Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sidney is a city in and the county seat of Shelby County, Ohio, United States, located approximately 36 miles (58 km) north of Dayton and 100 miles (160 km) south of Toledo. [4] The population was 20,421 at the time of the 2020 census .
Shelby County is a county in the western portion of the U.S. state of Ohio.As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 48,230. [2] Its county seat is Sidney. [3] Its name honors Isaac Shelby, first governor of Kentucky. [4]
Farm fields on Schenck Road, southwest of Sidney Location of Clinton Township in Shelby County Coordinates: 40°17′17″N 84°9′43″W / 40.28806°N 84.16194°W / 40.28806; -84
The Sidney Walnut Avenue Historic District is a neighborhood and historic district on the western side of the city of Sidney, Ohio, United States. [1] Located a short distance northwest of the city's downtown, the Walnut Avenue District has been Sidney's premier residential neighborhood since its creation in the late nineteenth century.
The film is about the everyday life of the small town Sidney, Ohio, and the people living in it; the title comes from the town's ZIP Code. 45365 premiered at the 2009 South by Southwest Film Festival, where it won the Grand Jury Prize. [1] It won the Roger and Chaz Ebert Truer than Fiction award at the 2010 Independent Spirit Awards. [2]
Civitas Media sold its Ohio papers to AIM Media Midwest in 2017. [9] On March 1, 2023, AIM Media Midwest reduced the publishing frequency of the Sidney Daily News and its other Ohio publications to twice per week. [10] [11] The Sidney Daily News publishes on Wednesdays and Fridays. Bryant Billing took over as the publication's editor in April ...
The Whitby Mansion is a historic mansion in Sidney, Ohio, United States.Built in 1890, [1] it was originally the home of W.H.C. Goode, a Sidney industrialist.Descended from one of the First Families of Virginia, Goode first purchased property in the vicinity of Sidney in 1849.
Advertisement for The Dean Miller Show on WLW-C (now WCMH-TV) in Columbus. On January 8, 1964, the Federal Communications Commission granted the Van Wert Broadcasting Company—owner of WMVR (1080 AM), which signed on November 21, 1963—a construction permit for an FM station on 105.5 MHz. [2]