Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Ashtabula Harbor Commercial District is a historic district in the northern section of the city of Ashtabula, Ohio, United States.Comprising a commercial section near the city's Lake Erie waterfront, the district includes buildings constructed largely in the late nineteenth century, at which time Ashtabula was a flourishing port city.
Jun. 13—ASHTABULA — Despite a rainy start, the Ashtabula Farmers Market opened Sunday morning in the Ashtabula Harbor. By noon, the sunshine and customers came out, much to the delight of the ...
The historic Ashtabula Harbor offers visitors a beach, marinas and boat clubs, several museums, unique shops and lots of great places to eat and drink. The area is known for a variety of great ...
Jun. 20—ASHTABULA — The Ashtabula Harbor will be filled with beach glass creations large and small this Saturday and Sunday. For more than a decade, vendors and collectors have gathered along ...
The Ashtabula Harbor was a primary coal harbor and still serves to ship. It has two public beaches: Walnut Beach, near the harbor, and Lake Shore Park, originally a Public Works Administration project during the Great Depression, on the opposite side of the harbor. Part of the city lies in Ashtabula Township, and part lies in Saybrook Township.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Ashtabula County, Ohio, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.
Jul. 16—ASHTABULA — A lighted boat parade, a fishing tournament and a wine garden will take center stage July 22-24 at the Wine and Walleye Festival on Bridge Street in the Ashtabula Harbor ...
McKinnon relocated to Ashtabula, where he owned machine shops, was a member of the Board of Education and city council and was Mayor of Ashtabula. He married Octavia J. Porter on April 2, 1878, and had four sons and one daughter. [3] In 1880, he was the founder and head of the McKinnon Iron Works Company at Ashtabula Harbor. [2]