1950s: Findlay booming again 1960s: A decade of Findlay `firsts`
Transcription
1950s: Findlay booming again 1960s: A decade of Findlay `firsts`
The Courier 1950s: Findlay booming again By JEANNIE WILEY WOLF STAFF WRITER The decade of the 1950s may well have been the boom years of the 20th century in Findlay. The discovery of gas and oil some 60 years earlier had transformed the small county seat into a thriving metropolis. But progress in the 1950s did not depend on mineral resources and luck. This time, the community made a conscious effort to create its own success. Toward the end of World War II, an organization called the Post-War Planning Committee was de veloped in conjunction with the chamber of commerce to examine the possibilities for economic re covery. The group assembled facts and figures and made rec ommendations for a course of action. The resulting plan enabled Findlay to make great strides. The city’s population rose to 23,845 during the decade, and the construction of new homes continued. New industry that came to town contributed to the community’s prosperity. Ashland Oil and Refining Co. began operations in 1950 after purchasing the facilities of the NationalR efinery. Radio Corporation of America opened a few years afterwards. As part of the RCA Tube Division, the company manufactured electronic components for televisions. In 1955, the Findlay Kodak Processing Laboratory was completed to provide processing facilities for movie and still film. Findlay Industries and the Hy way Concrete Pipe Co. were also founded. National Automotive Fibers, the first industry to locate in Findlay after World War II, moved its business out of the city in 1958. The plant was sold to the Dobeckmun Division of Dow Chemical. The Hancock County AFL-CIO Council was formed, to organize and coordinate the efforts of local labor unions. Meanwhile, many of Findlay’s long-established firms continued to thrive. Ohio Oil Co. again enlarged its Photos provided by Hancock Historical Museum A MAJOR MILESTONE for Findlay in the 1950s was when a highway bypass was opened in 1958 on the city’s west side at a cost of $10 million. It rerouted Old U.S. 25 (Lima Avenue) to help ease congestion on Main Street. office facilities. The old part of the Donnell building on East Hardin Street was torn down and an eightstory addition was constructed. A few years later, a nine-story building was erected nearby. Likewise, Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. was engaged in a twoyear, $5 million expansion by the end of the decade. Midway through the decade, Findlay’s school enrollment skyrocketed to more than 5,700 students. School buildings were soon filled to capacity. Voters responded by approving a $2 million bond issue. Funds were used to build Jacobs Elementary School off Crystal Avenue, and to erect additions at Whittier, Northview, Washington, Lincoln and Adams schools. The two junior high schools were also expanded. The number of students attend ing St. Michael School was increasing, as well. Three expansion projects during the decade provided the school with a gymnasium, a cafeteria and 21 classrooms. A junior high school system was inaugurated in 1957. Two years later, the parish purchased 12 acres on U.S. 224 east of Findlay for future development. The Hancock School for Retarded Children was started in 1952 by a small group of parents of developmentally disabled children. Classes were held at Howard Methodist Church. By the end of the decade, Findlay College announced plans for a $2.9 million, eight-year development program that would add eight new buildings to the campus. Municipal improvements were also being made. Findlay Council approved a zoning ordinance that placed all areas within the city in different categories, such as residential, mercantile and industrial. In 1951, voters approved a $1.2 million bond issue to expand the city’s sewer system. The capacity of the waterworks plant also was doubled, and land was acquired in Marion Township for the construction of a reservoir. A significant milestone was achieved when a highway bypass was constructed on the city’s west side at a cost of $10 million. Old U.S. 25 — Lima Avenue — was rerouted to the west to help ease traffic congestion on Main Street. Federal funds, local gifts and a bond issue were used to build a new hospital in the community. The 175-bed facility opened in 1958 at the site of the old hospital south of town. Ownership was transferred from the city to the county. The Blanchard Valley Hospital Association continued to direct operations, and the name Blanchard Valley Hospital was adopted. The old north wing of the hospital was later remodeled. One floor became the Civilian Defense headquarters. Another area housed the local Red Cross chapter. Early in the decade, the Judson Palmer Home was built on North Main Street to provide a place for indigent older women. Money for the facility was provided in the wills of Judson and Katherine Palmer. Palmer had been involved in the grocery business and a flour mill operation. He also served as president of the Farmers’ Bank for a time. The Salvation Army citadel opened on Center Street during the period, and the Anchor Teen Center was established. The Fort Findlay Playhouse marked its first season in 1954-55. Mea nwh i le, t he Un ite d Community Fund was formed to unite the various causes that had been conducting individual fundraising campaigns in Hancock County. The fund initially benefited eight agencies. Severa l disastrous f ires occurred during the decade. Hancock Brick & Tile was forced to rebuild after a blaze damaged the Findlay plant in 1951. The new facility was mod- ernized and equipped with the latest machinery and clay processing procedures. A year later, First Presbyterian Church at the corner of West Sandusky and West streets was destroyed by fire. The structure dated back to 1901. A new church was built at the extreme southern edge of the city. In 1955, fire gutted the Fenstermaker Block on South Main Street. Damage was estimated at $750,000. That same year, voters approved a special levy to modernize the Fire Department. Personnel and equipment were added and a two-way communication system was installed with the help of the Hancock County Civil Defense program. The Fire Department also opened two new stations, one at the corner of Tiffin and McManness avenues, and the other on South Main Street to replace the old central station on Crawford Street. The Hancock County commissioners bought the former Page Dairy Co. on Broadway in 1956. The Welfare Department took over part of the building. The commissioners considered moving the county jail into the structure, too. The jail that was in use, just south of the dairy building, had become dilapidated. When the Korean War broke out in June 1950, Findlay and Hancock County again responded to the country’s call. A new selective service system had been established in 1948 as part of the national defense program. Under this program, Hancock County was directed to create a new three-member draft board to serve the entire county. The Ohio National Guard, including the Findlay company, was called into service during the war. Meanwhile, Hancock County was one of the first counties in the state to install automatic voting machines. Direct distance dialing also was introduced to the area. Wolf: 419-427-8419 jeanniewolf@thecourier.com Mask factory folds after 70 years Many of Findlay’s longtime businesses prospered in the 1950s, but not all. The American Mask Manufacturing Co. closed its doors after selling masks, false noses, wax ears, wigs and beards for 70 years. The company was one of the top mask manufacturers in the United States, said Paulette Weiser, former curator/archivist at the Hancock HistoricalM useum. “They were very well known. The masks were shipped all over the country,” she said. The company was started by two German immigrants, Oscar Kirsten and Kryst Heyn. Kirsten settled in Cincinnati after coming to the United States at the age of 18. He found work as a coachman and made masks in his spare time. “Friends soon asked him to make masks for them on Halloween,” Weiser said. The two men decided to come to Findlay after they heard the city was experiencing a gas boom and was offering free fuel to businesses willing to locate here. They started in a single room in the Headquarter’s building on South Main Street. By 1885, the company filled a three-story building in the 500 block of West Main Cross Street. Kirsten’s brother, Otto, also joined the firm. In addition to linen waxed masks, American Mask had an exclusive field in the production of papier-mache masks for several years. The molds were all handmade, and almost any caricature could be produced. In later years, hospital masks were added to the inventory. Mask-making techniques began to change in the 1950s. Company officials decided they could no longer compete with firms that produced masks by machine, and closed the business. 