of nearly $2.5 million. Named after Cleveland’s automotive pioneer, Alexander Winton, the hotel opened its doors on December 20, 1917, on Prospect Avenue just east of East 9th Street on the edge of what would become the theater district of Cleveland’s downtown. CRILE MILITARY HOSPITAL Crile General Hospital was built by the U.S. Army and named in honor of George Washington Crile (1864-1943), an internationally renowned surgeon and founder of the Cleveland Clinic. Crile served in both the Spanish American War and WWI and was a pioneer in military medicine, leading research and treatment of shock, blood transfusion, and blood TOUR | NORTH UNION SHAKERS: THE VALLEY OF GOD'S PLEASURE Self-styled "The Valley of God's Pleasure," the North Union Shaker colony existed from 1822 to 1889. At its peak in 1850 it contained over 300 members spread across three settlements. Perhaps the most noticeable remnant of the Shakers are the two Shaker Lakes, created when the Shakers dammed the Doan Brook to power their mills, though other sites in Shaker Heights also tell other parts of the VAN SWERINGEN RESIDENCE Accompanied by a photograph of the recently constructed home at what is now 17400 South Park Boulevard, a 1910 Cleveland Plain Dealer article muses: "Shakers Would Be Surprised Were They To Return and See The Van Sweringen Home". The image centers on a stone pathway leading through a beautifully maintained and vast lot. A mansion can be seen in the distance, hidden away behind aMOSES CLEAVELAND
As you approach the southern side of Public Square you will see a bronze statue of a man. This famous figure stands frozen in time, keeping watch over the very town that bears his name. Moses Cleaveland (1754-1806) was born and raised in Connecticut. After studying law at Yale College, he served as a General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. "ANYONE WHO IS ANYONE" Memories of a signature blue-and-white, string-tied cake box filled with a streusel coffee cake, hot cross buns, sticky pecan rolls, coconut chocolate bars or an Easter "daffodil" cake evoke pure food nostalgia for anyone from northeast CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share OLD CITY HALL BUILDING Before moving to its current location, Clevelands council chambers were located in the Case Block, a building situated on what is now the location of the Cleveland Public Librarys main building. On February 18, 1875, city officials leased the $800 thousand building for $36 thousand per year to serve as Clevelands City Hall. Because the building was so large, the city rented VALLEYVIEW HOMES ESTATES In Cleveland, several public housing projects (Cedar-Central, Outhwaite, Lakeview Terrace) preceded the development of Valleyview Homes Estates. However, Valleyview was among the first (along with Woodhill and Carver Park) to actually be built and overseen by the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA). Completed in 1940 on a bluff overlooking the Cuyahoga Valley in southeastern HOTEL WINTON / CARTER HOTEL Hotel Winton was a twelve-story hotel designed by architect Max Dunning of Chicago and built at a cost of nearly $2.5 million. Named after Cleveland’s automotive pioneer, Alexander Winton, the hotel opened its doors on December 20, 1917, on Prospect Avenue just east of East 9th Street on the edge of what would become the theater district of Cleveland’s downtown. PURITAS SPRINGS PARK Puritas Springs Park was the first amusement park on the west side of Cleveland. It stood next to a deep ravine overlooking the Rocky River valley. This created a wooded picturesque setting. While being unique because of its location, the amusement park was similar to all other parks in one way in that it was situated along the streetcar lines that connected Cleveland to its suburbs.ZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street.GWINN ESTATE
Sheltered in the quiet of Bratenahl Village, the Gwinn Mansion sits on the shoreline overlooking Lake Erie. It was home for William Gwinn Mather, the "first citizen" of Cleveland and one of the many wealthy industrialists who inhabited Bratenahl at the turn of the twentieth century. One million dollars went into the construction of his mansionin 1908.
HERMAN PIRCHNER'S ALPINE VILLAGE Herman Pirchner’s Alpine Village Theatrical Bar and Restaurant, located at 1614 Euclid Avenue (directly across the street from the Palace Theater) was the place to do it. Inspired by Pirchner’s childhood home in the Austrian Alps, the restaurant featured Tyrolean décor, mountain scenes and murals of CLARK AVENUE BRIDGE, 1978 Clark Avenue Bridge, 1978. ID: 7835 ~ Creator: Cleveland Memory Project, Cleveland State University Library Special Collections ~ Date: 1978. This file appears in: The Landscape of Tremont. Cars heading east over the Flats via the Clark Avenue Bridge, 1978. The church spire visible in the background is Saint Michael Archangel atthe corner of
THE CUSHING BUILDING Though he has been called America’s first neurosurgeon, Dr. Harvey W. Cushing was not the first American to perform brain surgery. Others did before him, piercing the dura which encases the brain in order to attempt to remove tumors, but the results were almost always disastrous for the patient. With his pioneering use of local anesthesia, innovative methods to control bleeding and oxygen CLEVELAND HISTORICALSTORIESTOURSABOUTTHE STILLMAN THEATERCULTURALGARDENSTHE ARCADE
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share OLD CITY HALL BUILDING Before moving to its current location, Clevelands council chambers were located in the Case Block, a building situated on what is now the location of the Cleveland Public Librarys main building. On February 18, 1875, city officials leased the $800 thousand building for $36 thousand per year to serve as Clevelands City Hall. Because the building was so large, the city rented VALLEYVIEW HOMES ESTATES In Cleveland, several public housing projects (Cedar-Central, Outhwaite, Lakeview Terrace) preceded the development of Valleyview Homes Estates. However, Valleyview was among the first (along with Woodhill and Carver Park) to actually be built and overseen by the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA). Completed in 1940 on a bluff overlooking the Cuyahoga Valley in southeastern HOTEL WINTON / CARTER HOTEL Hotel Winton was a twelve-story hotel designed by architect Max Dunning of Chicago and built at a cost of nearly $2.5 million. Named after Cleveland’s automotive pioneer, Alexander Winton, the hotel opened its doors on December 20, 1917, on Prospect Avenue just east of East 9th Street on the edge of what would become the theater district of Cleveland’s downtown. PURITAS SPRINGS PARK Puritas Springs Park was the first amusement park on the west side of Cleveland. It stood next to a deep ravine overlooking the Rocky River valley. This created a wooded picturesque setting. While being unique because of its location, the amusement park was similar to all other parks in one way in that it was situated along the streetcar lines that connected Cleveland to its suburbs.ZITIELLO BANK
The Zitiello Bank, located at 6810 Herman Avenue, was the earliest known ethnic bank opened in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The bank was founded by Joseph Zitiello, an immigrant from the Campania region of Italy who came to Cleveland in 1898. Joseph was just one of several members of the Zitiello family who by 1910 had purchased homes on West 69th Street.GWINN ESTATE
Sheltered in the quiet of Bratenahl Village, the Gwinn Mansion sits on the shoreline overlooking Lake Erie. It was home for William Gwinn Mather, the "first citizen" of Cleveland and one of the many wealthy industrialists who inhabited Bratenahl at the turn of the twentieth century. One million dollars went into the construction of his mansionin 1908.
