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Amano Artisan Chocolate was founded by Art Pollard in 2005, in Orem, Utah. [2] Pollard's first harvest for the company was some rare white beans he got from Villahermosa, Mexico that same year. [3] Up until 2015, Amano only manufactured single-origin chocolates. [4]
Loveland is a city in Hamilton, Clermont, and Warren counties in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Ohio.The population was 13,307 at the 2020 census. [13] Considered part of the Cincinnati metropolitan area, Loveland is located near exit 52 off Interstate 275, about 15 miles (24 km) northeast of the Cincinnati city limits.
Loveland is a city in Hamilton, Clermont, and Warren counties in southwestern Ohio, near exit 52 off Interstate 275, about fifteen miles northeast of the Cincinnati city line. It borders Symmes, Miami and Hamilton Townships. The population was 11,677 at the 2000 census
The major roads are US Route 22/Ohio 3, also known as the 3C Highway and originally known as the Cincinnati, Montgomery, and Hopkinsville pike. The Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad , which was absorbed by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad , ran through the southeast corner of the township, while the Little Miami Railroad followed the Little Miami ...
In 1853, the Little Miami Railroad was completed, connecting the township to Cincinnati. Symmes Township survived a 1994 attempt to merge with Loveland, [6] as well as efforts the following year to incorporate most of Symmes and Deerfield Townships as the City of Heritage. [7]
The area covering the City of Milford, O'Bannon (now Miami) Township, and part of the City of Loveland is from a single 1788 survey by John Nancarrow, a Revolutionary War veteran from Virginia. As one of Clermont County's major historians noted, "No wonder, then, that it struck with rapture the quaint and eccentric John Nancarrow, who had it ...
Milford is a city in Clermont and Hamilton counties in the U.S. state of Ohio. [6] Milford is the westernmost city in Appalachian Ohio, [7] and located along the Little Miami River and its East Fork in the southwestern part of the state, it is a part of the Cincinnati metropolitan area.
Cincinnati's public library was among the first to try providing service to patrons on Sunday. Starting in March 1871, the reading rooms at the main library were open from 8am to 10pm. Sunday library service was so popular that, according to library director William F. Poole , "often during the afternoon and evenings every seat has been occupied".