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Inside Kings Island's main entrance Kings Island is a 364-acre (147 ha) amusement park located in Mason, Ohio. The park is known for releasing record-breaking and first-of-a-kind rides over the years, such as Flight of Fear, the world's first launched roller coaster using a linear induction motor, and The Beast which opened as the world's tallest, fastest, and longest wooden roller coaster in ...
E. North Broadway roughly between Broadway Place and N. Broadway Lane 40°01′53″N 83°00′25″W / 40.031389°N 83.006944°W / 40.031389; -83.006944 ( East North Broadway Historic
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Cleveland, Ohio. ... East Ohio Gas Company Building. February 20, 2003 1403 E. 6th St. ...
The Framingham History Center's Haunted Trolley Tour takes place on Sunday, Oct. 20, and includes 17 stops. Framingham Haunted Trolley Tour on Oct. 20 visits 17 places with spooky history Skip to ...
A transport museum is a museum that holds collections of transport items, which are often limited to land transport (road and rail)—including old cars, motorcycles, trucks, trains, trams/streetcars, buses, trolleybuses and coaches—but can also include air transport or waterborne transport items, along with educational displays and other old transport objects. [1]
The property is located in the city's Franklin Park neighborhood and is a contributing part of the Columbus Near East Side District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The site's buildings were built between 1882 and 1920 to serve public transit in Columbus, including horsecars, streetcars, and buses. It became vacant in the ...
Constructed by Frederick Ingersoll, the park occupied a hilly 35-acre (140,000 m 2) site bounded by Woodland Avenue, Woodhill, Mt. Carmel (originally Ingersoll Road), and East 110th Street and included roller coasters, carousels, a fun house, a Ferris wheel, a roller rink, a shoot-the-chutes ride, a concert shell, a dance hall, bumper cars, a baseball field, and a 20,000-seat [3] stadium ...
A trolleybus of the Oakwood Street Railway, one of multiple companies that once operated trolleybuses in Dayton, passing the Montgomery County Courthouse in 1937. The first electric trolley bus (ETB) service in Ohio began operation in Dayton, on April 23, 1933, when the Salem Avenue-Lorain Avenue line was converted from streetcars to trolley coaches — or trolley buses, as they are most ...