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39 matches on "Sycamore (Ohio)"
Dr. Walton's residence in Sycamore, Ohio
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Dr. Walton's residence in Sycamore, Ohio  Save
Description: This photograph shows a family posed on the porch of a home identified as Dr. Walton's house in Sycamore, Ohio. Five adults and two children are on the large front porch with doric columns. Photograph by Harry Evan Kinley (1882-1969), a native of nearby Upper Sandusky, Ohio. Kinley was active in local events and organizations, and spent his professional career as a clerk at his father's store, and later as a traveling salesman for the Marion Paper & Supply Company (1934-1962). Kinley was also an avid lifelong photographer, and the bulk of the Harry Kinley Collection is comprised of glass plate negatives documenting the Kinley family, the city of Upper Sandusky and Wyandot County and surrounding areas. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV30_B01F03_09
Subjects: Families--Ohio; Houses; Photographers--Ohio
Places: Sycamore (Ohio); Wyandot County (Ohio);
 
Sycamore Hill, Cincinnati, Ohio
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Sycamore Hill, Cincinnati, Ohio  Save
Description: Steps from Dorchester Street to Sycamore Hill in Cincinnati View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B04F01_022_01
Subjects: Cincinnati (Ohio)
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
Group photograph at Dr. Walton's in Sycamore, Ohio
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Group photograph at Dr. Walton's in Sycamore, Ohio  Save
Description: The photograph shows a group of five seated on a porch. Two men sit in rocking chairs, and three women sit on the porch steps in front of them. Photograph by Harry Evan Kinley (1882-1969), a native of Upper Sandusky, Ohio. Kinley was active in local events and organizations, and spent his professional career as a clerk at his father's store, and later as a traveling salesman for the Marion Paper & Supply Company (1934-1962). Kinley was also an avid lifelong photographer, and the bulk of the Harry Kinley Collection is comprised of glass plate negatives documenting the Kinley family, the city of Upper Sandusky and Wyandot County and surrounding areas. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV30_B01F03_64
Subjects: Families--Ohio; Daily Life; Portrait photography; Photographers--Ohio
Places: Sycamore (Ohio); Wyandot County (Ohio);
 
Two children at Dr. Walton's
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Two children at Dr. Walton's  Save
Description: This photograph shows a boy and a girl sitting in a rocking chair outside a home identified as Dr Walton's in Sycamore, Ohio. The boy wears a patterned shirt, tie, and dark pants, and the girl wears a light colored dress, dark stockings, and a white bow in her hair. Photograph by Harry Evan Kinley (1882-1969), a native of Upper Sandusky, Ohio. Kinley was active in local events and organizations, and spent his professional career as a clerk at his father's store, and later as a traveling salesman for the Marion Paper & Supply Company (1934-1962). Kinley was also an avid lifelong photographer, and the bulk of the Harry Kinley Collection is comprised of glass plate negatives documenting the Kinley family, the city of Upper Sandusky and Wyandot County and surrounding areas. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV30_B01F03_65
Subjects: Families--Ohio; Children--Ohio; Rural life
Places: Sycamore (Ohio); Wyandot County (Ohio)
 
Group portrait at Walton's
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Group portrait at Walton's  Save
Description: The photograph shows a group portrait taken on the front porch of Dr. Walton's home in Sycamore, Ohio. Two men stand behind three women sitting on a bench. A pillow lies on the ground at the women's feet. The men are in suits and the women are in white tops and long skirts, with the woman on the left wearing glasses. All but the woman and man on the right look away from the camera. Photograph by Harry Evan Kinley (1882-1969), a native of Upper Sandusky, Ohio. Kinley was active in local events and organizations, and spent his professional career as a clerk at his father's store, and later as a travelling salesman for the Marion Paper & Supply Company (1934-1962). Kinley was also an avid lifelong photographer, and the bulk of the Harry Kinley Collection is comprised of glass plate negatives documenting the Kinley family, the city of Upper Sandusky and Wyandot County and surrounding areas. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV30_B01F01_09
Subjects: Family life; Daily Life; Portrait photography--United States--History
Places: Sycamore (Ohio); Wyandot County (Ohio);
 
