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In the early 1840s, quarry activities began in the area to mine a narrow belt of Columbus and Delaware limestone [2] which stretched all the way from the Scioto River to the Olentangy River adjacent to Marble Cliff, Ohio. [citation needed] The Columbus formation stone was roughly 100 feet thick with the Delaware limestone deposit above at 16 to ...
Pages in category "Companies based in the Columbus, Ohio metropolitan area" The following 125 pages are in this category, out of 125 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Jeffrey Manufacturing Company plant in Columbus, Ohio in 1911. Joseph Andrew Jeffrey was born in Clarksville, Ohio on 17 January 1836. After high school he worked at the Commercial National Bank in Columbus. In 1876, he saw a model of a compressed-air mining machine, created by inventor Francis Lechner Jeffrey contacted Lechner and offered ...
Owens Quarry, a limestone quarry and crusher plant near Marion, Ohio, around which the community of Owens, Ohio grew. Ridgeway Site, in Hardin County, Ohio, a former archaeological site which, during excavation of its gravel, yielded numerous artifacts and buried bodies of the Glacial Kame culture, for which it is the type site.
He founded the company in Columbus, Ohio, where it is still headquartered. In his first year of business, McConnell grossed $342,000; his profit was $11,000. Throughout the late 1950s and 1960s, he continued to add processing facilities. In 1966, he started sharing his profits with the people he worked with.
Clermont Steel Fabricators is situated in Batavia across Old State Route 32 from the former Ford Batavia Transmission plant which closed in 2008. [7] [8] Its main building has 152,000 square feet (14,100 m 2) of production space, and there is 76,500 square feet (7,110 m 2) of outdoor storage space surrounding it.
Defunct newspapers published in Ohio (2 C, 23 P) Pages in category "Defunct companies based in Ohio" The following 63 pages are in this category, out of 63 total.
The Galion Iron Works Company of Galion, Ohio, was founded by David Charles Boyd and his three brothers in 1907.In its early years, the Galion produced a wide range of road-building and other construction equipment, such as drag scrapers, plows, wagons, stone unloaders, rock crushers, and a variety of other "experimental machines".