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February 7, 1978 (West of Springfield off State Route 4: Bethel Township: 9: Kenton-Hunt Farm: Kenton-Hunt Farm: February 8, 1980 (North of Springfield at 4690 Urbana Rd.
The Glen Helen Nature Preserve is a nature reserve immediately east of Yellow Springs, Ohio, United States.The initial 700-acre parcel was given to Antioch College by Hugh Taylor Birch in memory of his daughter Helen Birch Bartlet in 1929, [1] and is the largest private nature preserve in the region.
Developed during Springfield's industrial growth of the 1850s to the 1920s, the South Fountain Avenue Historic District encompasses about 15 square blocks south of downtown Springfield, across the street from South High School. Among its prominent early residents were Oliver S. Kelly, [1] William N. Whiteley, and Francis Bookwalter. [2]
The Clark County Heritage Center is a Romanesque architecture-style building in central Springfield, Ohio, United States.Originally built for the city's offices in 1890, it is now the location of the Clark County Historical Society (founded in 1897), which includes a museum, research library and archives.
The park spans more than 2,500 acres (1,000 ha) and is the second largest in the system. The park has reservable picnic areas and shelters with Great Parks Catering available. Winton Woods also offers an 18-hole disc golf course, 2.6-miles of paved trails, a 1.1-mile Parcours fitness trail, 0.7-mile Great Oaks, a 1.1-mile long Kingfisher nature ...
Springfield is a city in and the county seat of Clark County, Ohio, United States. [5] The municipality is located in southwestern Ohio and is situated on the Mad River , Buck Creek, and Beaver Creek, about 45 miles (72 km) west of Columbus and 25 miles (40 km) northeast of Dayton .
The warning about “our beloved pets” appeared for the first time in early September, in a post on a community Facebook page called Springfield Ohio Crime and Information.. The post claimed a ...
The City of Forest Park, Ohio was founded in 1956, two years after private developers Marvin Warner and Joseph Kanter purchased 3,400 acres of 5,930 acres north of Cincinnati originally set aside in 1935 by the Resettlement Administration under President Franklin D. Roosevelt to relocate struggling urban and rural families to one of three such communities planned by the government called ...