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The Gantz Homestead, also called the Gantz Farm House, in Grove City, Franklin County, Ohio, United States, was built in or around 1832. It was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
A Homestead and Hope - the first bulletin for the Division of Subsistence Homesteads, U.S. Department of Interior [8] Homestead Project Timeline; Urban homesteading; Smallholding; Five Acres and Independence; NARA Records of the Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) (Record Group 96) 1918-80 (bulk 1932–59)
The A.G. Grant Homestead in Grove City, Franklin County, Ohio, United States, was built around 1840. It was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1998. [ 1 ]
The capital budget also includes $600 million for new construction and facility upgrades at Ohio's public schools and $575 million for local infrastructure projects such as roads and water and ...
Hundreds of projects are lined up to get a piece of a $700 million pie that state lawmakers are dishing out. Several local projects in line for money from Ohio's $700 million 'super duper fund ...
The Intel Corporation's January 2022 announcement of its plans to build a $20 billion computer chip manufacturing operation just south of Johnstown was clearly the top story of 2022 in Licking ...
The James and Sophia Clemens Farmstead is a historic farm situated in western Darke County, Ohio, United States.Located at 467 Stingley Road, [1] approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) from the Indiana border, [2] it is among the oldest remaining buildings of a small community of free African-Americans founded before the Civil War.
This log cabin was built in 1805 by Zachariah Price Dewitt and Elizabeth Dewitt and is the oldest extant structure in the Oxford Township of Butler County, Ohio. It is the only remaining home of the several built by pioneers along the Four-Mile Creek, just east of what is now the Miami University campus.