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Tiffin has one airport, Seneca County Airport (K16G). A flex-route bus service, the Shelton Shuttle, [30] is provided by Seneca-Crawford Area Transportation. Tiffin is currently on 5 state routes, as well as U.S. Route 224, which skirts the city's southern edge. Tiffin is located on the southern terminus of Northern Ohio and Western Railway.
Junction of State Route 101 and County Road 38, northeast of Tiffin 41°10′05″N 83°05′58″W / 41.168056°N 83.099444°W / 41.168056; -83.099444 ( Pleasant Ridge United Methodist Church and
Pioneer was platted in 1853. [4] A post office has been in operation at Pioneer since 1851. [5] From 1903, the village was the terminus of an electric interurban passenger railroad from Toledo called the Toledo and Western Railway, which was hoping to become a link in an electric rail service from that city to Chicago but which got no further. [6]
Initially known as “Mill Camp,” the neighborhood’s first homes were built in the 1920s as temporary housing for workers for the Pioneer Mill Co., a sugar cane plantation. ...
Artisans and crafts people will sell items throughout the village
Seneca County is a county located in the northwestern part of the U.S. state of Ohio. As of the 2020 census, the population was 55,069. [1] Its county seat is Tiffin. [2] The county was created in 1820 and organized in 1824. [3] It is named for the Seneca Indians, the westernmost nation of the Iroquois Confederacy.
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Mid-19th-century water-powered grist mill Beaver Creek State Park Pioneer Village: East Liverpool: Columbiana: Northeast Open air Ten structures that represent Ohio history from its early pioneer days to the Victorian period including Gaston's Mill: Bedford Historical Society Bedford: Cuyahoga Northeast Local history