1960s: A decade of Findlay ‘firsts’ By JEANNIE WILEY WOLF STAFF WRITER The 1960s was a decade of firsts for the Findlay area. The city’s population topped 30,000 for the first time. An interstate highway first passed through Hancock County. The first ultra-modern shopping center was opened here. And Findlay first earned the title of “Flag Capital.” A new artery of transportation called Interstate 75 opened between Michigan and Florida. The limited access roadway followed the general route of old U.S. 25 (Dixie Highway) through Hancock County. The interstate between Findlay and Bluffton was the last rural section of the interstate to be finished in Ohio, in 1964. Two other segments through Hancock County, a bypass west of the city and a stretch of highway north to Wood County, had been completed a few years earlier. Work also began on a new bridge over the Blanchard River on Broad Avenue. The project included widening and rebuilding the road, and relocating a portion of the river. T h e i m p ro ve m e nt w a s designed to provide better access to the new Findlay High School near U.S. 224 West. The campus was completed in 1963 with facilities for 2,200 students. The school featured a new auditorium, R.L. Heminger Auditorium. It was named to honor the president of the Findlay Publishing Co. and owner of the Republican-Courier newspaper and radio station WFIN for his civic leadership. District voters authorized con struction of the new high school in 1960. The bond issue also financed additions at three elementary schools. Meanwhile, the former high school building on West Main Cross Street became the city’s third junior high. It was called Central. Findlay College’s development program was well under way, too. Buildings constructed during the decade included the Alumni Memorial Union, Shafer Library and Croy Physical Education Center. Findlay College enrollment reached an all-time high in 1962 with 1,000 students. The Winebrenner Graduate School of Divinity separated from the college that same year. The seminary established a threebuilding complex on East Melrose Avenue. Blanchard Valley School was becoming more visible in the community. Hancock County voters approved a bond issue to construct new facilities for the school. Mr. and Mrs. Tell Thompson donated land on East Sandusky Street for the project. A contract for construction was awarded in 1965. Another war touched Findlay and Hancock County families during the decade. The city’s first casualty was Capt. John Bartley. Sesquicentennial celebrated Findlay and Hancock County observed the sesquicentennial with an eight-day celebration in July 1962. The event featured parades, dances and a five-night historical spectacle titled “Along the Old Mill Stream.” The pageant was held at Donnell Stadium and featured a cast of 600. Karol Kirkpatrick presided over festivities as “Miss Fort Findlay,” and Jill Koehler served as “Miss Hancock County.” Jack Harrington was president and general chairman of the celebration. In conjunction with the sesquicentennial, a time capsule was buried at Riverside Park. Items included an autographed picture of President John F. Kennedy, a sesquicentennial edition of the Republican-Courier newspaper, and a portion of then-Mayor William J. Carlin’s beard. The time capsule was to be opened in 2012 on the community’s 200th anniversary. THE FINDLAY YMCA was destroyed by fire in the early 1960s. However, a portion of the East Sandusky Street building was saved and remodeled to allow the program to continue. Volunteers raised more than $900,000 for a new building that was erected at East and East Lincoln streets. Bartley was one of two U.S. pilots killed in the crash of a B26 fighterbomber in South Vietnam in 1963. By 1968, 10 markers had been erected at the War Memorial in Maple Grove Cemetery to honor local soldiers killed in the war. That same year, the Findlay VFW post officially changed its name to Barry D. Lord Post 5645 in honor of Lance Cpl. Barry D. Lord, 21, who was killed in action in April 1968. His father, Josiah Lord, was a past commander of the post, and his mother, Florence, was past president of the VFW Auxiliary. Barry Lord was also active in post affairs and had marched with the color guard at the funeral of William Tweed, who had been killed in Vietnam while Lord was home on leave. Findlay earned the title “Flag Capital” of the nation on Flag Day 1968. Local resident John B. Cooke obtained donations to purchase 14,000 small American flags, which were distributed to every home in the city. The 24-hour Flag Capital designation, by the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, was intended to provide a focal center for a nation al Flag Day observance. The city’s commercial area expanded east on U.S. 224 when the $2.5 million Fort Findlay Village shopping center opened in 1962. It was the first center of its kind in the area and featured concourses, covered walkways and 2,000 parking spaces. Britts Department Store occupied the largest area in the mall, followed by J.C. Penney, which had been located in downtown Findlay for nearly 40 years. That same year, Ohio Oil Co. marked its 75th anniversary by changing its name to Marathon Oil Co. Central Rubber and Steel Corp. also underwent a name change, becoming Centrex Corp. in 1963. The following year, the corporation made stock available to the public, ending nearly 40 years of private control. A number of other companies established facilities in Findlay during the decade, including Whirlpool Corp., Dow Chemical, Hercules Tire & Rubber, Kirk Bros. (which became O.H. Materials), and Superior Trim. Whirlpool was to become one of the biggest employers in the city. Meanwhile, three longtime businessesc losed. Findlay’s Deisel-Wemmer-Gilbert cigar factory closed in 1962 when it was consolidated with several others to form a new factory in Lima. The company began operations locally in 1910. By 1911, nearly 100 workers were rolling San Felice cigars by hand. A four-story, red brick building was later erected at 214 Broadway. The Glessner Medicine Co. also closed its doors in 1962. The com pany was founded in 1890 as Dr. Drake’s Medicine Co. A factory was built at 230 E. Sandusky St. and purchased by Leonard Glessner. One of the firm’s more popular products was Dr. Drake’s German Cough and Croup Remedy. The closing of these businesses “may have been a sign of the times,” said Paulette Weiser, former curator/archivist at the Hancock Historical Museum. “Cigars and patented medicines fell out of favor over the years,” she explained. “That certainly affected business.” The International BreweriesOld Dutch Division also closed, in 1966. The brewery dated back to 1891 when the Brilliant City Brewery opened at the corner of Jefferson Street and Clinton Court. The company was later purchased by Peter Krantz and his sons, and then the Altmeyer brothers. The firm was particularly well known for its Old Dutch Beer. The Findlay YMCA was largely destroyed by fire in the early 1960s. However, a portion of the East Sandusky Street building was saved and remodeled to allow the program to continue. Volunteers raised more than $900,000 for a new building that was erected at East and East Lincoln streets. Fire also destroyed the Ohio Power Co. building at 120 N. Main St., and Ashland Oil’s lubrication oil manufacturing building on Glessner Avenue. In 1960, blazes on the same day destroyed Woodward Lumber Co. on Third Street and Lumbertown on West Sandusky Street. In other areas of the city, a new municipal parking garage opened on East Crawford Street, and work began on a $2 million waterworks expansion. The city also had the distinction of being, for three months in 1960, the only community in the world where touch-tone telephone service was available. The following year, Findlay Airport became part of the Lake Central Airlines Commercial Service. The city was visited twice a day by one northbound and one southbound flight. Countywide voter registration was inaugurated during the decade, and the Mental Health and Mental Retardation board was formed to provide local mental health services. Wolf: 419-427-8419 jeanniewolf@thecourier.com D2 BICENTEN NI A L THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 The 1970s: A blizzard to remember By JEANNIE WILEY WOLF STAFF WRITER The 1970s. It was the era of Kent State and Watergate. The Iran hostage crisis. Legionnaire’s Disease and the nation’s bicentennial. But the thing people probably remember most is the snow. The blizzard of 1977 was described, perhaps inaccurately, as the worst snowstorm to ever hit the area. Findlay was laid low by record-breaking cold and 12 inches of snow. As it turned out, the real blizzard did not arrive until one year later. January 1978 was a month plagued by storms. Gusting winds whipped snow into drifts and created treacherous driving conditions Jan. 8-9. A second storm a week later dumped three more inches on the ground. As the Findlay area attempted to dig its way out, a third storm arrived Jan. 20. Winds gusting as high as 39 miles per hour caused 5.2 inches of new snow to drift over area roads. Less than a week later, the real blizzard hit with a vengeance. A night of freezing rain preceded nine inches of snow. High winds, bitter temperatures and snow paralyzed the area for severald ays. Roads were blocked. Power, water and phone service were dis rupted. Neighbors banded together to battle the cold and share dwindling food supplies. President Carter declared a federal state of emergency in Ohio, Indiana and Michigan. Ohio National Guard and U.S. Army troops were called on to help with recovery operations. At least 12 people in Hancock and four area counties died from weather-related causes. The only Hancock County death was Otis Van Sickle, 81, of McComb, who suffered from frostbite after spending more than 24 hours in his unheated home. Findlay officials estimated the storm cost the city more than $188,000, not counting another $80,000 to repair streets damaged by cold, snow and ice. The decade’s severe weather was not limited to snow, however. In 1973, a tornado touched down near the Findlay Reservoir, ripping trees out of the ground and the roofs off barns. Some 50 boats docked at the reservoir were overturned. A 12-year-old boy was cut by flying glass at his home on Ohio 37. A year later, a flash flood caused the evacuation of 16 families at Greenbriar Apartments on South Main Street. When residents were not battling the elements, they were busy making improvements in the city. Ribbon-cutting ceremonies were held in 1978 to mark the opening of Findlay’s $1.7 million Central Parkway project. The four-lane roadway connected East Main Cross Street to the Tiffin Avenue-Blanchard Street intersection to help ease traffic flow between downtown and the shopping center. The Findlay Village Mall was enclosed during the 1970s, and Tif fin Avenue was widened to make the area more accessible. Hancock County 95 was extended, and extensive improvements were made to Interstate 75 around the western edge of the city and on into Allen Township. Findlay also started work on an $850,000 Trenton Avenue overpass project. In business news, Whirlpool C or p. constr ucted a 550,000-square-foot distribution center just south of its North Main Street plant. Centrex Corp. completed the expansion and renovation of its corporate headquarters on Western Avenue. Jeffco Manufacturing Co. began operations in 1973 by producing a new type of beer can for testing by Stroh Brewery. The local firm later became the Ball Metal Container Group. A $14.8 million expansion was undertaken in 1978. Hancock Brick & Tile Co. changed its name to Hancor Inc. during the decade. In 1973, the Community Improvement Corp. (CIC) of Findlay/Hancock County reached an agreement to purchase 375 acres of land in Marion