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Bainbridge IGA store, formerly at corner of Rt. 306 and Chagrin Road. Named for Commodore William Bainbridge, it is the only Bainbridge Township statewide. The village of Bainbridge, Ohio, is located in Ross County, in Southern Ohio. The first residents of Bainbridge were the McConougheys, who came from Blandford, Massachusetts. Many other ...
Location of Ross County in Ohio. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Ross County, Ohio. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Ross County, Ohio, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which ...
Bainbridge is a village in Ross County, Ohio, United States, along Paint Creek. The population was 765 at the 2020 census . Bainbridge is the location of Pike Lake State Park .
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Sykes, who had served as minority leader in the Ohio House, defeated Republican Madison Gesiotto Gilbert in 2022 in a newly redrawn 13th District that put all of Summit County in the same voting bloc.
This episode explores scary attractions across the nation: a motel next to a cemetery that's a Coulrophobia's worst nightmare, a morbid museum that houses haunted artifacts like a demonic Raggedy Ann doll, an old western ranch with a 19th-century schoolhouse that's reportedly haunted by a schoolmarm and her students, a historic Mississippi town ...
Capernaum (Hancock County) - small town named after biblical city in Amanda Township; Cass (Hancock County) - small town in Cass Township; Claylick, Licking County Located at the intersection of Claylick and the Licking River, this was one of the largest towns to be destroyed and caused primarily by 2 floods 1 in 1919 and 1 in 1959. After the ...
Ross County was formed by proclamation of Governor St. Clair, August 20, 1798, being the sixth county formed in the Northwest Territory. [5]Ross County was described by Ephraim George Squier and Edwin Hamilton Davis as having almost "one hundred enclosures of various sizes, and five hundred mounds" in their book, Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley (1848).