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The basement of the St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Terrace Park contains a museum of the Terrace Park Historical Society that includes the history of the Robinson Circus. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Gallery
St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Terrace Park. The primary document for the history of Terrace Park is "A Place Called Terrace Park" by Ellis Rawnsley (1992). [5] Rawnsley notes that the earliest human inhabitants of Terrace Park may have arrived as early as 12,000 years ago—the Paleo-Indians. Although "no traces of established settlements have ...
St. Thomas Episcopal Church (Slaterville Springs, New York) St. Thomas Episcopal Church (Bath, North Carolina) St. Thomas Episcopal Church (Port Clinton, Ohio) St. Thomas Episcopal Church (Terrace Park, Ohio) St. Thomas' Episcopal Church (Canyon City, Oregon) African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
St. Thomas Catholic Church (Coeur d'Alene, Idaho), National Register of Historic Places in Kootenai County, Idaho St. Thomas Church and Convent , Chicago, Illinois St. Thomas Episcopal Church (Sioux City, Iowa)
Saint Francis De Sales Catholic Church (Cincinnati, Ohio) St. James Episcopal Church (Boardman, Ohio) St. James Episcopal Church (Painesville, Ohio) St. James Episcopal Church (Zanesville, Ohio) St. John the Baptist Catholic Church (Glandorf, Ohio) Saint John the Evangelist Catholic Church (Logan, Ohio) St. John's Episcopal Church (Cleveland, Ohio)
The Diocese of Southern Ohio was created from the Diocese of Ohio in 1875. The diocese's original cathedral, St. Paul Episcopal Cathedral, Cincinnati, was located in downtown Cincinnati but was demolished in 1937 due to structural problems.
The 1965 Palm Sunday tornado outbreak was a historic severe weather event that affected the Midwestern and Southeastern United States on April 10–12, 1965. The tornado outbreak produced 55 confirmed tornadoes in one day and 16 hours.
St. Thomas' Episcopal Church (St. Thomas' Guild Hall ; St. Thomas' Rectory) is a parish in the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio. Its historic Gothic Revival style church, at 214 E. Second Street in Port Clinton, Ohio, was built in 1896. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.