Township for the development of an industrial park. The property was platted as the Findlay Industrial Center. That same year, Findlay Publishing Co. moved from Broad- way into a new building on West Sandusky Street. The newspaper shortened its name from the Republican-Courier to the Courier in 1976. Meanwhile, Gar-Wood Industries ceased production of the Buckeye Traction Ditcher machine in the early 1970s. Various versions of the machine had been made here since early in the century. The city, which had grown to a population of 35,800, was recognized as “Flag City of America.” U.S. Rep. Tennyson Guyer of Findlay introduced the congressional resolution. It was the only designation of its kind in the nation. Residents also helped finance an addition at the YMCA. The wing housed a new gymnasium, hand ball courts and a second swim ming pool. The Y also purchased a tract of land 10 miles west of Find lay to serve as a park site for day camp programs. The Hancock Historica l Museum was founded in 1970. The association acquired the historic Hull House at 420 W. Sandusky St. The structure, which was built during the gas boom days, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. The Hancock Recreation Center opened that same year on North Main Street. The Findlay-Hancock County Public Library moved forward with plans to expand its facility, and the Hancock County Alcoholism Council was started. The Hancock Regional Park District was developed in 1970 to provide for the community’s growing need for recreational space. City leaders also made plans to convert a former dump into a recreational area called Swale Park. It was a busy decade for Blanchard Valley School with the con struction of two buildings, including an adult activity center and a social services building. The United Community Fund of Hancock County officially became the United Way of Hancock County in 1975. Findlay resident L. Dale Dorney died the following year at the age of 90. Prior to his death, he established a $5 million trust fund through the Cleveland Foundation. Dorney specified that part of the yearly profits be distributed to nonprofit organizations in Hancock County. The first grants were awarded in 1979. Several major fires occurred during the 1970s. Calvary Baptist Church and Christ Church United Methodist were both damaged by fire in 1973. A 23-year-old Findlay man was later arrested and charged with malicious burning. The north grandstand at the Old Millstream Fairgrounds was completely destroyed by fire in 1978. Arson was ruled as the cause. Meanwhile, two firemen, Roland Smith and William VanAtta, drowned during a rescue attempt April 22, 1978. A memorial marker was dedicated near the site on the Blanchard River where they died. Wolf: 419-427-8419 jeanniewolf@thecourier.com Madison & Keegan Faulkner 50 years om now, when the 2012 time capsule is opened, we pray that you will be healthy & happy and will have exerienced a lifetime fll of love and many blessings. We love you, Mom & Dad • Gift Baskets • Gourmet Food • Seasonal Decor • Jewelry 327 S. Main St. 419-425-5510 • Wine Accessories • Unique Gifts www.shopdorannes.com • Serving Dishes Located in the heart of downtown across from the courthouse...since 2002. Niswander’s Jewelers Since 1937 Celebrating 75 Years In Business Owners: Barry & Terry Niswander Staff Members: Karla, Janelle & Paula Fine Diamonds, Jewelry, Watches, Fine Gifts & Clocks 331 S. Main St. Downtown Findlay www.niswanderjewelers.com Free Parking in rear “Your Hometown Jeweler” Photos provided by Nick Moore and Lynn Riker JANUARY OF 1978 brought a blizzard that no one around at the time will soon forget. A night of freezing rain was followed by nine inches of snow, high winds and bitter cold. The entire area was paralyzed for several days. Amy Diller walks down Main Street (left), dragging a basket on a sled to Food Town to stock up on supplies. Kirt and Mary Riker (above), along with their French poodle, pose for a photo next to a big pile of snow at their West Lima Street home. End of the road for a longtime landmark A Findlay landmark was lost in 1978 when the former Phoenix Hotel at South Main and Main Cross streets was razed. The Pheasant Room had been a popular restaurant in the building for years. “That was a sad day for the community,” said Paulette Weiser, former curator/archivist at the Hancock Historical Museum. “A lot of people remember the Phoenix.” The location had been the site of a hotel for more than a century. As early as the mid-1830s, John Patterson operated a hotel there. “From the earliest years of Findlay’s existence, it was a hotel,” said Weiser. It went through numerous name changes, including the American House, the Humphrey House, the Marvin Hotel and finally the Phoenix. Through the years, the hotel survived a gas explosion, fire and bankruptcy, said Weiser. “Changes were made, of course. But the building really went through a lot and survived for a long time,” she said. Other buildings also were demolished during the decade, including the Woolworth store at South Main and Crawford streets; the Royal Theater, 510 S. Main St.; and the Harris Theater, 606 S. Main St. In 1978, Green Mill Gardens, a onetime dance pavilion turned roller-skating rink at Riverside Park, was razed. RED WING OF FINDLAY Proudly Serving Findlay Since 1998! 325 S. Main St. • 419-423-9990 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-5:30, Sat. 9:30-5 Congratulations Findlay on Your Bicentennial! STARLEY CANNON 419-722-3942 DEB COLE 419-348-5015 TRENT FARTHING 419-306-1769 JULI FRANKART 419-348-8262 RAY FRANKART 419-348-8263 JOAN KAGY 419-348-1344 SARAH LEAL 419-438-2014 TOM LEDDY 419-424-9451 LYNDA NISWANDER 419-421-1656 ANITA PATRICK 419-348-8910 JENNIFER GRIFFIN 419-421-7340 RUTHELLEN ONDRUS 419-889-4115 AMIE HATHAWAY 419-619-5002 COLLEEN ROBINSON 419-348-4691 LAUREN HELDMAN 419-348-9065 DONNA RUSE 419-889-1939 CHAR JOHANNIGMAN 419-306-8657 CHERYL STERLING 419-722-8991 GREG WILLIAMS 419-348-9005 JOIN US ALONG WITH SHERLOCK HOMES PROPERTY SERVICES AT THE JUNE 22nd RELAY FOR LIFE FROM 6-8 PM. WE ARE FUNDRAISING FOR THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY WHEN WE OFFER TETHERED RE/MAX BALLOON RIDES AT THE HANCOCK COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS T 1621 TIFFIN AVE., FINDLAY, OH 4 419-423-8004 Mon. - Fri. 8:30am-5:30pm, Sat. 9am-12pm Each Office Independently Owned and Operated BICENTEN NI A L THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 D3 1980s: Findlay overcomes adversity By JEANNIE WILEY WOLF STAFF WRITER The 1980s were memorable years in the Findlay area. Local happenings on several oc casions drew national attention. Perhaps best remembered is 1981, when a flood hit the area in June, and a corporate takeover battle for Marathon Oil Co. began inO ctober. When rain began to fall in early June 1981, few would have predicted that floodwaters would engulf Findlay over the weekend of June 13, causing more than $13 million in damage to 2,200 homes and 500 businesses. Ohio National Guardsmen were activated to help secure the flooded area. The flooding surpassed the level reached by the last major flood in 1959. But it was not worse than the 1913 flood when the entire city was inundated. The f loodwaters also hit Ottawa and Carey. Hancock, Putnam and Wyandot counties were declared major disaster areas by President Ronald Reagan. Later that year, a serious economic threat made headlines. On Oct. 30, Mobil Corp., the nation’s second-largest oil company, started a hostile takeover attempt of Marathon Oil Co. Mobil said if it was successful in acquiring 40 million Marathon shares at $85 apiece, it would try to obtain all remaining shares through a merger, an exchange offer, or both. Community leaders feared that if Mobil succeeded, the takeover would mean the end of Marathon Oil in Findlay. What followed was a flurry of board of director activity and community action. Marathon’s board 1988 drought The drought of 1988 began in April and May with continuing dry spells. By June, the drought combined with recordbreaking high temperatures to damage crops and farmers’i ncomes. Area churches held rain vigils, and restrictions were placed on watering lawns and washing cars. The restric tions were finally lifted in November. Courier file photo FINDLAY RESIDENTS GATHER at a rally in support of Marathon Oil Co. in 1981. The rally included a parade down Main Street. That year, Mobil Corp. attempted a hostile takeover of the company. Local leaders feared that if Mobil was successful, it would mean the end for Marathon in Findlay. Mobil’s bid failed when Marathon merged with U.S. Steel. of directors rejected Mobil’s takeover bid in November and filed an antitrust suit against Mobil. An estimated 5,000 people turned out for a pro-Marathon rally before a Findlay High School football game at Donnell Stadium. Democratic Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, made a rare Findlay appearance, attending a local public meeting on the takeover bid Nov. 11. On the same day, 6,000 Findlay residents attended a massive pro-Marathon rally which included a parade down Main Street. On Nov. 19, 1981, U.S. Steel Corp. made a friendly bid for Marathon, offering $125 a share for 30 million Marathon shares. Remaining Marathon shares were to be converted into U.S. Steel notes. Mobil raised its bid to $126 a share, but to no avail. U.S. Steel, later USX Corp., became Marathon’s new parent in early 1982 when U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren E. Burger refused to block U.S. Steel’s $6.2 billion takeover of Marathon. A majority of Marathon shareholders voted in 1982 to merge their company with U.S. Steel. The Marathon scare motivated government and civic leaders to begin a concerted effort to expand and diversify the city’s economy. The Community Development Research Foundation was formed, and the old Findlay Industrial Park was developed into the Tall Tim- bers Industrial Center off Hancock County 95 in the late 1980s. And on the city’s west side, the Westfield Industrial Park was developed. Findlay’s population held steady at 35,594 during the decade, and a number of multimillion-dollar government building projects were undertaken. In 1984, a new Findlay Municipal Building was completed. Two years later, the Hancock County commissioners decided not to participate in a regional jail and instead announced plans