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    10 matches on "Business enterprises--Ohio"
    Main business street in Fremont, Ohio
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    Main business street in Fremont, Ohio  Save
    Description: The photograph shows the main street in Fremont, Ohio, in 1939. Fremont, located on the Sandusky River, is the county seat of Sandusky County. Spiegel Grove, the home of President Rutherford B. Hayes, is located in Fremont. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B06F07_007_1
    Subjects: Fremont (Ohio); Cities and towns--Ohio; Business enterprises--Ohio
    Places: Fremont (Ohio); Sandusky County (Ohio)
     
    J. Hinig portraits advertisement
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    J. Hinig portraits advertisement  Save
    Description: Pencil sketch of a promotional poster by J. Hinig advertising his crayon portraits, signs, ornaments and designs, dated 1876-1877. The address listed is on South Third Street in Zanesville, Ohio, though the street number is too faded to make out. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: MSS559_B13F02_001
    Subjects: Artists--Ohio; Zanesville (Ohio); Portrait painters; Business enterprises--Ohio;
    Places: Zanesville (Ohio); Muskingum County (Ohio)
     
    Downtown Urbana, Ohio
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    Downtown Urbana, Ohio  Save
    Description: Photograph of downtown Urbana, Ohio. Seen in the picture are several cars, people walking on the sidewalk, and some business like "Creath's Thrift E Market." View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B14F04_033_001
    Subjects: Urbana (Ohio); Cities and towns--Ohio; Automobiles; Business enterprises--Ohio
    Places: Urbana (Ohio); Champaign County (Ohio)
     
    Brooks Household Art Company photograph
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    Brooks Household Art Company photograph  Save
    Description: This photograph shows The Brooks Household Art Co. in Cleveland, Ohio, where I. T. Frary's drafting room was located. He worked for the company (which later became Rorimer-Brooks Studios) as an interior decorator and furniture designer from 1894 until 1914. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1873, Ihna Thayer Frary was a prominent American art and architecture scholar, whose primary interest was the architectural heritage of the region of northeastern Ohio known as the Western Reserve. In addition to serving as publicity and membership secretary of the Cleveland Museum of Art, he was a professor of Ohio and American architecture at the Cleveland Institute of Art and Western Reserve University’s School of Architecture. Over the course of his career, Frary was a design consultant for private clients and designed furniture, and was an active member of several prominent arts councils in the Cleveland area. In 1963, Frary and his two sons donated his entire photographic collection to the Ohio Historical Society (now the Ohio History Connection). The Ihna Thayer Frary Collection consists of 4,000 5 x 7 photographs of private residences, churches, taverns, and public buildings, as well as select rural buildings, bridges, archaeological sites, and public monuments. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: P112_B63_F2-3_01
    Subjects: Frary, I. T. (Ihna Thayer); Photography--Ohio; Architecture; Stores and shops; Business enterprises--Ohio--Cleveland
    Places: Cleveland (Ohio); Cuyahoga County (Ohio)
     
    Zanesville businesses advertisement
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    Zanesville businesses advertisement  Save
    Description: Printed advertisement for "reliable business houses" in Zanesville, Ohio. On one side is a comical advertisement for Ed. Merkle's hats, caps, and furnished goods showing a bald man looking in a hand mirror and saying "There will be no more parting there!" On the reverse is a list of Zanesville businesses, including Merkle's, "the Shoe Man" Henry Werner, Blankenbuhler's, the new grocery of N. S. McBee and Thomas Coulton & Co.'s dry goods, millinery and notions. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: MSS559_B13F02_004_1
    Subjects: Zanesville (Ohio); Advertisements; Business enterprises--Ohio; Clothing and dress; Stores and shops;
    Places: Zanesville (Ohio); Muskingum County (Ohio)
     
