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The Cleveland Masonic Temple in Cleveland, Ohio is an auditorium and banquet hall which opened in 1921. It is noted for containing two large organs (Austin opus 823 and a Wurlitzer Opus 793), and for many years was home to the Cleveland Orchestra. [2] It was designed by the architectural firm of Hubbell and Benes. [3] [4]
900 Euclid Ave. at E. 9th St. 41°30′00″N 81°41′09″W / 41.500000°N 81.685833°W / 41.500000; -81.685833 ( Cleveland Trust 1907 bank building designed by George B. Post featuring a striking glass rotunda, a tympanum sculpture, and interior murals.
Cleveland Masonic Temple (1921), 3615 Euclid Ave., Cleveland (Hubbell and Benes), NRHP-listed [6] Plain Dealer building (1922) that was also used by the Cleveland Public Library at Superior and East 6th. Since demolished
The Euclid Avenue Historic District is a historic district in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States. Established and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002, it comprises 125 acres (51 ha) along Euclid Avenue and parallel streets from Public Square to East 21st Street. In 2007, another 4 acres (1.6 ha) was added to the ...
Sylvester T. Everett mansion on Euclid Avenue (since demolished), designed by Charles F. Schweinfurth. Euclid Avenue is a major street in Cleveland, Ohio, United States.It runs northeasterly from Public Square in Downtown Cleveland, passing Playhouse Square and Cleveland State University, to University Circle, the Cleveland Clinic, Severance Hall, Case Western Reserve University's Maltz ...
Jason Fauntleroy thought he'd snagged a great deal when he purchased a vacant lot in Trenton, Ohio, for $5,000 from the Butler County Sheriff’s Office auction three years ago.
The Schofield Building (previously known as the Euclid Ninth Tower) is a high-rise building in downtown Cleveland, Ohio. [2] The 172-foot (52 m), 14-story building is located at the southwest corner of East 9th Street and Euclid Avenue, adjacent to the Rose Building and the City Club Building in the city's Historic Gateway District. [3]
A station at the intersection of Euclid Street (Euclid Avenue from 1870) and Willson Avenue (East 55th Street from 1906 [7] [8]) first opened in 1856, when Jared V. Willson and his wife executed a quitclaim deed for $1, partitioning their plot of land on the SE corner of the intersection for a small wooden shelter to be built by the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Rail Road. [9]