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The paper was founded in 1879 by former Pittsburgh Gazette city editor William McCord as a weekly paper called The Saturday Review, launching on October 29 of that year. In 1885, the paper increased its publication to a daily basis, a frequency the paper maintains to the present. Following this change, the paper was retitled The Evening News ...
The Buchtelite (student newspaper at the University of Akron) - Akron; The Suburbanite - Akron; Mr. Thrifty Shoppers - Alliance; The Athens News - Athens; The Post (student newspaper at Ohio University) - Athens; Cleveland Jewish News - Beachwood; News on the Green - Brookfield; Harrison News-Herald - Cadiz; The Journal and The Noble County ...
The Richard L. Cawood Residence was built in 1923 by Richard Cawood in East Liverpool, Ohio. Cawood was the president of Patterson foundry and owned a steel mill. He had an intense interest in architecture and design and often designed smaller houses. [2] The design of the house evolved over ten years.
The Alliance Review; The Athens Messenger; Athens News (Ohio) B. Bellefontaine Examiner; The Blade (Toledo, Ohio) ... The Review (East Liverpool) S. Sandusky Register;
East Liverpool is a city in southeastern Columbiana County, Ohio, United States.The population was 9,958 at the 2020 census. [6] It lies along the Ohio River at the intersection of Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia about 30 miles (48 km) from both Pittsburgh and Youngstown.
Black Ohioans has been experiencing housing inequality since the Civil War and responses towards it have greatly varied from the northern and southern parts of the state. . Certain ideals challenged the state during this time coinciding with the thought that southern Ohio was a "white mans state" even though the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 under the Articles of Confederation invited the mot Oh
Ikirt House, in East Liverpool, Ohio, was built in 1888. The house is an example of a variety of architectural styles including Second Empire, Eastlake movement, and elements of Queen Anne style architecture. [2] The house was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in May 1980. [1]
Born in 1851, Cassius Clark Thompson was a major player in East Liverpool's dominant pottery industry; he was the owner of a prosperous pottery firm that had been founded in 1868. Intending to build himself a house, he purchased a hillside lot on the southeastern edge of downtown, finding the site's view of the nearby Ohio River highly ...