Boys and girls at Dr. Walton's
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Boys and girls at Dr. Walton's  Save
Description: This photograph shows three young women and two young men on a porch, taken at Dr. Walton's house in Sycamore, Ohio. Harry Kinley sits on the left. Photograph from the collection of Harry Evan Kinley (1882-1969), a native of Upper Sandusky, Ohio. Kinley was active in local events and organizations, and spent his professional career as a clerk at his father's store, and later as a traveling salesman for the Marion Paper & Supply Company (1934-1962). Kinley was also an avid lifelong photographer, and the bulk of the Harry Kinley Collection is comprised of glass plate negatives documenting the Kinley family, the city of Upper Sandusky and Wyandot County and surrounding areas. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AV30_B01F03_36
Subjects: Families--Ohio; Daily Life; Portrait photography; Photographers--Ohio
Places: Sycamore (Ohio); Wyandot County (Ohio);
 
Upper Sandusky Sycamore photograph
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Upper Sandusky Sycamore photograph  Save
Description: This tree, known as the Upper Sandusky Sycamore, was located near Upper Sandusky in Wyandot County, Ohio, ca. 1885-1889. The tree had a circumference of 41 feet and was at one time said to be the largest tree east of the Rocky Mountains. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL02654
Subjects: Upper Sandusky (Ohio); Ohio History--Natural and Native Ohio; Trees
Places: Upper Sandusky (Ohio); Wyandot County (Ohio)
 
Cincinnati - Central Parkway
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Cincinnati - Central Parkway  Save
Description: Reverse says: "Central Parkway now and how it looked in Canal days." Steeped in history, this parkway of 23.8 acres extends for 4.5 miles from downtown to the edge of Cumminsville - from Broadway and Reading Road, turning right at Plum, to Liberty, to Harrison and the Western Hills Viaduct, to its terminal at Ludlow, below Mt. Storm Park. It was acquired in 1931 by the Park Board from the Board of Rapid Transit Commissions. Trees and shrubs were planted - those of a variety to endure the atmospheric and soil conditions of the downtown section, particularly the English maple, the Oriental plane tree, and the elm - three types found to be best fitted for growth in metropolitan confines. The English maples were moved to Ault Park and replaced by crabapples when the parkway islands were narrowed. London plane tree replaced most of the oriental plane trees and red oak, the elms. During the construction of Central Parkway, many gifts of trees were made. These are a part of landscape now so familiar to Parkway travelers. The Daughters of the American Revolution placed at the Central Parkway and Ludlow Avenue intersection a bronze tablet in memory of Major General Arthur St. Clair, who was an officer in the Revolutionary War, first governor of the Northwest Territory, and the man who gave Cincinnati its name. A historical marker, erected under the Ohio Revolutionary Memorial Commission's plan, stands at Central Parkway and Sycamore where the two Ohio trails branched. Reading Road following the marches of Bowman, Clark, Harmar, Harrison, Clay and Shelby; and Central Parkway folloing the route of St. Clair and Mad Anthony Wayne - brave names in those days of pioneer drumbeat and marching soldiers and frontiersmen in buckskin. The old Miami and Erie Canal which came later on the Central Parkway site did not erase those indelible footsteps from history. The canal itself is gone, a small remnant left of the $6,000,000 project started in 1825 to provide a 244-mile waterway between Cincinnati and Toledo. Yet the old canal, too, is remembered by a marker commemorating it at Central Parkway and Ezzard Charles Drive. Here was the site of a major medium of commerce. Here was the "Rhine," the boundary of the Over-the-Rhine section where Cincinnatians, in a wide-open city, crossed the Vine Street Bridge to the other side of the canal, listened to the little German bands and drank beer in their favorite saloons of the carved-mahogany-bar variety. There was the oom-pah-pah of the music and the clack of man-sized mugs, as the citizens fondled handle-bar moustaches and discussed the canal traffic. In the old canal, many of the notables of Cincinnati went for a swim in their boyhood days, and they loved every single minute of it. Central Parkway is one of the major parkways in a citywide network envisioned in the 1907 park plan by George Kessler. Extending along the former route of the old Miami & Erie Canal, central Parkway was developed in conjunction with a rapid transit railway, which was to run in a tunnel created in the old canal bed. Construction of the railway began in 1920, but ceased in 1927 when funds ran out. The system was never completed because the growing popularity of the automobile greatly diminished the need or desire for mass rail transit. When it was dedicated in 1928, Central Parkway featured broad central islands with concrete walks, trees, benches, ornamental street lamps and circular ventilators for the subway below. This scheme was mush simpler than that proposed by Kessler. In the 1950s, increasing auto traffic led to widening the roadways at the expense of the medians and fixtures, with the exception of the streetlights. In 1990, the remaining medians were replanted. Between main and Sycamore Streets, an historic marker capped with a silhouette of a Conestoga Wagon party marks the confluence of two 18th-century military trails. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B04F02_01_01
Subjects: Historical markers--Ohio--Cincinnati; Parks--Ohio--Cincinnati; Canals--Ohio--History; Miami and Erie Canal (Ohio); Waterways--Canals--Miami & Erie Canal; Central Parkway Area (Cincinnati, Ohio)
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
Miamisburg aqueduct bridge
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Miamisburg aqueduct bridge  Save
Description: Typed on reverse: "Montgomery Co., Miamisburg, O., Jan. 1938. Aqueduct." This photograph shows a bridge over an aqueduct, likely over the Miami and Erie Canal at Sycamore Creek in Miamisburg, Ohio, near the curve of 4th Street and Canal Street. The Miami and Erie Canal was constructed between 1825 and 1845, eventually connecting the Ohio River at Cincinnati with Lake Erie at Toledo through the western corridor of the state. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B09F04_006_001
Subjects: Aqueducts; Canals--Ohio--Pictorial works; Canals--Ohio--Dayton; Miami and Erie Canal (Ohio); Ohio--History--Pictorial works; Federal Writers' Project
Places: Miamisburg (Ohio); Montgomery County (Ohio)
 
