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    5 matches on "Wood County (Ohio)"
    Wood County products at Ohio Centennial Exposition photograph
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    Wood County products at Ohio Centennial Exposition photograph  Save
    Description: Modern photograph made from a glass plate negative depicting a display of agricultural products from Wood County, Ohio, at the Ohio Centennial Exposition of 1888. The Centennial celebration was in honor of the 100th anniversary of the first European settlers arriving in Marietta, Ohio, in 1788. It was held at the state fairgrounds in Columbus and formally opened on September 4, 1888. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL03290
    Subjects: Wood County (Ohio); Agriculture--Ohio; Ohio--Centennial exhibitions, etc.
    Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
     
    Perrysburg Journal building photograph
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    Perrysburg Journal building photograph  Save
    Description: Caption reads: "Journal Bldg. - Perrysburg." The Perrysburg Journal was a weekly newspaper started on March 10, 1853 by Silmon Clark. The Perrysburg Journal building, which was located along West Front Street, burned down in the 1950's. In 1965, the Perrysburg Journal was purchased by Betty M. “Helen” Hart, owner of the weekly newspaper the Messenger, founded in 1935. The two newspapers were combined, becoming the Perrysburg Messenger-Journal, which was run by Hart until 1969, when she sold the newspaper to current publisher Robert Welch. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F01_005_1
    Subjects: Perrysburg (Ohio); Wood County (Ohio); Perrysburg (Ohio)--Newspapers;
    Places: Perrysburg (Ohio); Wood County (Ohio)
     
    Wabash and Erie Canal photograph
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    Wabash and Erie Canal photograph  Save
    Description: This photograph shows an abandoned canal lock and an overgrown canal bed near Grand Rapids, Ohio. A railroad trestle spans the canal bed. The unidentified lock may be Lock No. 44, now located within the boundaries of Providence Metro Park (across the Maumee River from Grand Rapids). Lock No. 44 was part of the Miami, Wabash and Erie Canal system. The Miami and Erie Canal, which connected Toledo to Cincinnati, joined the Wabash and Erie Canal, which linked Toledo to Evansville, Indiana. The conjoined canals diverged at Junction, Ohio. The Miami and Erie Canal was one of Ohio's most important canals during the mid-nineteenth century. During the late 1810s, Governor Thomas Worthington and Governor Ethan Allen Brown both supported the development of canals. Both men believed that Ohioans needed quick and easy access to the Ohio River and to Lake Erie if they were to profit financially. Farmers and business owners would be able to transport their products much more easily and cheaply with canals rather than turnpikes. Canals would also possibly open up new markets for Ohio goods. In 1822 the Ohio legislature created a new Ohio Canal Commission, which eventually recommended two routes: a western route along the Miami and Maumee Valleys (Miami and Erie Canal) and an eastern route that started at Lake Erie, passing through the Cuyahoga Valley, the Muskingum Valley, the Licking Valley, and then to the Ohio River along the Scioto Valley (Ohio and Erie Canal). In 1825 the Ohio legislature approved both routes, and work began immediately on the Miami and Erie Canal. The 250-mile-long canal was completed in 1845. On February 22, 1832, construction of the Wabash and Erie Canal started in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Once completed, it would connect Toledo, Ohio, and Evansville, Indiana. The Wabash and Erie Canal intersected with the Miami and Erie Canal at the town of Junction, Ohio. From Junction the canals proceeded as one to Defiance, Toledo, and Lake Erie. Most canals remained in operation in Ohio until the late 1800s. By the 1850s canals were losing business to the railroads, which offered several advantages. Railroads delivered passengers and goods more quickly, and they were not limited by a water source as canals were. Because of these advantages, railroads quickly supplanted the canals. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06114
    Subjects: Wabash and Erie Canal (Ind. and Ohio); Miami and Erie Canal (Ohio); Canals--Ohio--History--19th century; Grand Rapids (Ohio); Wood County (Ohio); Transportation--Ohio--History;
    Places: Grand Rapids (Ohio); Wood County (Ohio)
     
    Jeffrey Coaling Station
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    Jeffrey Coaling Station  Save
    Description: This coaling station contained a bucket elevator made by the Jeffrey Manufacturing Company of Columbus, Ohio. The bucket elevator raised coal from coal cars up into the coaling station hoppers where it was stored. This photograph shows coal being unloaded from the station into the coal tender of a steam locomotive. This locomotive was owned by the Hocking Valley Railroad and the coaling station was in Walbridge, Ohio near Toledo. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL01428
    Subjects: Wood County (Ohio); Ohio Economy--Transportation and Development
    Places: Walbridge (Ohio)
     
    Fort Meigs Stockade
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    Fort Meigs Stockade  Save
    Description: View of a reconstructed blockhouse and a portion of the stockade on the site of Fort Meigs, Perrysburg, Ohio. The stockade was reconstructed in 1965 and rebuilt again in 2002. The original fort was constructed by William Henry Harrison during the War of 1812 to protect northwestern Ohio from attack by the British. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL01013
    Subjects: Wood County (Ohio); Other--Ohio Historical Society
    Places: Perrysburg (Ohio)
     
      5 matches on "Wood County (Ohio)"
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