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Painesville is a city in and the county seat of Lake County, Ohio, United States, [4] located along the Grand River. It is a northeast suburb of Cleveland . Its population was 20,312 at the 2020 census .
Morley Library has a special collection to help those interested in researching their family genealogy and local Painesville history. The collection includes a variety of atlases, birth records, cemetery records, census enumerations, church records, city directories, high school and college yearbooks, magazines, marriage records, military records, naturalization records, newspapers, obituaries ...
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Lake County, Ohio, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.
The seminary was relocated to Painesville after Willoughby Seminary, founded in 1847, burned to the ground. [4] Its founders include prominent local citizens Timothy Rockwell, general store owner Silas Trumbull Ladd, Judge William Lee Perkins, Mayor and Judge Aaron Wilcox, Charles Austin Avery and Judge Reuben Hitchcock, a president of the Cleveland and Mahoning Railroad and cousin of Edward ...
The Methodist Episcopal Church of Painesville (also known as Painesville United Methodist Church) is a historic church building at 71 N. Park Place in Painesville, Ohio. It was built in 1873 in a Gothic Revival style and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1998.
Jul. 12—A historic bank building on Painesville Square being repurposed as new student housing has officially been renamed The Tower to honor Lake Erie College. Tours will be given of The Tower ...
Sessions House (also called the "Tuscan House") is a historic Italianate style house at 157 Mentor Avenue in Painesville, Ohio. Constructed in Italianate style in 1873 for the widow of one of the region's pioneers, [2] the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. [1]
Eber Dudley Howe (June 9, 1798 – November 10, 1885) [1] was the founder and editor of the Painesville Telegraph, a newspaper that published in Painesville, Ohio, starting in 1822. Howe was the author of one of the first books that was critical of the spiritual claims of Joseph Smith Jr, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement.