Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Aullwood's trails are only open during business hours. Admission or membership is required to visit Aullwood Audubon's nature center, farm, sanctuary and trails. As of January 2022, general admission is free for children 3 and under, $8.00 for children 4 to 12, $12.00 for adults 13 to 64, and $10.00 for seniors age 65 and over and active duty ...
The Ohio House Finance Committee passed House Bill 683, a $10 million spending bill to help farmers get through the state’s historic drought. “It’s a slowly evolving crisis,” Rep. Don ...
Farms on the National Register of Historic Places in Ohio (39 P) F. Farm museums in Ohio (6 P) Pages in category "Farms in Ohio" The following 2 pages are in this ...
The Village of Englewood was incorporated on May 15, 1914, and Jacob Hoover was the first mayor. The population had risen to 415 by 1930 and over 600 by 1940. [5] Englewood became a city in 1971. Natural gas was made available to the area in 1934, the first water works was built in 1936 and the original sewer system was completed in 1940.
Malabar Farm Inn is a historic stagecoach inn built in 1820. The two-story brick building was restored as a restaurant, offering home-cooked dining. The Malabar Inn Restaurant has operated sporadically in recent years, having closed in 2018, re-opened in 2021, and closed in July 2023.
Lake Metroparks Farmpark is a working farm located in Kirtland, Ohio. Opened in 1990, the farm is located on 235 acres (95 hectares) with fields, gardens and standard farm buildings. The park hopes to help people understand how farm life has developed over time, and reinforces that farming is a current and viable lifestyle.
Pages in category "Farms on the National Register of Historic Places in Ohio" The following 39 pages are in this category, out of 39 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Wood Old Homestead, also known as Bob Evans Farm, is a farm in Bidwell, Ohio, near the city of Rio Grande, where American restauranteur Bob Evans and his wife Jewell lived for nearly 20 years, raising their six children. The large brick farmhouse was formerly a stagecoach stop and an inn, and now serves as a company museum.