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Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Depot: March 31, 1975 (#75002166) July 29, 1977: B&O RR jct. Willard: Former B&O railroad junction 2: Dr. David De Forest Benedict House: Dr. David De Forest Benedict House: January 23, 1975 (#75001439) May 12, 2016: 80 Seminary St.
Benedict School at 134 Benedict Avenue is now home of the Board of Education offices. [14] It was closed in either 1980 or 1981 along with Bronson-Norwalk. [15] In the 1970s, NCSD tried grade "clustering" in their system and paired Benedict with Bronson-Norwalk. Benedict would house grades K-3 and then send those students to Bronson-Norwalk for ...
This was the first permanent residence established within the limits of Norwalk. [citation needed] In May 1818, the county seat was successfully removed from Avery, Ohio, to Norwalk. Benedict was the first white permanent settler in Norwalk, [8] when he came with his wife, Sarah DeForest, and their children. His descendants remained prominent ...
The Huron County Courthouse and Jail is located by a busy downtown intersection in Norwalk, Ohio, United States. The ground floor is composed of rusticated blocks and recessed arched windows. The entrance is reached by a flight of stairs and a protruding portico. Two small windows frame either side of the entrance.
Benedict House (Lawrence, Kansas), listed on the NRHP in Douglas County; Benedict House (Portsmouth, New Hampshire), listed on the NRHP in Rockingham County; Sarah Benedict House, Cleveland, Ohio, listed on the NRHP in Cleveland; Dr. David De Forest Benedict House, Norwalk, Ohio, listed on the NRHP in Huron County
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Benedict was born in Norwalk, Ohio, the youngest of seven children of David DeForrest Benedict, MD and Harriott Melvina Benedict (née Deaver). Dr. Benedict had been a Union Surgeon in the American Civil War. [2] She was a niece of oil magnate and philanthropist, Louis Severance. [3]