Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The city of Akron is the location of 63 of these properties and districts, including 2 of the National Historic Landmarks; they are listed here, while the 124 sites and 1 National Historic Landmark located elsewhere in Summit County are listed separately. One district, the Valley Railway Historic District, is split between Akron and other parts ...
Akron station, located at Quaker Square, was served by Amtrak passenger trains during the 1990s and 2000s. Former passenger platform. The former Akron Union Station, slightly to the south, was closed in 1971 when Amtrak did not include a Washington-Chicago train on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) as part of its initial route structure. [9]
The city of Akron is the location of 63 of these properties and districts, including 2 of the National Historic Landmarks; they are listed separately, while the 125 properties and districts and the National Historic Landmarks in the remaining parts of the county are listed here. One district, the Valley Railway Historic District, is split ...
You can also email your memories to info@greenbookcleveland.org or by traditional mail to Greg Wilson, c/o 216 Arts & Sciences, UA history department, University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, 44325-1902.
Fire crews battled a large fire in a former factory near downtown Akron for hours on Wednesday night. A three-story building that was once home to a rubber mat business caught fire at the dead-end ...
The Main–Market Street Historic District is the heart of the North Village of Akron's original town plat, created in August 1833. Developed to the north of the canal town of Akron, and eventually merged into one city, this area of Akron has long been a successful commercial center.
Akron city administrators are applying to the Ohio Department of ... After demolition of the building, city officials plan to build a 200,000-square-foot spec building marketed to a yet-unknown ...
This location was previously served by the Howard Street station of the Valley Railway (which was acquired by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad starting in 1890). [2] Trains began stopping here in 1880. [3] By 1948, the station was served by the Cleveland Night Express, Shenandoah, and Washington Night Express. [4]