to build a 96-bed county jail downtown. The $8.2 million Hancock County Justice Center opened for public tours in 1989. Later that year, Hancock County voters rejected a tax levy to pay for renovating the old 1879 county jail. “At the time, I believe that it was the oldest county jail house still in use,” said Paulette Weiser, former curator/archivist at the Hancock Historical Museum. “The Historic Preservation Guild fought so hard to save that building,” she said. “They brought in a consultant. They had a plan to restore it. There were ways to save it.” But despite their efforts, the old building was demolished. The city’s water treatment plant received a major upgrade in 1986 when a $19.6 million project was completed. Initial plans for a major expan- sion and renovation of the Findlay Village Mall were announced in 1987. The $16 million project involved a 200,000-square-foot expansion and renovation, and the addition of 55 retail stores. The latter part of the 1980s saw several more significant construc tion projects. In May 1988, National Lime and Stone Co. announced that up to $70 million would be spent over a period of years to build an office/housing complex in and around the company’s Western Avenue quarry in Findlay, which would be phased out of production. A two-year project to rebuild four miles of Interstate 75 through Findlay began in the late 1980s. The southbound lanes were rebuilt in 1989, and the northbound lanes were completed a year later. Construction caused massive traf fic jams. The Ohio Department of Transportation decided in 1987 to close the roadside rest area on U.S. 68, just south of Findlay, despite opposition from some area residents. The rest area, which dated to 1936, was Ohio’s first. Blanchard Valley Hospital’s new $5.9 million outpatient treatment center opened in 1989. At the same time, ground was broken for a $1.7 million radiation therapy center. A number of significant business closings and changes also oc curred during the decade, including the 1982 demise of Pat- terson’s Department Store, which was recognized as Ohio’s oldest independently-owned retail business. The store opened in 1849 at South Main and West Sandusky streets. The Fort Findlay Motor Inn closed its doors in 1985 after 145 years of serving downtown Findlay as a hotel, nightclub and restaurant. Located at the corner of South Main and East Front streets, the building was transformed into the Sherman House, an independent living facility primarily for senior citizens. That same year, the former Egbert furniture and carpet store at 404 E. Sandusky St. was torn down. Lying below the 94-year-old brick building was the second natural gas well to be drilled during the days leading up to the Findlay gas boom of the late 1880s. It was known as the Hull well on property owned by Jasper G. Hull. The building was originally called the Opp House, a saloon and third-rate hotel. Later it was the Apostolic School, Assembly of God Church, and then the furniture store. The well had been capped in 1932. In 1987, Producers Livestock Association ceased operations in Findlay after 47 years because of declining livestock numbers in the area. RCA announced in 1988 that it would sell its solid state division, including the 1,350-employee semiconductor plant in Findlay, to Florida-based Harris Corp. Centrex Corp. agreed in 1987 to pay $200,000 to more than 500 west side Findlay residents and perma nently shut down its rubber reclamation equipment, to settle a class action lawsuit. The suit al leged that emissions from Centrex’s Western Avenue plant resulted in noxious odors. U.S. Rep. Tennyson Guyer, a Findlay native whose political ca reer spanned more than 40 years, died in 1981 at the age of 68. The 4th District Republican assumed the congressional seat in 1973 and was re-elected four times. He was succeeded by then-state Rep. Michael G. Oxley, R-Findlay, who won the seat by narrowly defeat ing Democratic state Rep. Dale Locker of Anna. Guyer was honored a few years later when Vice President and Mrs. George Bush visited Findlay to dedicate the Tennyson Guyer Saturn speculation One business deal never materialized, but caused plenty of commotion in 1985. An edition of AutoWeek magazine listed Findlay as one of eight top sites for General Motors’ proposed Saturn automobile plant. The report caused a flood of local rumors and speculation that lasted for months, until GM announced it was picking a Tennessee site for the plant. Memorial, which included two rooms in Findlay College’s Shafer Library, a scholarship and annual lecture series. As part of the lecture series, former President Gerald Ford spoke before a gathering of about 2,000 people at the college in 1987. Bush returned in 1988 when he brought his presidential campaign to town. He spoke to a large downtown crowd and also helped launch the city’s first Flag City USA celebration. President Reagan campaigned here, too. In 1984 he made a whistle-stop campaign tour through Ohio on a railroad car once used by Harry Truman. A crowd estimated at 12,000 greeted the president at a stop in Ottawa, and 8,000 people packed the village of Deshler to see Reagan there. Gov. Richard Celeste and more than a dozen cabinet members came to Findlay in 1987 for a Capital for a Day program. Several deadly and noteworthy fires occurred during the 1980s. On Thanksgiving Day 1981, production facilities at Findlay’s Hercules Tire & Rubber Co. were destroyed by fire. Later that same year, a rural Arlington woman died in a fire that destroyed Meijer’s Square, a Findlay discount store. Linda Pever, a store employee, died in the blaze and two other employees were injured. The store was a total loss and there was heavy smoke damage to the adjacent Great Scot supermarket. Losses were estimated at $1.2 million. See 1980S, Page D4 D4 BICENTEN NI A L THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 1990s: Businesses, community expand By JEANNIE WILEY WOLF STAFF WRITER As Findlay entered the 1990s and the twilight of the 20th century, it was business as usual. Progress continued to be the order of the day in all areas of the community. But the decade arrived with a wintry blast as a February 1990 storm glazed northern Ohio with ice, bringing down tree limbs, electric poles and lines. Thousands of homes lost electricity during the storm. Damage-related costs totaled more than $250,000 locally. Later that month, hundreds of motorists found themselves stranded in Findlay when a fierce winter storm hit, causing whiteout conditions and icy roads. More than 100 accidents occurred countywide. Floods were part of the local weather scene, as well. The city battled high water in 1991, 1992 and 1998. Residents also felt the earth move when a small earthquake rattled the area in 1990. No damage or injuries were reported from the quake which registered a magnitude of 2.5 on the Richter scale. The community was moved in a different way when the Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of Tibet, brought his message of love and compassion to Findlay in 1991. The Dalai Lama was just one of several dignitaries to visit the city during the decade. President George Bush was a frequent visitor, bringing his presidential campaign to the area twice in 1992. Later, in 1998, Bush visited Findlay as a former president to raise funds for then-Ohio Gov. George Voinovich. Other visitors included Vice President Dan Quayle, who sampled hamburgers at Wilson’s in 1990, and President Bill Clinton, who spoke in Arlington and passed through Findlay during a train tour of Ohio in 1996. Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole also made a local campaign stop that same year. The city’s 35,703 residents saw the business community continue to change, with several expansions and mergers. Some longtime businesses also closed their doors. Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. in December 1992 undertook a 163,000-square-foot addition to its Findlay plant as part of a $9.5 million project. A few years later, Cooper built a $14.4 million tire molds manufacturing plant in the Tall Timbers Industrial Center. 1980s Continued from page D3 Find lay resident Dean Weaver later pleaded guilty to four charges in connection with the fire, but then denied that he committed the arson. In a plea agreement, Weaver entered guilty pleas to attempted involuntary manslaughter, attempted aggravated arson, and arson. He was given a 3-15 year prison term. A new Meijer’s store opened in Findlay in 1985. Also in 1985, a huge fire gutted three buildings in the 300 block of North Main Street, resulting in at least $200,000 in damage. Buildings housing Specialty Flooring, the Garage Sale and the adjoining Lee’s Barber Shop were all destroyed. The Salvation Army’s thrift store on East Main Cross Street was destroyed by fire in 1988. After leasing a spot in the 800 block of North Main Street, the organization bought the former American Home Furnishings Store and reopened the thrift store at 509 N. Main St. At the time, it was billed as the largest thrift store in northwest Ohio. In 1989, fire destroyed the north ern, newer section of Findlay’s Hope Temple Church. Damage topped $2 million, but no one was injured. An electrical problem was suspected as the cause. A winter storm hit the area in 1982. Record-breaking cold temperatures and a wind chill factor which dipped to 71 degrees below zero on Jan. 10 caused problems for area residents. A blizzardlike storm dumped more than 10 inches of snow on the area three weeks later. In education news, a committee of school personnel and community members presented a Harris Corp. announced it would invest $20 million in its Findlay plant in 1994 to increase plant capacity and upgrade technology. In 1999, the plant was sold to another company and the name was changed to Intersil. Hercules Tire & Rubber Co. unveiled plans in 1998 to build a $12.5 million distribution center at the intersec tion of Hancock County 236 and 212. At the Lake Cascades Office Park complex, three companies — Findlay Publishing Co.’s broadcast operations, Pry CPA Services and National Lime and Stone Co. — announced intentions to build a new facility in 1991. Retailers also made some noteworthy decisions during the decade. Walmart became the anchor store for a new $11.2 million shopping center on Findlay’s east side in 1990, while Lowe’s opened a 65,000-square-foot store