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The city of Dayton is the location of 116 of these properties and districts, including 5 National Historic Landmarks; they are listed separately, while the remaining properties and districts are listed here. A single property, the Miami Valley Golf Course and Clubhouse, is split between Dayton and other parts of the county, and it thus appears ...
Southern Ohio Lunatic Asylum: November 15, 1979 : 2335 Wayne Ave. 98: Squirrel-Forest Historic District: Squirrel-Forest Historic District: October 14, 2010 : North of Homewood Ave. and along the west side of Forest Ave.
Stuart Patterson Park is home to the Francis Fitzsimmons Senior Citizens Center. State Routes 201 (Valley and Brandt Streets) and 202 (Troy St.) provide access to downtown Dayton, Riverside, and Huber Heights. Ohio State Route 4 provides access to Interstate 75, Interstate 70, U.S. Route 35, and Interstate 675.
10516 Marquart Rd., north of New Carlisle 39°58′59″N 84°00′08″W / 39.983056°N 84.002222°W / 39.983056; -84.002222 ( Ollie' Pike Township
It was placed in the Woodland receiving vault in Dayton, and every day members of the late ”queen"'s family came with fresh flowers to visit her. Eight months later the funeral was held, in order to give some time for the word to spread and to make it so that more of their people traveled to Dayton. She was interred in the Stanley family plot.
The Kossuth Colony Historic District, named for Lajos Kossuth, is a nationally recognized historic district bounded by Baltimore Street, Mack Avenue and Notre Dame Avenue in Dayton, Ohio. The Kossuth Colony was built in 1906 to house Hungarian immigrant workers for the Barney and Smith Car Company , a rail car manufacturer that ranked among ...
Shawen Acres, also known as the Montgomery County Children's Home, is a historic complex in Dayton, Ohio. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on October 9, 1991. [2] It was originally designed as an orphans home. Dr. Charles Shawen donated 19 acres (77,000 m 2) to the county March 21, 1926 for "wayward and homeless children."
The Dayton View Historic District is a 680-acre (2.8 km 2) sector of Dayton, Ohio, United States, developed in the late 19th century and consisting of 219 structures, that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.