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    7 matches on "Venice (Ohio)"
    Water Power Mill photograph
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    Water Power Mill photograph  Save
    Description: This mill was on the Venice mill-race of Erie County, Ohio. A mill-race is an artificial channel that was created to power mills. Many different types of mills were set up along the Venice mill-race. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B05F01A_009_1
    Subjects: Erie County (Ohio); Water mills--Ohio--History; Venice (Ohio)
    Places: Venice (Ohio); Erie County (Ohio)
     
    Water Power Mill photograph
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    Water Power Mill photograph  Save
    Description: This mill was on the Venice mill-race of Erie County, Ohio. A mill-race is an artificial channel that was created to power mills. Many different types of mills were set up along the Venice mill-race. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B05F01A_008_1
    Subjects: Venice (Ohio); Groundwater--Ohio--Erie County--Maps; Erie County (Ohio)--History
    Places: Venice (Ohio); Erie County (Ohio)
     
    Water Power Mill photograph
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    Water Power Mill photograph  Save
    Description: This mill was on the Venice mill-race of Erie County, Ohio. A mill-race is an artificial channel that was created to power mills. Many different types of mills were set up along the Venice mill-race. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B05F01A_023_1
    Subjects: Water mills; Venice (Ohio); Erie County (Ohio)--History; Water-supply--Ohio--Erie County--Maps
    Places: Venice (Ohio); Erie County (Ohio)
     
    Basilica di San Marco, Venice, Italy
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    Basilica di San Marco, Venice, Italy  Save
    Description: Stereoview photograph of pedestrians on the plaza outside the Basilica di San Marco in Venice, Italy, ca. 1898. The Basilica, also known as Saint Mark's Basilica, was consecrated in 1094 and completed over the next several centuries. It is one of the most well-known of Venice's churches. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL03907
    Subjects: Venice (Italy); Other--Non Ohio; Tourists
    Places: Venice (Italy)
     
    William Dean Howells photograph
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    William Dean Howells photograph  Save
    Description: This is a portrait of journalist and author William Dean Howells, ca. 1900. Howells was born on March 1, 1837, in Martinsville (now Martins Ferry), Ohio, but later moved with his family to Hamilton, Dayton, Xenia, Columbus, Ashtabula and finally Jefferson. By his early 20s, Howells had become a newspaper reporter; he also began to write poetry and published his first collection in 1859. The Atlantic Monthly also began to publish his literary work, and Howells' reputation grew quickly. In 1860, the Republican Party selected him to write a biography of their presidential candidate, Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln won the election of 1860 and rewarded Howells by appointing him the United States Consul to Venice. Howells remained in this position until 1865, when he returned to the United States and became an editor with The Atlantic Monthly, and later with Harper's and Cosmopolitan. Howells became a well-known novelist during the late 19th century, publishing his first novel, "Their Wedding Journey," in 1872. He authored 35 novels over the next fifty years, as well as numerous short stories, plays, and poems. Howells was the first president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He died on May 11, 1920. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL02671
    Subjects: Authors, American--Ohio; Cultural Ohio--Literary Ohio; Journalists
     
    William Dean Howells and wife portrait
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    William Dean Howells and wife portrait  Save
    Description: This is a portrait of journalist and author William Dean Howells, seen with his wife Elinor (Mead) Howells in Venice, Italy, where he served as U.S. Consul, ca. 1862-1865. Howells was born on March 1, 1837, in Martinsville (now Martins Ferry), Ohio. By his early 20s, Howells had become a newspaper reporter; he also began to write poetry and published his first collection in 1859. The Atlantic Monthly also began to publish his literary work, and Howells' reputation grew quickly. In 1860, the Republican Party selected him to write a biography of their presidential candidate, Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln won the election of 1860 and rewarded Howells by appointing him the United States Consul to Venice. Howells remained in this position until 1865, when he returned to the United States and became an editor with The Atlantic Monthly. Howells became a well-known novelist during the late 19th century, publishing his first novel, "Their Wedding Journey," in 1872. He authored 35 novels over the next fifty years, as well as numerous short stories, plays, and poems. Howells was the first president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He died on May 11, 1920. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SC3403_001
    Subjects: Authors, American--Ohio; Cultural Ohio--Literary Ohio; Couples; United States - Officials and employees
    Places: Venice (Italy)
     
    Cincinnati Museum of Art - Duveneck room
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    Cincinnati Museum of Art - Duveneck room  Save
    Description: Caption reads: "District #12 American Guide Photograph Taken in the Duveneck room located on the second floor of the Cincinnati Art Museum, Eden Park, Cincinnati, Ohio. In the center is the memorial of Elizabeth Book Duveneck. Among a large number of paintings by this Cincinnati artist can be seen: 'Young Girl With Dark Eyes'; 'Landscape, Poling, Bavaria'; 'Boy in Cloak'; portrait of Frank Duveneck, by Dixie Selden; 'Little Italian Boy'; 'At Anchor, Venice'; 'Girl in Black Hood'; 'Girl With Orange Shawl'; 'The Blacksmith'; 'Little Girl in Gray'; portrait of Mrs. Marie Danforth Page; 'Guard of the Harem'; portrait of John W. Alexander'; 'Blue Boy'; and a study of a nude; 'Whistling Boy'. Photo by Federal Writers' Photographer 12-17-36." Cincinnati Art Museum The Cincinnati Art Museum is located at 953 Eden Park Drive, in Eden Park. In 1880, Charles W. West of Cincinnati donated 150,000 dollars to the Cincinnati Museum Association to establish an art museum in the city. In 1886, the Cincinnati Art Museum opened, and became one of the leading art museums in the United States. The Romanesque Revival style building was designed by James W. McLaughlin. In 1881, the Cincinnati Museum Association convinced the McMicken School of Drawing and Design to relocate to the Cincinnati Art Museum. McMicken College later became the University of Cincinnati. The college agreed to turn over all operations of The School of Drawing and Design to the Cincinnati Museum Association. The school became known as the Art Academy of Cincinnati. Established in 1887, the academy has trained artists for more than a century. In 1998, the Art Academy of Cincinnati legally separated from the museum and became an independent college of art and design and has since moved to another location. By the early twenty-first century, the Cincinnati Art Museum contained works of art spanning more than five thousand years. Its holdings include works by Picasso, Matisse, and El Greco. The museum also owns a number of works by Frank Duveneck and other local artists. Eden Park Located between Gilbert Avenue and Columbia Parkway (U.S.) and comprised of about 185 acres in the Mount Adams community of Cincinnati, Ohio, Eden Park was assembled by a series of purchases beginning in 1859. The name came, naturally, from the Garden of Eden and was given by Nicholas Longworth who owned a large tract which constitutes the main portion of the park. Eden Park is the home of the Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati Art Academy, the Navigation Monument, the Capitoline Wolf Statue, and the Irwin M. Krohn (Eden Park) Conservatory. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B03F07_014_1
    Subjects: Parks--Cincinnati (Ohio); Parks--Ohio--Cincinnati; Cincinnati (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc.; Cincinnati (Ohio). Art Museum; Cincinnati Art Museum
    Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
      7 matches on "Venice (Ohio)"
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