in 1993. At the end of 1999, plans were in the works for Lowe’s to build a new superstore. A $25 million expansion and renovation project at the Findlay Vil lage Mall was completed in 1990, and Kohl’s Department Store opened a 75,000-square-foot department store in 1994 on Tiffin Avenue. In downtown Findlay, a new Rite Aid Pharmacy was built at Center and North Main streets in 1997. Two huge distribution centers, one for Kohl’s and one for Best Buy, opened in the 1990s. Kohl’s Distribution began its operations in 1994 on Hancock County 140. That same year, Best Buy Co. picked Findlay as the site for a major distribution center on Township 212, north of the Tall Timbers Industrial Center. Significant mergers also took place during the 1990s. Marathon Oil Co. and Ashland Inc. decided in 1996 to consolidate their refining, marketing and transportation operations in a joint venture called Marathon Ashland Petroleum (MAP). MAP was headquartered in Findlay. In 1998, OHM Corp. was ac quired by Pittsburgh-based International Technology in a cash and stock transaction valued at about $365 million. Another merger involved Ohio Bank, Findlay’s last locally-owned bank, which agreed to join with Citizens Bancshares of Salineville and Mid Am Inc. of Bowling Green in a stock transaction valued at about $191 million. The deal was completed in 1998. Ohio Bank, while keeping its name, became part of Sky Financial Group. Meanwhile, Columbus-based Banc One Ohio Corp. in 1992 bought a majority of Dana’s Diamond Savings and Loan Co., based in Findlay. Three years later, Banc One Mortgage Corp. decided to consolidate its mortgage processing centers, and located one of the new centers in Findlay at the site of the former downtown Elder-Beerman store. In 1997, the Findlay-Hancock County Community Development Foundation (CDF) and the Findlay-Hancock Chamber of Commerce agreed to merge, with the CDF becoming a division of the chamber. In 1999, the Fostoria Review Times newspaper was purchased by the Findlay Publishing Co., publishers of the Courier. The decade also marked the end of three longtime Findlay businesses: Fenstermaker’s Shoe Co., Parker True Value Building Center, and Kaminsky Jewelers. Findlay’s Sundor Brands plant transferred production lines to other states, then closed the local factory. The Quality Stores distribution center left town a few years later. The center needed more space and moved to Fostoria. Findlay’s low-power television station, WFND-TV 47, suspended local live programming as the station’s management was cut back and restructured in 1995. Later, the station went off the air. Fires caused millions of dollars worth of damage to several local businesses. A 1994 blaze destroyed Findlay’s City Laundry and Dry Cleaning Co. on East Main Cross Street. Losses were estimated at $3 million to $5 million. The company constructed a new building in the Westfield Industrial Park and a new retail store on East Main Cross. In 1995, five buildings at the northeast corner of Center and North Main streets were destroyed by fire. A year later, a blaze at Roger’s Pallet Service on Crystal Avenue resulted in $400,000 in damage. A fallen electrical line was blamed for starting an Easter Sunday fire in the storage yard at Hantech in 1998. The blaze sent flames shooting hundreds of feet into the sky and generated billowing clouds of black smoke. Damage was estimated at more than $1 million. City and county government leaders kept busy during the reorganization plan to the Findlay school board in 1988. The plan called for pairing most elementary buildings into regional schools; converting the three junior high schools into middle schools; and moving the ninth grade to Findlay High School. Voters rejected the idea in May 1989. At the college level, Owens Technical College announced that it would begin offering technical education classes locally. A 32,000-square-foot building was constructed on a 4.2-acre campus adjacent to Findlay College. Classes were first offered in the fall of 1983. Several area agencies also made significant strides in the 1980s. The Hancock-Hardin-Wyandot-Putnam Community Action Commission moved into a leased building on Jefferson Street in the early 1980s. The agency bought the facility in 1988. In 1980, the YMCA’s park site was renamed Camp Mosshart in memory of Ray Mosshart, who served as the general secretary of the Findlay YMCA from 1933-79. In 1981, the former Findlay Racquet Center on Manor Hill Drive was purchased and became the Y’s new tennis center. The former Hancock County Children’s Home on North Main Street was purchased by the Hancock County Mental Health Society in 1983 for use as office space for the mental health clinic. The Hancock County Alcoholism Council changed its name to the Lincoln Center in 1986. Also, an exhibit area was added at the Hancock Historical Museum’s historic center, and the Hancock County Chapter of the American Red Cross moved into new quarters after renovating a former lumber company business on Fair Street. In 1981, Janice Granata of Findlay gave birth to quintuplets, three boys and two girls, at Toledo Hospital. One of the babies died, but four survived. Findlay area residents also became more involved in the community during the decade. A group of residents, headed by the Citizens Task Force for Action on Crime and Vandalism, organized a Block Watch program in 1980 to combat vandalism and other crime. By the year’s end, city police declared the program as uccess. The first Findlay Arts Festival was held in the early 1980s in downtown Findlay, and became an annual event. The festival site was moved to Riverside Park in 1988. One day in 1986, thousands of area residents took part in Hands Across America, an attempt to form a human chain across 4,000 miles of the United States to raise money to aid the nation’s hungry and poor. The first Red Ribbon Celebration was held in Findlay in 1989 to promote awareness about the use and abuse of alcohol and other drugs. Serving you a slice of Paradise for over 11 years! Happy 200th Findlay! 542 Sixth Street • 419-422-9200 decade. In 1992-93, Findlay City Council approved the purchase of the Marathon Oil Co. airport and its facilities, while the city’s newest fire station on County 236 was dedicated in 1997. The station serves the eastern portion of the city. In 1999, council gave the goahead for a $34 million expansion of the city’s sewer system. The Hancock County commissioners decided in 1997 to close the 130-year-old county home, saying it was no longer economical and feasible to operate. Thirtyfive residents were moved to other care facilities. The old county home was renovated for offices See 1990S, Page D5 Ross, Jack, Noah & Grant Rambo My hope for the next 50 years brings you close to God and Family. 1860 Findlay Optical 714 S. Main St, Findlay, OH 419-423-2651 • Karla Sasse, Owner 2012 Findlay Optical... Get Your a history of “Sassy Specs” at excellent service Findlay Optical since 1970. Wolf: 419-427-8419 jeanniewolf@thecourier.com JERRY AUGUST’S GEORGIA CONNECTION Your Family-Owned Flooring Connection Since 1975! Jerry August’s Georgia Connection has been serving Findlay for 36 years. Our location at 350 E. Sandusky St. was built in 1904 as a wholesale grocery warehouse called Eldridge & Higgins Co. It later changed ownership to A.E. Dorsey and then to The Midland Grocery. We have enjoyed serving Findlay’s flooring needs from this historical warehouse atmosphere and look forward to providing the same quality flooring, affordable pricing and great service for many years to come. Thank you Findlay for your continued patronage! 350 E. Sandusky St. Findlay, Ohio 419-423-1465 Hours: Mon. 9-7, Tues.-Fri. 9-6, Sat. 10-2 BICENTEN NI A L THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 1990s Continued from page D4 in 1998, and the Hancock County Ed ucational Service Center became the first tenant. In 1990, the Hancock County Children Services board voted to combine the agency with the county Department of Human Services. A new office building was erected on county-owned property south of the county home, and the department moved into its new $1.37 million home in 1993. Hancock County officials dedicated their new court building on Broadway in 1991, after the 124-year-old building underwent $600,000 in renovations. The structure, which previously housed the sheriff’s department and the Republican-Courier offices, became home to the county’s probate and juvenile court. Both the Findlay and Hancock County health boards approved regulations in 1993 that banned smoking in most public places and workplaces in the city and county. In 1998, the county commission ers approved buying a downtown building, the Midtowne Centre Building on West Main Cross, for $1.25 million. It was renovated to provide offices for the commissioners, the county auditor, treasurer, recorder and title office. A local landmark was lost in 1990 when the old post office on Broadway, which became a li brary in 1930, was razed. The building, constructed near the turn of the century, was torn down to make room for a $3.8 million expansion project at the Findlay-Hancock County Public Library. A major project began at the Hancock Historical Museum, a $2 million campaign to renovate and expand the main facility on West Sandusky Street. In the health arena, Blanchard Valley Hospital and Bluffton Community Hospital merged in 1995, changing their names to Blanchard Valley Regional Health Center. A year earlier, Blanchard Valley Hospital had opened its new Caughman Health Clinic for residents unable to find a doctor. In 1993, the Blanchard Valley Health Association (BVHA) bought the downtown Sherman House for $720,000, converting the former downtown Findlay hotel and apartment complex into an independent living facility, primari ly for senior citizens. Another BVHA purchase, Winebrenner Village at 415 College St., was made in 1997. Earlier in the decade, a $2.4 million care center, designed for adults suffering from Alzheimer’s and related diseases, was opened at the Winebrenner complex. A new urgent care center, Physicians Plus, was opened by BVHA in 1998 at the corner of Allen Township 99 and North Main Street. Among notable education-relat ed projects, Findlay school board decided in 1999 to fund three build ing additions with a bank loan, rather than a traditional bond issue. The $4.5 million project added