Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
43939. Area code. 740. FIPS code. 39-52990 [3] GNIS feature ID. 1086380 [1] Mount Pleasant Township is one of the fourteen townships of Jefferson County, Ohio, United States. The 2020 census found 2,191 people in the township.
Jefferson County was organized on July 29, 1797, by proclamation of Governor Arthur St. Clair, six years before Ohio was granted statehood. Its boundaries were originally quite large, including all of northeastern Ohio east of the Cuyahoga River, but it was divided and redrawn several times before assuming its present-day boundaries in 1833, after the formation of neighboring Carroll County.
UTC-4 (EDT) FIPS code. 39-80878 [3] GNIS feature ID. 1086388 [1] Warren Township is one of the fourteen townships of Jefferson County, Ohio, United States. The 2020 census found 3,832 people in the township.
Sep. 3—Mt. Pleasant-area homes that have endured for generations will be showcased this month during the Westmoreland Historical Society's latest Historic House Tour. The self-guided tour runs ...
Designated NHLDCP. June 28, 1974. The Benjamin Lundy House is a historic house at Union and Market Streets in Mount Pleasant, Ohio. It was home in 1820 to abolitionist Benjamin Lundy (1789–1839), where he established the influential anti-slavery newspaper The Genius of Universal Emancipation, one of the first anti-slavery publications in the ...
Gannett. Nathan Hart, Columbus Dispatch. September 19, 2024 at 8:44 AM. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources is urging the public to use water "wisely" as the state's drought continues. The ...
Area code. 740. FIPS code. 39-52976 [3] GNIS feature ID. 2399415 [2] Mount Pleasant is a village in southern Jefferson County, Ohio, United States. The population was 394 at the 2020 census. It is part of the Weirton–Steubenville metropolitan area.
Added to NRHP. June 28, 1974 [1] Designated NHLD. April 5, 2005 [2] The Mount Pleasant Historic District encompasses the historic center of the village of Mount Pleasant, Ohio. Founded in 1803 by anti-slavery Quakers, the village was an early center of abolitionist activity and a well-known haven for fugitive slaves on the Underground Railroad.