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Historic district of 43 buildings constructed between 1888 and 1930. The district runs on Broadway between Cable and Barkwill Avenues, and on E. 55th Street between Lufkin and Broadway Avenues, with a few buildings to either side. It is the heart of the Czech community in Cleveland, and was once the second largest shopping district in the city. 20
At the close of the 1920s, the Broadway commercial district was home to numerous bakeries, banks, businesses, and music stores. [85] It was the largest shopping district out of Cleveland's downtown, [86] and with 90,000 residents in the area North Broadway was the second-largest Czech community in the United States (only Chicago was larger). [87]
Broadway Avenue is a road in Cuyahoga County in the U.S. state of Ohio. Broadway begins in Downtown Cleveland at Carnegie Avenue as a continuation to the south of Ontario Street. It runs from northwest to southeast through the cities of Cleveland , Garfield Heights , Maple Heights , Bedford , and the village of Oakwood .
An access road was formed from Hale Lane in Failsworth to replace a footpath, known as Morris Lane, across the Moston Brook, which forms the boundary with Failsworth. Morris Lane ran into Moston Lane (now ‘East’). The new road, connecting with Oldham Road, gave an easier route to Manchester, Oldham, or beyond. [citation needed]
Rt. 48 Bath Road Akron, Summit County: 1959 ... Cleveland-East Liverpool Road bridge SR 14 (Cleveland-East Liverpool Road) Streetsboro, Portage County: 1985
On October 22 and 23, 1915, Bohemian National Hall was the site of the signing of the Cleveland Agreement by Czech American and Slovak American representatives. The agreement was a precursor to the Pittsburgh Agreement , calling for the formation of a joint Czech and Slovak state, which was realized with the founding of Czechoslovakia in 1918.
Broadway–Slavic Village is a neighborhood on the Southeast side of Cleveland, Ohio. One of the city's oldest neighborhoods, it originated as the township of Newburgh, first settled in 1799. [4] [5] Much of the area has historically served as home to Cleveland's original Czech and Polish immigrants.
Transfiguration Church (Polish: Parafia Przemienienia PaĆskiego w Cleveland), was a Catholic parish church in Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States.Part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland, it was located at the southwest corner of the intersection of Broadway Avenue and Fullerton Avenue in a part of the South Broadway neighborhood previously known in Polish as Warszawa, also referred ...