classrooms at Findlay High, Whittier Primary and Wilson Vance Intermediate School. Owens Technical College broke ground for a $2.1 million building on its Findlay campus in 1990. The community college also opened a 23,000-square-foot Center for Development and Training on Findlay’s Commerce Parkway in 1998. The University of Findlay, meanwhile, announced a campaign in 1996 to raise $27.5 million through the year 2000 to construct a health sciences building and a recreation center, renovate Old Main, make technological improvements and strengthen its endowment. In 1994, the $3 million Virginia B. Gardner Fine Arts Pavilion was dedicated at the university. In 1999, the university opened the $11 million Ralph and Gladys Koehler Fitness and Recreation Complex. Socia l ser v ice agencies were also busy during the 1990s. Major projects included a 4,800-square-foot addition at the Salvation Army headquarters in 1993, and a two-story addition for the Findlay City Mission in 1998. T he Wi n f ield Ch i ld Development Center, operated by the HHWP Community Action Com mission, opened in 1997 in the former Parkview Church of Christ to house the county’s Head Start program. An ongoing project was the Find lay Family YMCA’s $5 million capital campaign to renovate and expand the structure, which was built in 1963. The YMCA moved its day care facilities into the former Marathon Pipe Line Co. building at 231 E. Lincoln St. in 1998. A few years earlier, the Y joined with Hope House to open the Hardin House for the Homeless, to provide a shelter for homeless women and their children, at 331 E. Hardin St. The Lincoln Center moved into new quarters at 1918 N. Main St. in 1990. In 1997, the center, along with Family Service of Hancock County and the John C. Hutson Center, consolidated into a single agency called Century Health. The Hancock County Community Partnership also was developed in 1990. The L. Dale Dorney Fund in 1999 became independent of the Cleveland Foundation and changed its name to the Findlay-Hancock County Community Foundation. Other significant local events included the opening of a new $3 million Findlay Country Club and the Hancock Park District’s 227-acre Litzenberg Memorial Woods, both in 1995. The park is west of Findlay. Notable Findlay area deaths during the decade included Jackson E. Betts, Hancock County’s former congressman for 22 years and a former speaker of the Ohio House, who died in 1993 at the age of 89; and former Findlay Mayor W. Bentley Burr, who died in 1994 at 78. Burr was a founder of the lo cal Community Development Foundation and the driving force behind construction of a new municipal building in 1984. In 1996, former Findlay Mayor Keith D. Romick, who served three terms in the city’s top office, died at age 74. Two years later, longtime Findlay Judge John Patterson died at 68. He was in his second term on the common pleas court bench. In 1999, former Ohio appeals court Judge Ralph D. Cole Jr. of Findlay, who also had served seven terms as a state representative, died at age 85. D5 RANDY ROBERTS / The Courier FINDLAY FIREFIGHTERS rescue city residents from the flooded East-View Drive area in August 2007 as rainswollen creeks, ditches and the Blanchard River spilled over their banks. The height of the floodwater nearly tied the 1913 flood, the worst in Findlay’s history. 2000 on: Ups and downs, but progress continues By JEANNIE WILEY WOLF STAFF WRITER The decade of the 2000s — as well as 2011 and the first half of 2012 — have been a time of extremes in Findlay. The new millennium began with a sigh of relief when the feared computer bug Y2K failed to materialize and all of the computers didn’t go haywire as predicted. Local electric companies reported no Y2K problems because of extensive and expensive preparations. The same was true at Ameritech, at local banks, at Blanchard Valley Hospital, and at Cooper Tire and Marathon. The decade had barely started, though, when terrorists struck one clear September morning in 2001 and nearly 3,000 Americans died at the World Trade Center, Pentagon and in rural Pennsylvania. Findlay residents mourned and prayed. They gave blood and bought thousands of flags to show their patriotism and support for the country. A Red, White & Blue Candlelight Vigil and Memorial was held downtown. Then came natural disasters like Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Again, the community did its part by collecting funds and supplies to assist the evacuees. Two years later, however, local and area residents were the ones in need of help when the Blanchard River flooded — nearly matching the famous and worst flood of 1913. Businesses, schools and homes were damaged or destroyed at a cost of millions of dollars. One man drowned when his car became trapped in high water. Studies then began, and continue today, into how the region can control and reduce its flooding problem. Northwestern Ohio, including Findlay and Hancock County, also caught the national economic flu. Factories closed, unemployment rates rose and governments cut back. But through those dark times, progress has continued. Unemployment rates for March 2012 dropped in all 88 Ohio counties, including in Hancock County, which had the eighth-lowest rate at 6.5 percent. More jobs came to town when Marathon Oil leaders split the corporation into two publicly traded companies in 2011. Marathon Petroleum Corp. is the fifth-largest oil refiner in the country and is headquartered in Findlay, while Houston is the base for Marathon Oil Corp., which focuses on crude oil production and exploration. It’s the first time in 20 years that an independent Marathon has been headquartered in Findlay, adding jobs to the 1,500 already here. Marathon Petroleum is also helping Findlay reduce its electric bill. A 5,100-panel solar array will be set up in a field near the sewage treatment plant off Broad Avenue and is expected to save the city about $80,000 annually. Cooper Rubber & Tire Co. has had its ups and downs. More than 1,000 unionized workers were locked out from November 2011 until the end of February 2012, when a new five-year labor contract was ratified. Cooper continued to produce tires during the lockout using temporary workers. Three years earlier, a campaign was mounted to persuade Cooper to keep the Findlay plant open. The city offered free water and sewer service as part of a $3 million incentive package. Several other companies have expanded and celebrated anniversaries over the past 11½ years. See 2000, Page D6 TOM AHL HYUNDAI OF FINDLAY AS FINDLAY CELEBRATES THEIR 200TH, TOM AHL IS CELEBRATING OUR 50TH WITH OUR BIGGEST EVENT EVER!! WE WILL BE GIVING AWAY A BRAND NEW VEHICLE ON JUNE 14TH! FREE T-SHIRTS PRIZEAYS W GIVEA FREE FOOD TO BE THROWN OUT 4 LIVE ADIO STATIR AT EVEONS NT! KIDS FUN! REGISTER ONLINE OR IN STORES NOW. REGISTRATION ENDS JUNE 12TH COMPLETE DETAILS AT WWW.TOMAHL.COM *MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN. MUST BE 21 OR OLDER TO SIGN UP. VINCE DOWNING JAY COCHENSPARGER All Dealerships GM Findlay GM SUSAN MORRISON DON GONYA Finance JIM HADDOX Sales Sales WOODY JONES Sales TOD KITCHEN JERRY KUHLMAN Used Car Manager Sales BRAND NEW 2012 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GLS LEASE FOR ONLY $159 PER MO. FOR 36 MONTHS. OWN FOR $18,999! *12,000 MILES PER YEAR, 19 CENTS PER MILE THEREAFTER. $2,850 DUE AT SIGNING. EXCLUDES TAX, TITLE & DOC FEES. WITH APPROVED CREDIT. AMERICA’S BEST WARRANTY 419-424-4078 www.tomahlfindlay.com 5-Year/60,000-Mile Bumper-to-Bumper Coverage 10-Year/100,000-Mile Powertrain Protection 5-Year/Unlimited Miles 24-Hr. Roadside Assistance UP TO 40 MPG SALE HOURS: MON/THURS 9-8, TUES/WED/FRI 7-6, SAT 9-3 SUNDAY CLOSED 15199 US 224 E. Findlay, OH 45840 D6 BICENTEN NI A L 2000 Continued from page D5 Whirlpool Corp. invested $41 million in equipment and retooling equipment early in the decade. The company also marked its 40th anniversary in 2007 and began producing Maytag, Magic Chef and Crosley standard tub dishwashers. Early in the decade, Lowe’s and Findlay Ford Lincoln Mercury opened new, larger locations. Lowe’s built and opened a $15 million home improvement warehouse-superstore on the former site of Findlay Ford on Bright Road. The 120,000-squarefoot center is twice the size of the company’s old location on Tiffin Avenue. Lowe’s also constructed a $77 million distribution center. Findlay Ford, meanwhile, opened an 84,000-square-foot dealership on Hancock County 99. The lot accommodated 1,300 to 1,400 vehicles, as opposed to 750 to 800 that could be housed previously. However, the dealership got caught in the auto industry’s downward spiral. It was purchased for $3.4 million in 2009 and became part of Reineke Ford Lincoln Mercury. The Tiffin Avenue Walmart underwent an 80,000-square-foot expansion in 2000, qualifying it for supercenter status. Six years later, a second Walmart supercenter opened on U.S. 224 near Interstate 75, as an anchor store at the Independence Square shopping center. The Courier celebrated 175 years in the newspaper business in 2011. Other anniversaries were noted by Dow Chemical, 50 years; and GSW, 20 years, both in 2009. In 2000, Kuss Corp. constructed a $15 million plant in Tall Timbers Industrial Park while Kohl’s Distribution Center undertook a $5 million expansion. It was the first brick and mortar expansion of the center on Hancock County 140 since its opening in 1994. Home Depot opened a new 115,000-square-foot retail store on Tiffin Avenue, but it later closed. Another home improvement store, Menards, became an anchor store in the Flag City Center on property east of County 236 and north of U.S. 224 East. CVS built a new store at the intersection of Tiffin Avenue and North Blanchard Street. Groundbreaking on Microsoft Great Plains Business Solutions’ largest facility in Ohio, on a 10.5-acre tract of land in Allen Township, was held in 2002. The 43,200-square-foot building cost $5.69 million. Findlay also got a new theater in 2005 when the Carmike 12, a 12-screen multiplex theater, opened on Interstate Drive. The business climate wasn’t as kind to Findlay’s Intersil Corp., which closed in 2002, causing the loss of 380 jobs. In 2005, the North Central Campus of Emerging Technologies took over the location, which also houses Brown Mackie College. The Findlay Kmart store located in the Findlay Village Mall closed in 2003, resulting in the loss of 79 jobs. The