Military trail marker in Cincinnati
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Military trail marker in Cincinnati  Save
Description: Caption on reverse reads: "Indian Trail Marker (Silhouette). Central Pky. and Sycamore Str." This photograph shows a plaque with the silhouette of soldiers and a covered wagon on top, held between two concrete pillars. It used to stand somewhere near the intersections of Reading Road, Central Parkway and Sycamore Street, in Cincinnati. Inscription reads: "Approximately at this point two Ohio military trails branched. Reading Road follows the marches of Bowman, Clark, Harmar, Harrison, Clay and Shelby, 1779 - 1812. Central Parkway follows the route of St. Clair and Wayne, 1791 - 1793." A historical marker, erected under the Ohio Revolutionary Memorial Commission's plan, stands at Central Parkway and Sycamore where the two Ohio trails branched. Reading Road following the marches of Bowman, Clark, Harmar, Harrison, Clay and Shelby; and Central Parkway folloing the route of St. Clair and Mad Anthony Wayne - brave names in those days of pioneer drumbeat and marching soldiers and frontiersmen in buckskin. The Daughters of the American Revolution placed at the Central Parkway and Ludlow Avenue intersection a bronze tablet in memory of Major General Arthur St. Clair, who was an officer in the Revolutionary War, first governor of the Northwest Territory, and the man who gave Cincinnati its name. Major General Arthur St. Clair left Fort Washington, in present day Cincinnati, on September 17, 1791, following the aforementioned trail north, in order to build a fort at the head of the Maumee River. An large group of Indians led by Little Turtle and Blue Jacket, as well as army deserters and prisoners, left Kekionga in Indiana, heading south. The Indians had been receiving information about the army's movements from warrior scouts and deserters, and a large group led by Little Turtle and Blue Jacket headed south to intercept St. Clair's army. A battle ensued near what is now Fort Recovery in which most of St. Clair's officers were killed, causing him to lose his post and his reputation.General Anthony Wayne returned in 3 years with properly trained, well-equipped army, and defeated the Indians at Fallen Timbers near Toledo. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B09F10_021_1
Subjects: Historical markers--Ohio--Cincinnati; Indian trails--Ohio; Central Parkway Area (Cincinnati, Ohio); Memorials--Ohio; Wayne, Anthony, 1745-1796; St. Clair, Arthur, 1734-1818
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
Steamer Tom Greene
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Steamer Tom Greene  Save
Description: Reverse reads: "STEAMER 'TOM GREENE' AT WHARF FOOT OF SYCAMORE STR. STEAMER 'TOM GREENE' at wharf-foot of Sycamore Street. Cincinnati,Ohio,1940" Tom Greene seems to have been a notable steamboat captain. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B12F01_010_001
Subjects: Steamboats; Ohio River
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
View of Sycamore Street in Cincinnati
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View of Sycamore Street in Cincinnati  Save
Description: Original description reads: "View down Sycamore Street, Cincinnati". View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B04F02_42_01
Subjects: Street photography; Cincinnati (Ohio)
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
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