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Roughly bounded by Public Square, Euclid Ave. to E. 17th St., and E. 21st St.; also 205 St. Clair Ave., 1370 Ontario St., and 1796-1808 E. 13th St.; also 1835 to 1937 Prospect Ave. East 41°30′02″N 81°41′12″W / 41.500556°N 81.686667°W / 41.500556; -81.686667 ( Euclid Avenue Historic
Northerly view of St. Clair Avenue near the intersection of E. 62nd Street. St. Clair–Superior is a neighborhood on the East Side in Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States. Largely settled in the 1880s and 1890s by Eastern European immigrants, white flight in the 1990s left the neighborhood largely African American. It is one of the oldest and ...
105th and Euclid prior to Euclid's 2008 reconstruction. East 105th Street and Euclid Avenue was at one time the most famous intersection in the city of Cleveland, Ohio.The legendary commercial junction consists of several blocks from East to West between 107th Street and 105th Street.
The Euclid Avenue Historic District is a historic district in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States. Established and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002, it comprises 125 acres (51 ha) along Euclid Avenue and parallel streets from Public Square to East 21st Street. In 2007, another 4 acres (1.6 ha) was added to the ...
Sylvester T. Everett mansion on Euclid Avenue (since demolished), designed by Charles F. Schweinfurth. Euclid Avenue is a major street in Cleveland, Ohio, United States.It runs northeasterly from Public Square in Downtown Cleveland, passing Playhouse Square and Cleveland State University, to University Circle, the Cleveland Clinic, Severance Hall, Case Western Reserve University's Maltz ...
Location of Lake County in Ohio. This is a list of historic country estates in Lake County, Ohio built between the years 1895 and 1930. Around 1885 the city of Cleveland, Ohio was home to an estimated 70 millionaires.
The land currently comprising South Euclid was part of the Western Reserve, obtained via treaty with the Iroquois confederation in 1796 by the Connecticut Land Company. In 1797, Moses Cleaveland named the area east of the Cuyahoga River Euclid, after the Greek mathematician and "patron saint" of surveyors. Euclid Township was officially formed ...
The house was the last grand house built on Euclid and was to be the family home of the large Mather clan which included four children, Samuel Livingston (b. 1882) named after his father, Amasa Stone (b. 1884) named for his grandfather on his mother's side, Constance (b. 1889) and Philip Richard (b. 1894).