mall also lost the Findlay Six theater in 2010. A movie theater had been at the Tiffin Avenue location since the 1970s, when the shopping center was two plazas without a mall. Weather-wise, area farmers faced hard times in 2002. Rain kept them from planting their fields until early June. Then drought crippled the corn and soybean yields. By August, the National Weather Service said the Findlay/Hancock County area was in a “severe drought.” Some farmers said 2002 weather conditions were the worst they had experienced. It was quite the opposite in December 2006 when a total of about 2.7 inches of rain fell on the Findlay area, according to the National Weather Service, sending the Blanchard River and area creeks over their banks. The river crested at 3.7 feet above flood stage on Dec. 2 in one of the worst floods in the city’s history. If only residents knew what was to come. Another 2.3 inches of rain fell in January 2007, causing flooding of many downtown and area roads and businesses near the river, and rousting 60-70 people from their homes. The river crested an inch higher than the flood during the previous month. The river flooded again on Jan. 15, 2007, and yet again on March 3. Before Valentine’s Day, a blizzard arrived with temperatures in the teens and winds of more than 40 mph. Snow fell at the rate of an inch an hour, accumulating to about 10 inches within a 24-hour period and either closing or delaying openings of area factories, government offices, banks and businesses. But by early summer that year, Findlay and northwest Ohio turned a “dry, dusty brown” as drought conditions covered the state, causing the federal government to declare Ohio a disaster area. During June, only .65 inch of rain fell, compared to seven inches a year earlier for the month of June. A heat wave with temperatures pushing the 100-degree mark struck in August. Aug. 21 brought too much rain, produced by the remnants of Hurricane Erin and moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, ranging from 5 to 9 inches. The flooding Blanchard River crested at 18.5 feet, or 7.5 feet above flood stage, nearly matching the estimated record of the famous and worst flood of 1913. Gale Augsburger, an 84-yearold resident of Hancock County, drowned when his car became trapped in high water on Ohio 235. The flood forced the library to close, causing extensive damage to books and materials on the lower level; necessitated the closing of the bridge on East Main Cross Street over Eagle Creek after officials discovered structural damage; damaged several churches; forced the evacuation of 90 prisoners from the Hancock County jail; wiped out the 150-vehicle inventory of Treadway Chrysler Dodge on U.S. 224; and caused more than $1 million in damage to Findlay City Schools’ facilities, particularly Central Middle School. As residents cleaned up the mess, more than 900 tons of trash went to the landfill. More than 1,600 Hancock County households became eligible for the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Individual and Household Program, and the agency approved more than $6 million in grants for Findlay flood victims. The Small Business Administration approved $8 million in loans to county flood victims. In 2008, the city gave $50,000 to the Army Corps of Engineers to start a feasibility study on ways to control flooding of the Blanchard River, and received a $1.4 million federal grant to buy 16 flood-prone homes. A number of businesses also formed the private, nonprofit Northwest Ohio Flood Mitigation Partnership, to seek an accelerated solution to the flooding problems in the area with the Army Corps of Engineers. In particular, the partnership worked to reduce the corps’ years-long process of determining and funding solutions. Findlay and Ottawa experienced more flooding in 2009, and continued efforts to study and combat major flooding in the future. The corps was expected to have a plan, and costs estimates, for a flood-control project in 2013. A major fire in February 2012 destroyed the Argyle Building, a downtown Findlay apartment building, injuring four residents and leaving dozens of others homeless. The blaze left the four-story, 122-year-old building at 532½ S. Main St. structurally unsound, leading to fears that one or more walls could collapse. Damage to the building and its contents was estimated at $662,000. The cause of the fire could not be determined because damage was too extensive, but arson was ruled out. The building was razed. Four years earlier, 38 people were displaced and several were left homeless when fire destroyed another downtown Findlay apartment building and an adjacent business, the Star Pawn Shop on North Main Street. No injuries were reported. An electrical problem was suspected as the cause of that blaze. The pawn shop reopened a month later in a nearby Main Street building. Also causing destruction was the Emerald ash borer, a bug that kills ash trees. It was found in Hancock County in March 2005. Ohio Department of Agriculture officials discovered the beetle’s larvae in the branches of ash trees that were being logged out of a woodlot north of Van Buren. The metallic green beetle, which has been moving its way south from Michigan, later arrived in Findlay and began decimating the city’s ash trees. In other matters, Findlay City Council agreed to trade a downtown parking lot and part of Dorney Plaza to Hancock County in 2003 in exchange for the Hancock Recreation Center ice arena. Three years later, $3 million in renovations were started at the center, including replacement of most of the ice-making equipment. The Hancock Leadership Class of 2007 built a $75,000 “All Star Playground” next to the Cube, the new name of the recreation center. In 2002, the Hancock County commissioners built a one-stop building to encompass all aspects of auto licensing services on Hancock County 140. Tony Iriti, Hancock County auditor for 16 years, was elected mayor of Findlay in 2004. During his term, he developed a plan to deal with the 300,000 to 700,000 tires at the old Brandman tire dump, located next to the Blanchard River off North Cory Street. The city purchased the site from its owner for $1. The tires were ground up and the pieces used as a liner for the Hancock County landfill. A Lexington, Ky., developer then proposed a $90 million multiuse subdivision on the Brandman tire site and on neighboring Swale Park property. The plan called for a baseball stadium, performing arts center, retail stores and apartments. However, Findlay voters rejected the proposed development. Afterward, the developer backed out of the project without breaking ground. Pete Sehnert, a Republican, defeated Mayor Iriti in the Republican primary, and beat Democrat Tom Knopf for mayor of Findlay in the general election in 2007. Sehnert served one term, then was defeated in the 2011 primary by Republican Lydia Mihalik. She went on to win the general election, becoming the first woman to be elected Findlay mayor. Transportation matters also got the attention of residents during the period. A 26.5-mile, $99 million expansion of U.S. 30 from two to four lanes was completed in 2008. The project includes 16.2 miles of the highway in southern Hancock County. Meanwhile, debates continued about the intersection of Ohio 15 and Western Avenue on the southwestern edge of Findlay. Over the years, at least five people have died in accidents there and many more have been seriously injured. In 2010, residents of the Spring Lake Subdivision who frequently used the intersection were disappointed by the Ohio Department of Transportation’s decision to close the Western Avenue crossing on Ohio 15. Citing accidents and safety concerns, and following the threat of a lawsuit from one Findlay resident, the state agency decided to permanently close the crossover. The city also saw many new facilities erected. Winebrenner Theological Seminary built a $5.8 million structure in the 900 block of North Main Street, adjacent to the University of Findlay campus, in 2003. The two-story, 52,100 -square-foot building includes classrooms, offices and a 750-seat audito- THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 rium. The seminary was formerly located on East Melrose Avenue. At Blanchard Valley Hospital, many buildings and offices opened, including the Thomas B. and Kathleen M. Donnell Patient Pavilion; Bridge Hospice Care Center; Wound Care Solutions; the EasternWoods Outpatient Center; Birchaven Retirement Village at EasternWoods; the Blanchard Va lley Reg iona l Cancer Center at EasternWoods; the North Baltimore Medical and Diagnostic Center; the William E. Ruse Center, which houses an emergency room, imaging services, same-day surgery and more; and Valley Health Center in Kenton, through a partnership with Hardin Memorial Hospital. The health system also completed a $2.85 million Bluffton Hospital expansion and renovation project. The Hancock Park District celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2000. Since then, the park district has constructed a 1.3-mile bike path from Broad Avenue to North Main street, opened a dog park at Riverbend Recreation Area, and moved its headquarters out of a building at 819 Park St. and into a larger house on East Main Cross Street along the Blanchard River. The Lodge at Riverbend Recreation Area was renamed Brugeman Lodge, in honor of Tim Brugeman, who retired in 2008 as the Hancock Park District’s director, a job he held for 35 years. The Hancock Historica l See 2000, Page D8 Kiya Papaya Boutique One of a Kind Unique Designs for Children of All Ages Check Out Our Bicentennial/4th of July Children’s Clothing! 