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1651, 1667 East Main Street, 498 Berkeley Road, and 1640 East Mound Street 39°57′27″N 82°57′22″W / 39.9575°N 82.9560°W / 39.9575; -82.9560 ( Holy Rosary Roman Catholic Church
Dublin is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio. A suburb of Columbus, it falls within the jurisdictions of Franklin, Delaware, and Union counties. [5] The population was 49,328 at the 2020 census. [6] Dublin has the highest concentration of Asians of any Ohio city. The Dublin Irish Festival advertises itself as the largest three-day Irish festival ...
Map of the Ohio Country between 1775 and 1794, depicting locations of battles and massacres surrounding the area that would eventually become Ohio. The area including modern-day Columbus once comprised the Ohio Country, [2] under the nominal control of the French colonial empire through the Viceroyalty of New France from 1663 until
16th century illustration showing the aldermen and Lord Mayor of Dublin welcome back Sir Henry Sidney from battle.. For centuries it was a two-chamber body, made up of an upper house of 24 aldermen, who elected the Lord Mayor of Dublin from their number, and a lower house, known as the "sheriffs and commons", consisting of up to 48 sheriffs peers (former sheriffs) and 96 representatives of the ...
Ohio State Hillel - Ohio State University [12] Schottenstein Chabad House at OSU - Orthodox, Ohio State University [13] Columbus Community Kollel - Orthodox, Bexley [14] There are two Jewish schools, Columbus Torah Academy, an Orthodox K-12 school, and Columbus Jewish Day School, a K-6 Jewish Day School. [2]
In the early 1840s, quarry activities began in the area to mine a narrow belt of Columbus and Delaware limestone [2] which stretched all the way from the Scioto River to the Olentangy River adjacent to Marble Cliff, Ohio. [citation needed] The Columbus formation stone was roughly 100 feet thick with the Delaware limestone deposit above at 16 to ...
It reached an $80 million settlement in 1975 (equivalent to $467,482,993 in 2024), used to demolish Union Station, build Battelle Hall at the Columbus Convention Center, refurbish the Ohio Theatre and create Battelle-Darby Creek Metro Park. The institute lost its nonprofit status in the 1990s, though regained it by 2001.
The O'Shaughnessy Dam is located on the Scioto River near Dublin, Ohio, United States. The dam forms O'Shaughnessy Reservoir, which is a major source of drinking water for the city of Columbus . It was completed in 1925 following recommendations of then superintendent Jerry O'Shaughnessy (for whom the dam was named).