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Greene County–Lewis A. Jackson Regional Airport (FAA LID: GDK) is a public use airport located in Xenia, [2] a city in Greene County, Ohio, United States. It is 10 nautical miles (19 km) east of the central business district of the city of Dayton. [1] The airport is owned by the Greene County Regional Airport Authority. [1]
In 1881, the YWLA incorporated under the name Xenia Library Association. In 1885 they hired their first librarian, Clara Martin, for $6.25 per month. A Carnegie library, the Greene County District Library, opened in 1906. Due to property destruction by a 1974 tornado in Xenia, land adjacent to the Xenia City Building was available. A new ...
2301 W. River Rd. [6: Also known as SunWatch Indian Village 54: Independent Order of Oddfellows, Dayton Lodge No. 273: Independent Order of Oddfellows, Dayton Lodge No. 273: October 25, 1984 : 8 LaBelle St.
Prior to late 1968, SR 235's northern terminus was at an intersection with State Route 4 and then State Route 69, which ran from downtown Dayton northward to State Route 65. With the reconstruction of SR 4/SR 69 to a high speed thoroughfare from I-75 to I-70, SR 69 southwards was discontinued, and northwards from the intersection was renumbered ...
Xenia Township (/ ˈ z iː n i ə / ZEE-nee-ə) is one of the twelve townships of Greene County, Ohio, United States. As of the 2020 census , the population was 6,742. Geography
Entrance to Kil-Kare Raceway, May 2018. Kil-Kare Raceway is a motorsports complex located in Xenia Township, Greene County, near Xenia and Dayton, Ohio, USA.Kil-Kare was first built by the Marshall Brothers, and first opened up as a 1/5-mile dirt track in 1951.
Its county seat is Xenia and its largest city is Beavercreek. [3] The county was established on March 24, 1803 [4] and named for General Nathanael Greene, [5] an officer in the Revolutionary War. Greene County is part of the Dayton, OH Metropolitan Statistical Area.
In 1849, each of the United States was asked to supply a block of stone for the construction of the Washington Monument.Because McDonald's quarry was known as one of Ohio's best sources of limestone, state geologists decided to supply a block of McDonald stone, and a Xenia mason produced a block measuring 6 × 3 × 0.75 feet (1.83 × 0.91 × 0.23 m) to be sent to Washington, D.C., [5] where it ...