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Pages in category "People from Boardman, Ohio" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B. Homer C. Blake;
Forest Lawn Memorial Park is a nonsectarian cemetery located in Boardman Township, Mahoning County, Ohio, United States. It was built in the 1930s and added to the National Register in 2018. [2] [3] Notable burials at Forest Lawn include MLB infielder Floyd Baker (1916–2004) and actress Elizabeth Hartman (1943–1987). [4] [5]
Boardman Township is one of the fourteen townships of Mahoning County, Ohio, United States. The population was 40,213 at the 2020 census . [ 4 ] It is a suburb directly south of Youngstown and the second-largest municipality in the Youngstown–Warren metropolitan area .
Dolly Johnson (born late 1820s, died after 1887), in later life known as Aunt Dolly, was a small-business owner and domestic worker, remembered in Greeneville, Tennessee as one of the best cooks in the region. Andrew Johnson, who became the 17th president of the United States in 1865, enslaved Dolly from 1843 until 1863.
Boardman Bikes, a British bicycle manufacturer founded by cyclist Chris Boardman; Boardman Books, a British publishing company; Boardman High School (Mahoning County, Ohio), a public high school in Boardman, Ohio, United States; Boardman Center Middle School, a public middle school in Boardman, Ohio; Boardman House (disambiguation), various houses
Fran Norris (1911 – 1988), or "Aunt Fran" was a children's television pioneer, best known for her TV program "Aunt Fran and Her Playmates" which aired from 1950 to 1957 over WBNS-TV in Columbus, Ohio.
On 18 April 1904, voters approved a resolution to establish a high school in Boardman. Prior to 1904, students attended eight one-room schoolhouses scattered throughout the township. Later that year, the first centralized school was built on Market Street near the site of the present Boardman Center Intermediate School.
Boardman was born in Burma, the son of the Baptist missionaries George Dana Boardman and Sarah Hall Boardman.He returned to the United States as a boy and attended Worcester Academy in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he graduated in 1846, and then Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, where he graduated in 1852.