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The Frederick W. Schumacher mansion was a historic house on East Broad Street in Columbus, Ohio. The mansion was built for Mary L. Frisbie, and was constructed from 1886 to 1889. Frisbie lived in the house for several years before selling it in 1901 to Frederick W. Schumacher, a prominent businessman and philanthropist. Schumacher lived there ...
Other important residents included Andrew Black, a dry-goods merchant who built Black's Opera House [5] (353 S. Fountain), William D. Bayley, owner of the William Bayley Co. [6] (521 S. Fountain), James Johnson Jr., [7] leading attorney and mayor in 1895 (563 S. Fountain), Hector Urquhart, [8] owner and president of the Springfield Baking Co ...
The Charles F. Kettering House is located on Kettering's west side, on a hill overlooking the grounds of both Kettering College and Kettering Medical Center. It is a large Tudor Revival structure, originally designed by the Dayton firm of Schenck & Williams and built in 1914. The original building was destroyed by fire in 1995 and was rebuilt ...
Location of Stark County in Ohio. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Stark County, Ohio. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Stark County, Ohio, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National ...
Historical marker ()The Snowden-Gray mansion is located on East Town Street in Downtown Columbus, close to Topiary Park. [1] The surrounding Town-Franklin neighborhood is considered the city's first suburb, first subdivided in the 1840s, with early fashionable residences constructed in the 1850s, and its lots filling in during the subsequent prosperous decades. [2]
The Alfred Kelley house was a two-story house, measuring 65 feet (20 m) square and 40 feet (12 m) tall. [1] It was built with a warm gray sandstone from Eastern Ohio, [1] designed in the Greek Revival style at the height of its popularity. It had a simple, symmetrical, and dignified design, presumably the work of Kelley himself.
Here's an album-sized sampling of songs to add to your Ohio holiday song list to impress friends and family at your next holiday gathering.
Prospect Place mansion as it appeared in the 1866 epigraphic survey of southeastern Ohio. Prospect Place House. Prospect Place, also known as The Trinway Mansion and Prospect Place Estate, is a 29-room mansion built by abolitionist George Willison Adams (G. W. Adams) in Trinway, Ohio, just north of Dresden in 1856.