Bellaire aerial photograph   Save
Bellaire, Ohio Collection
Description: Elevated panoramic photograph taken near the town of Bellaire, Ohio, during the early 20th century. Written at the bottom of a matching photograph is the caption "Georgetown from Tunnel Hill." Bellaire, incorporated in 1857, is located at the confluence of McMahon Creek and the Ohio River in Belmont County, Ohio. Bridges spanning the river connect people and railroads to West Virginia. Jacob Davis acquired the land on which the town was eventually laid out in 1802, naming it Bel Air after his home in Maryland. His son, Jacob Davis, Jr., laid out the town in 1834. Multiple variations of the town name were used in the early 19th century: when the first post office was established in 1841 the town was listed as Bell Air, and after 1870, the town was called Bellaire. Several railroads built lines through Bellaire in the 1850s that stimulated the growth of local industries such as coal mining, clay, limestone and glass manufacturing. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV88_B01F03_01
Subjects: Bellaire (Ohio); Ohio River; Bridges--Ohio; Landscape photography; Aerial views;
Places: Bellaire (Ohio); Belmont County (Ohio)