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Aullwood Farm is located at 9101 Frederick Pike, Dayton, OH 45414. At Aullwood's Marie S. Aull Education Center, you will find two themed discovery rooms and six thematic classrooms containing interactive displays, informative exhibits, educational games, native animals and animal specimens.
The Cox Arboretum and Gardens MetroPark is a 189 acres (76 ha) arboretum and park located at 6733 Springboro Pike, Dayton, Ohio (in Miami Township, south of the city proper). It is open daily without charge. Cox Arboretum and Gardens MetroPark is one of many Dayton area parks within the Five Rivers Metroparks system.
Aullwood House and Garden is a registered historic site near Dayton, Ohio, listed in the National Register on 1999-02-05. A path on the grounds in June, 2012. The property once served as home for Dayton-area industrialist John Aull and his wife, Marie. Today, the garden is one of twenty-five properties cared for by Five Rivers MetroParks. There ...
Kemp's house is built of brick and limestone with a stone foundation; it is covered with an asphalt roof, and peripheral elements are made of wood and stone. [5] The original portion of the house was constructed in 1806, [1] almost as soon as Kemp and his family reached their new farm, while the brick section was constructed in approximately 1832.
Dayton Fire Station No. 14: September 27, 1980 : 1422 N. Main St. 22: Dayton Motor Car Company Historic District: Dayton Motor Car Company Historic District: May 31, 1984 : 15, 101, 123-5 Bainbridge; 9-111 and 122-124 McDonough
This list of botanical gardens and arboretums in Ohio is intended to include all significant botanical gardens and arboretums in the U.S. state of Ohio. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Name
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 ...
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 ...