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The house at 657 South Main Street was originally the home of John S. Kelly. The home was built by Kelley's father in law, Andrew Kinninger who was a local contractor. Kelly was born in Maryland in 1840 and moved to Dayton in 1856. Kelly had been a managing partner of a local bakery and opened his own grocery store.
Salem is a city in northern Columbiana County, Ohio, United States. The population was 11,915 at the 2020 census. [5] It extends into southern Mahoning County and is the principal city of the Salem micropolitan area. [6] Salem was founded by Quakers in 1806 and played a key role in the abolitionist movement as a hub of the Underground Railroad.
Ohio's largest known Atlantic White Cedar stands in front of New Hope Lutheran Church Location of Salem Township in Muskingum County Coordinates: 40°3′36″N 81°52′33″W / 40.06000°N 81.87583°W / 40.06000; -81
Refineries were located in Ohio, West Virginia, Oklahoma, and Texas. In the late 1920s Pure Oil made a contract to deliver gasoline and oil to another Ohio gasoline company, Hickok Oil Corporation of Toledo Ohio. The contract called for Pure Oil to be paid in stock such that on August 1, 1945, Pure Oil would own Hickok. [3]
The Kelly-Springfield Tire Company was an American manufacturer of tires for motor vehicles. It was founded in Springfield , Ohio by Edwin Kelly and Arthur Grant in 1894. It was acquired in 1935 by the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company , who maintained it as a subsidiary until 1999 when it was integrated into Goodyear North America. [ 1 ]
Skelly Oil Company was a medium-sized oil company founded in 1919 by William Grove (Bill) Skelly, Chesley Coleman Herndon and Frederick A. Pielsticker in Tulsa, Oklahoma. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] J. Paul Getty acquired control of the company during the 1930s.
Ohio oil production peaked in 1896 at 24 million barrels, but Ohio continued as the leading oil state until 1902, when that title was taken by Oklahoma. [4] The Trenton limestone produced more than 380 million barrels of oil and 2 trillion cubic feet of gas, peaking in 1896 at 23.9 million barrels of oil.
On February 14, 1927, Congress approved bill H.R. 1105 "for relief of Kelly Springfield Motor Truck Company of California", [10] but the company eventually ended operations later the same year. [1] That year, the Kelly-Springfield Truck & Bus Corporation advertised that it wished to sell its Springfield manufacturing plant. [11]