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Number of Students Principal River Trails Middle School 6th through 8th 500+ Mary Krall-Meske Euclid Elementary School 1st through 5th 360+ Karen Daly Indian Grove Elementary School 1st through 5th 450+ Bill Timmins Prairie Trails School Pre-K and Kindergarten 170+ Amy Veytsman
The population of Mount Auburn was 5,094 at the 2020 census. The District was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 28, 1973 (No. 73001464). Mount Auburn was founded as a hilltop retreat for Cincinnati's social elite where wealthier people could escape the dirt, heat, smoke and crowded conditions of the lower city.
After her death, the Benedict House existed for many years as a single-family residence. As the Upper Prospect neighborhood transitioned during the early 20th century to a center for Cleveland's automobile retail sales and other commercial uses, the property served as a boarding house, office building and for light manufacturing.
Cincinnati's system of streetlights has been seen as historic because it is representative of the application of early- to mid-nineteenth-century technology to daily life. Prompted by a newly founded firm known as the "Cincinnati Gas Light and Coke Company," the city of Cincinnati began to implement streetlights in 1837. [ 2 ]
Prospect Hill Historic District is located on a hillside outside of downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. It is part of the Mount Auburn neighborhood of Cincinnati. Prospect Hill is bounded by the following streets, Liberty, Sycamore, Boal and Highland. Prospect Hill is sometimes called locally "Liberty Hill". [2]
Rab Carrington (born 1947 in Glasgow) devoted himself to rock climbing and mountaineering in the late 1960s and 1970s, taking on expeditions in the Alps and Himalayas. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In 1973, he took part in an expedition to Patagonia , Argentina, but when his group arrived in Buenos Aires , they found that their climbing equipment had not been ...
Mount Washington was laid out in 1846 and received its city rights in 1867. The community was annexed by the City of Cincinnati in 1911. [2] [3] A major local landmark for Mount Washington is the Mount Washington Water Tower, a concrete water tower that went into service in November 1940.
Mount Prospect is 20.0 miles (32.2 km) from Ogilvie Transportation Center, the Northwest Line's southern terminus. [2] In Metra's zone-based fare structure, Mount Prospect is located in zone 3. As of 2018 [update] , Mount Prospect is the 11th busiest of the 236 non-downtown stations in the Metra system, with an average of 1,879 weekday boardings.