    Edward W. Scripps portrait
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    Edward W. Scripps portrait  Save
    Description: Portrait of Edward W. Scripps (1854-1926), ca. 1900. After purchasing the Cleveland Penny Press in 1878, Scripps built the first newspaper chain in the United States. Through a series of acquisitions, he formed United Press International, which sent reporters all around the world to report on news events instead of relying on reporters from other papers for information. Shortly after establishing the United Press Association, Scripps also created the Newspaper Enterprise Association. This organization provided Scripps' newspapers and other papers around the world with editorial cartoons, feature stories, and pictures. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL03884
    Subjects: Newspaper publishing; Ohio Economy--Economy--Business; Business enterprises--Ohio--Cleveland
    Places: Cleveland (Ohio); Cuyahoga County (Ohio)
     
    John M. Bonnet calendar
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    John M. Bonnet calendar  Save
    Description: Dated ca. 1833-1882, this perpetual calendar, produced by Weeks and Campbell of New York, belonged to John M. Bonnet of Zanesville, Ohio. It features an oriental vase, a woman holding an hourglass, and an owl perched on a crescent moon. Bonnet emigrated from Germany to America, arriving in Zanesville in 1833, where he built upon his knowledge of tailoring and learned the trade of watchmaking. He later opened a jewelry and watch repair business in Zanesville and, at the time of his death in 1882, owned the largest jewelry wholesale business in central Ohio. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: MSS559_B13F07_001_1
    Subjects: Zanesville (Ohio); Art; Jewelry; Business enterprises--Ohio; Businessmen
    Places: Zanesville (Ohio); Muskingum County (Ohio)
     
    Central Market photograph
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    Central Market photograph  Save
    Description: Women shopping for produce at Central Market, located at East 9th Street and Woodland Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio, 1940. This photograph was to be included in the Cleveland Guide, one of several guides on selected American cities to be published by the Federal Writers Project. The Federal Writers Program was a depression-era program created to employ writers. Most of the work for the Cleveland Guide was complete when the program was abolished in 1943, though the Cleveland Guide was not published. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL03286
    Subjects: Markets--Ohio; Grocery shopping--United States; Business enterprises--Ohio--Cleveland; Federal Writers' Project--1930-1950
    Places: Cleveland (Ohio); Cuyahoga County (Ohio)
     
    Alexander Winton driving a Winton automobile
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    Alexander Winton driving a Winton automobile  Save
    Description: Alexander Winton (1860-1932) was a Scottish-born American and pioneer automobile manufacturer, seen here driving his Winton automobile. He settled in Cleveland, Ohio, and started the Winton Motor Carriage Company in 1897, with his automobile credited as the first commercial sale of automobile in the United States. He patented over one hundred designs and even gave Henry Ford access to his steering designs before a race. Ford and his assembly line out-produced Winton's custom-made cars and put him out of business in 1924. Winton eventually focused purely on engine design, and his Winton Engine Company was bought by General Motors in 1930. He died in Cleveland, Ohio. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL04079
    Subjects: Ohio Economy--Science and Technology; Automobile industry; Ford, Henry, 1863-1947; Business enterprises--Ohio--Cleveland
    Places: Cleveland (Ohio); Cuyahoga County (Ohio)
     
    Standard Oil Company service station photograph
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    Standard Oil Company service station photograph  Save
    Description: Grand Opening of a Standard Oil Company's Sohio service station. Standard Oil of Ohio was the original Standard Oil company founded in 1911 by John D. Rockefeller as a result of Standard Oil Company and Trust breakup. Standard Oil Company and Trust was an American company and corporate trust that from 1870 to 1911 was controlling almost all oil production, processing, marketing, and transportation in the United States. Standard Oil Company stations in Ohio operated under the brand name "Sohio." The company was acquired by British Petroleum, now BP, in 1968. Following the terms of the acquisition, BP took majority ownership of the company in 1978. In 1987 BP bought out 45% of Sohio, assuming control, and in 1991 started rebranding all the Sohio stations to 'BP.' Although Sohio gas stations have ceased to exist, a few gas stations on Lake Erie and the Ohio River still bear the Sohio name. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL07668
    Subjects: Standard Oil Company; Oil industry; Business enterprises--Ohio--Cleveland; Ohio Economy--Economy--Business; Transportation--Ohio--History
    Places: Cleveland (Ohio); Cuyahoga County (Ohio)
     
      10 matches on "Business enterprises--Ohio"
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