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08000115 [1] Added to NRHP. February 28, 2008. Vine Street Hill Cemetery is a notable nonprofit cemetery located at 3701 Vine Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. The cemetery was originally known as the German Evangelical Protestant Cemetery on Carthage Road or just Carthage Road Cemetery, located three and one half miles from the City of Cincinnati.
Vine Street functions as Cincinnati's central thoroughfare. It bisects the downtown neighborhood, as well as the adjacent Over-the-Rhine neighborhood. The street also serves as the dividing line for the "east" and "west" sides of the city. All east-west addresses in the city start at zero at Vine Street. It heads mostly north-northeast from the ...
Opened. 1905. Closed. 1955, ca. 1970. Years active. 1980–present. Website. www.bogarts.com. Bogart's is a music venue located in the Corryville neighborhood of Cincinnati, Ohio, near the University of Cincinnati, across Vine Street from the former Sudsy Malone's Rock 'n Roll Laundry & Bar.
John Church Company Building. John Church Company Building. June 17, 1994. (#94000592) 14–16 E. 4th St. 39°06′01″N 84°30′43″W / 39.100278°N 84.511944°W / 39.100278; -84.511944 (John Church Company Building) 7. Cincinnati and Suburban Telephone Company Building. Cincinnati and Suburban Telephone Company Building.
West Fourth Street Historic District is a registered historic district in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, listed in the National Register of Historic Places on August 13, 1976. It contained 32 contributing buildings when it was listed, [1] but an additional building, 309 Vine Street, was added in a 2015 boundary increase.
November 13, 1985. The Cincinnati Enquirer Building is the former headquarters building of The Cincinnati Enquirer on Vine Street in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio. It was designed by the firm of Lockwood Greene and Company and completed in 1926. [1] The newspaper had been published from premises on the same site since 1866.
Local Historic Landmark is a designation of the Cincinnati City Council for historic buildings and other sites in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.Many of these landmarks are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places, providing federal tax support for preservation, and some are further designated National Historic Landmarks, providing additional federal oversight.
Cincinnati Rhinelanders, 1888. Over-the-Rhine, also known as "Cincinnati's Rhineland", and the "Rhineland of America", is a German cultural district of Cincinnati, Ohio. [2][3][4] Over-the-Rhine is among the largest, most intact urban historic districts in the United States. [5] Germans from Ohio are known as "Ohio Rhinelanders" (German: Ohio ...