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At the close of the 1920s, the Broadway commercial district was home to numerous bakeries, banks, businesses, and music stores. [85] It was the largest shopping district out of Cleveland's downtown, [86] and with 90,000 residents in the area North Broadway was the second-largest Czech community in the United States (only Chicago was larger). [87]
This 1905 Swiss Chalet Revival style house was built for Frederick W. Bomonti, a famous Swiss American restaurateur in Cleveland. It is an exemplar of the type of architecture favored by Swiss Americans, a large and influential immigrant group in Cleveland in the late 1800s. 19: Broadway Avenue Historic District: Broadway Avenue Historic District
Early in the 20th century, Cleveland was a city on the rise and was known as the "Sixth City" due to its position as the sixth largest U.S. city at the time. [ 39 ] Its businesses included automotive companies such as Peerless, People's, Jordan, Chandler, and Winton, maker of the first car driven across the U.S.
Collinwood is a historical area in the northeast part of Cleveland, Ohio.Originally a village in Euclid Township, it was annexed by the city in 1910.Collinwood grew around the rail yards of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway (now CSX) and is divided by these same tracks into the neighborhoods of North Shore Collinwood and Collinwood–Nottingham.
Irishtown Bend is the name given to both a former Irish American neighborhood and a landform located on the Flats of the west bank of the Cuyahoga River in the city of Cleveland in the U.S. state of Ohio in the United States. The landform consists of a tight meander in the Cuyahoga River, and the steep hillside above this meander.
Designated NHS. October 11, 2000. The Saxton House, former home of Ida Saxton McKinley. First Ladies National Historic Site is a United States National Historic Site located in Canton, Ohio. During her residency in Washington, D.C. Mary Regula, wife of Ohio representative Ralph Regula, spoke regularly about the nation's first ladies.
In the 1950s, Cleveland's Innerbelt Freeway cut through the Euclid Avenue neighborhood between downtown and the rail crossing at East 55th Street. By the 1960s, the street that once rivaled Fifth Avenue as the most expensive address in the United States was a two-mile (3 km) long slum of commercial buildings and substandard housing.
Stump Hollow Farm: No available image Hanna, Howard Melville Jr.(1877–1945) [205] and Jean Claire(1882-1973) Owners(1927 -1948) [206] President & Chairman of M. A. Hanna Company: 1927 6055-23 [102] Private Residence Walker and Weeks [207] 100: Kirtland Hills: 9011 Booth Road [208] Tract-1 Lot-37 [209] Manor House Farm [210] Morley Manor House ...