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However, it continued to manufacture wooden wagons and playground equipment. Catalogs from the 1950s and early 1960s show playground equipment and hand car racers with the trade name Howdy Doody. [2] In 1959, Gendron Wheel moved most of its manufacturing to Archbold, Ohio. [5] The Perrysburg plant was closed in 1963.
John Williams Stoddard was born in Dayton, Ohio to Henry and Susan (Williams) Stoddard. Henry Stoddard (1788–1869) was a pioneer citizen and distinguished lawyer of Dayton. [1] John was educated in the private schools of Dayton, and spent his freshman and sophomore years at Miami University.
Motor vehicle manufacturers based in Ohio (1 C, 75 P) Pages in category "Manufacturing companies based in Ohio" The following 109 pages are in this category, out of 109 total.
The Pioneer and Fayette Railroad (PF) was a historic railroad that operated in Ohio. The P&F began operations in November 1934 using abandoned Toledo and Western Railroad trackage between Pioneer and Fayette, Ohio. [1] The P&F connected with the Wabash at Franklin Junction near Alvordton, Ohio.
The Euclid Company of Ohio was a manufacturer which specialized in heavy equipment for earthmoving, particularly dump trucks, loaders and wheel tractor-scrapers. It operated in the US from the 1920s to the 1950s, when it was purchased by General Motors. The firm was later bought by Hitachi Construction Machinery. [1]
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]
ETNA – Three people are dead and 15 others injured after a "mass casualty incident" involving a semi and a charter bus carrying students on Interstate 70, near the State Route 310 interchange ...
In April 1946, the company changed its name to the Marion Power Shovel Company to more closely reflect its products. [6]Marion built its first walking dragline in 1939 and became a key player in providing giant stripping shovels to the coal industry, being the first to put a long-boom revolving stripping shovel to work in North America in 1911.