HERMAN PIRCHNER'S ALPINE VILLAGE Herman Pirchner’s Alpine Village Theatrical Bar and Restaurant, located at 1614 Euclid Avenue (directly across the street from the Palace Theater) was the place to do it. Inspired by Pirchner’s childhood home in the Austrian Alps, the restaurant featured Tyrolean décor, mountain scenes and murals of CLARK AVENUE BRIDGE, 1978 Clark Avenue Bridge, 1978. ID: 7835 ~ Creator: Cleveland Memory Project, Cleveland State University Library Special Collections ~ Date: 1978. This file appears in: The Landscape of Tremont. Cars heading east over the Flats via the Clark Avenue Bridge, 1978. The church spire visible in the background is Saint Michael Archangel atthe corner of
THE CUSHING BUILDING Though he has been called America’s first neurosurgeon, Dr. Harvey W. Cushing was not the first American to perform brain surgery. Others did before him, piercing the dura which encases the brain in order to attempt to remove tumors, but the results were almost always disastrous for the patient. With his pioneering use of local anesthesia, innovative methods to control bleeding and oxygenALL STORIES
Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to share RESULTS FOR SUBJECT TERM "ENVIRONMENT" Cleveland Historical is a free mobile app that puts Cleveland history at your fingertips. Developed by the Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University, Cleveland Historical lets you explore the people, places, and moments that have shaped the city's history. Learn about the region through layered, map-based, multimedia presentations, use social media to shareTHE FREE STAMP
Claes Oldenburg (1929-) and Coosje van Bruggen (1942-2009) were all about BIG; and the Free Stamp in Cleveland’s Willard Park is no exception. Inarguably the world’s largest office stamp, the aluminum and steel structure is 49 feet long, 28 feet high and weighs 70,000 pounds. In the Cleveland area, it’s one of three titanic installations created by Oldenburg and van Bruggen. PURITAS SPRINGS PARK Puritas Springs Park was the first amusement park on the west side of Cleveland. It stood next to a deep ravine overlooking the Rocky River valley. This created a wooded picturesque setting. While being unique because of its location, the amusement park was similar to all other parks in one way in that it was situated along the streetcar lines that connected Cleveland to its suburbs.HOLLENDEN HOTEL
Thousands of stories emanated from the venerable Hollenden Hotel. This hotel, located in downtown Cleveland on Superior, Bond, and Vincent Streets, was considered one of the city's most luxurious hotels. It attracted many diverse people, including several presidents of the United States, celebrities, and professional athletes, as well as prominent local organizations. PETER B. LEWIS BUILDING Designed by world-famous architect Frank Gehry, the Peter B. Lewis Building's unique architectural features symbolize the Case Western Reserve University Weatherhead School of Management's innovative approach to management education. Opened in 2002, the wavy, stainless-steel sheathed landmark takes its name from Peter B. Lewis, Chairman of the Progressive Insurance Company, THE CLEVELAND STATE HOSPITAL The Cleveland State Hospital, also known as Northern Ohio Lunatic Asylum, The Newburgh Asylum, The Cleveland Asylum for the Insane, and even referred to as "Turney Tech" on some occasions, was an institution that arose out of a growing need to send the mentally ill away to a facility to be treated and hopefully cured. The hospital was located on Turney Road (in what is now Cleveland) on landROSE HILL MUSEUM
Rose Hill, 2011: Rose Hill Museum, constructed in 1818, was the permanent home for the Cahoon family for 117 years. From 1919-1960 it also served as a library for the area. In 1974 it reopened in its current state as Rose Hill Museum. Cahoon House and Barn, Ca. 1900: The Rose Hill house (now home to the Rose Hill Museum) and the Cahoonbarn (in
AMHERST'S QUARRIES
In 1830, Amherst's population was 552, growing to 2,482 by 1870. By 1924, most of the smaller companies had been bought out by the Cleveland Quarries Company (CQC) which still owns the majority of the local quarries today. By the 1950s sandstone was used less widely as TOUR | NORTH UNION SHAKERS: THE VALLEY OF GOD'S PLEASURE Self-styled "The Valley of God's Pleasure," the North Union Shaker colony existed from 1822 to 1889. At its peak in 1850 it contained over 300 members spread across three settlements. Perhaps the most noticeable remnant of the Shakers are the two Shaker Lakes, created when the Shakers dammed the Doan Brook to power their mills, though other sites in Shaker Heights also tell other parts of the App Store Google Play* Home
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