419-957-1743 213 E. Crawford St., Findlay, Ohio 2 3 201 197 OLD SHOES LIKE OLD FRIENDS... are comfortable and hard to replace! • soles renewed • heels replaced • lifts restored • mileage added • dollars $aved Findlay Shoe Repair 540 S. Main St. Downtown Findlay 419-422-7977 Serving Findlay for over 43 years! '5$:$ +$33<3,&785( 2)/,)()25 $&+,/'«%(&20( $)267(525 $'237,9(3$5(1772'$< Requirements • At least 21 years of age • Can be married, single or co-parents • Can own or rent a home • Can work outside of the home • Can have children or not Benefits • Training • Monthly reimbursement for care provided to the child • Reimbursement for training completed • Caseworker and agency support • Expenses for medical and phychological care provided • AND MOST OF ALL...A HOUSEHOLD FILLED WITH FUN AND EXCITEMENT Visit these fine Carriage House Plaza merchants... CELEBRATE FINDLAY’S PAST & FUTURE at Logan’s Irish Pub Since 2010 Full Menu & Bar Live Irish Music 414 S. Main St. • LogansIrishPubFindlay.com 419-420-3602 Hours: Sun. 10am - 11pm, Mon. - Wed. 11am - 12am, Thurs. - Sat. 11am - 2am Jaqua’s Monogramming Carriage House Gifts, Jewelry & Apparel Wolfie’s Nuts National Cash Advance H&R Block Best Little Hair House The Tonsorium Book Nook Papillon Boutique Chu Smith Asian Grocery Jess Service Center Tidy Rides Auto Detailing Fort Findlay Coffee & Doughnut Shoppe Carriage House Plaza • 1016 Tiffin Avenue, Findlay THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 BICENTEN NI A L FINDLAY On 200 Years of Growth & Success!! Craig Holmes - Founder and Owner of Findlay Implement Co. We opened our doors on August 19th, 1972 with 4 employees and a commitment to the Agricultural community that we would provide quality equipment, service and parts to an industry that we take great pride in being a part of. Since then we have expanded to the Turf Care and Commercial Worksite Products industry with the same Pride and Commitment. Entering our 41st year, we would like to take this time to thank all of our past, present and future customers for their business and wish them continued success in the future!! D7 D8 BICENTEN NI A L 2000 Continued from page D6 Museum completed a $2 million renovation in 2002, giving the staff about double the space for displays and projects. The Hull House was renovated, a second story was added to the exhibit center annex, and the agricultural display barn was expanded. Two historical homes were moved to the museum campus on West Sandusky Street. The 1843 Davis Home, one of the oldest houses in Hancock County, was moved from U.S. 224 East. The DeWald-Funk House on East Street was also relocated to the museum. Originally located in Bascom, the house was moved to Findlay in 1990 by the Historic Preservation Guild of Hancock County. Many nonprofit agencies got a new home in 2005. The FindlayHancock County Community Foundation purchased a former Kroger store on North Blanchard Street. The building was renovated and became home to 19 nonprofits. That same year, the assets of the community foundation doubled with a $25 million gift from the estate of Ann Arbor, Mich., resident Madeleine T. Schneider, a Findlay native and former schoolteacher. Her gift made the local foundation the 12th largest charitable foundation in Ohio. Barbara Deerhake, who served as president of the community foundation for 21 years, retired in 2008. The Findlay Family YMCA completed a major renovation and expansion project in 2001. Renovations totaling about $7.8 million included new heating, lighting and plumbing systems; age-appropriate youth centers; adult, youth and family locker rooms; a hot tub; indoor track; aerobics room and wellness center, along with $349,000 in TechnoGym equipment which uses an electronic card system to personalize machines for each person. The Hancock County Agency on Aging and AMVETS Post 21 agreed to swap properties in 2009. The Senior Center moved to the former post home on East Melrose Avenue, and the AMVETS moved to the former Senior Center on West Trenton Avenue. The center also got a new ability-appropriate fitness center, thanks to the Hancock Leadership Class of 2009. The City Mission of Findlay is currently seeking to raise $2.7 mil- lion for a 12,682-square-foot addition at the main building on West Main Cross Street. The addition would increase the number of beds for homeless men from 23 to 45. Beds for women would increase from six to 20. Family units would be increased from three to six. The addition also would address needs for a larger dining room and kitchen. The Black Heritage Library and Multicultural Center is celebrating its 30th anniversary this year. A new veterans memorial at Findlay’s Maple Grove Cemetery was completed and dedicated on Memorial Day of 2003 at a cost of $225,000. St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church completed a new $8.3 million, 35,519-square-foot church building on Bright Road in 2003. A 24-foot-tall crucifix hangs in the apse of the church. An $8 million addition to the parish school followed. The single-story primary school became a twostory building, which brought all of the students, from preschool to eighth grade, to the same campus. The Hancock County Agricultural Service Center on County 140 opened in 2001. The building houses the Hancock County Cooperative Extension Office, the Farm Service Agency, Rural Development, Natural Resources Conservation Services, Ag Credit and Hancock Soil and Water Conservation offices. Children got a new place to play when the Fort Findlay Playground, a 20,000-square-foot playground, was built at Emory Adams Park in 2001. Children had a hand in its building as an architect visited local schools beforehand to gather their ideas. The playground was constructed over a period of several days by hundreds of local volunteers. The inaugural trip of Flag City Honor Flight last June hosted 78 veterans who flew to Washington, D.C., for a one-day trip to see the World War II Memorial and other landmarks. The University of Findlay has made major strides over the past 11-plus years. The $7 million Russ & Peg Armstrong Sports Complex was built in 2003 on land adjacent to the former Foodtown store on North Blanchard Street. The complex includes two practice football fields, a softball complex, baseball diamonds, an outdoor track, and several tennis courts. In 2004, a nearly 30-acre tract of land was donated to the university by Findlay’s Hancor Inc. Located on the city’s southern end THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 Photos by RANDY ROBERTS / The Courier FINDLAY IS KNOWN for its strong sense of cummunity and the last decade has been no exception. When Hurricane Katrina ravaged the Gulf Coast in 2005, area residents organized and pitched in to collect supplies for those displaced by the disaster (above). In 2001, an architect visited local schools to gather ideas to build the Fort Findlay Playground at Emory Adams Park. The playground was constructed over a period of several days by hundreds of local volunteers (left). behind Hancor’s headquarters, the parcel will be used as a natural habitat preserve. The university purchased the Davis Street property that had been Owens Community College’s former campus, and relocated the college of pharmacy to the building. A groundbreaking ceremony was held for the university’s Mazza Museum in the Virginia B. Gardner Fine Arts Pavilion. Already a premier destination for those interested in children’s book art, the museum launched a $2.2 million fundraising drive in 2004 to create more room for its bursting-at-the-seams collection and ongoing activities. A $1 million donation from Michael and Robin Gardner in December 2005 pushed the museum’s campaign over the top by $200,000, thereby ensuring the construction of the 8,000-square-foot addition along with additional fringes, such as the creation of an outdoor children’s reading garden with sculptures. The addition was dedicated in May 2007. The university observed its 175th anniversary that same year. The Dr. C. Richard Beckett Animal Science Building, located )ODJ&LW\0RUQLQJ5RWDU\VD\V ³+DSS\%LFHQWHQQLDO)LQGOD\´ at the university’s Animal Sciences Center on U.S. 68 south of Findlay, was opened in 2009. The building honors Dr. Beckett for conceiving and helping to start the pre-veterinary program at the university nearly 30 years ago. The Rieck Center for Habitat Studies held its 20th anniversary this spring. The center, at 13711 Delaware Township 166, Mount Blanchard, is the former site of the Hancock County Humane Society, which leased the property to the center for $1 a year in 1992 when it moved to Findlay. The property was taken over by the university in 2003. Owens Community College’s Findlay campus got a new home in 2005 — a $17 million campus at the corner of Township 212 and Bright Road. The following year, the college started construction of a 26,641-square-foot, $4.2 million Community Education and Wellness Center. Brown Mackie College, formerly Southern Ohio College, moved to its new home on Fostoria Avenue, the site of the former RCA factory, in 2007. A 26,000-squarefoot renovation, of which 18,000 square feet represented an expansion at the site, was completed in 2010. This year, four bachelor’s degree programs were introduced in the areas of business administration, criminal justice, health care administration and legal studies. And, it’s exciting times for Findlay City Schools. Three new buildings are on the rise, including Glenwood and Donnell middle schools and the new Millstream Career and Technology Center, thanks to a 4.3-mill bond issue that was approved by voters in November 2009. The bond issue will raise $54 million and will be matched with $19 million from the Ohio School Facilities Commission. Wa sh i ng ton Element a r y School on Main Street was closed in 2008 and students moved to a building on Broad Avenue. The former elementary school was then auctioned and purchased by the Church of the Living God for $152,500. Findlay and Hancock County schools entered the world of the virtual classroom by contracting with Tri-Rivers Educational Computer Association to provide online curriculum for the Findlay Digital Academy. The online school is for high school students who are at For many, the challenges of caring for a loved one are part of daily life and taking a vacation may seem impossible. Getting help is essential for your health, and your resilience is critical for your loved one. $DURQ5RXVK *DU\6FKXOW] %UDG6PLWK 1LFN6SHHU -HII6WUDWWRQ 6KDQH6WHZDUW 'HQLVH7KRPDV -RKQ8UEDQNVL 5DQG\9DQ'\QH %HWK:DGGHOO -RKQ:KLWVRQ &DWK\=HOOQHU Relax. Let The Heritage help! We offer Adult Day Care and Respite stays for a healthier you. Call us today to book your loved one’s stay and enjoy a worry free vacation for you and for your loved one! )LQGOD\)ODJ&LW\ 0RUQLQJ5RWDU\ The Heritage also offers: t "TTJTUFE-JWJOH t 4IPSUUFSNSFIBC t -POHUFSNSFIBC t 4QFDJBMJ[FE.FNPSZ$BSF t 4LJMMFEOVSTJOH t 0VUQBUJFOU5IFSBQZ t 3FTQJUF$BSF t "EVMU%BZ4FSWJDFT KWWSÀDJFLW\PRUQLQJURWDU\RUJ :HGQHVGD\VDWDPDWWKH)LQGOD\&RXQWU\FOXE %HRXUJXHVW Wolf: 419-427-8419 jeanniewolf@thecourier.com Pack your bags ... ,WKDVEHHQRXUSOHDVXUHWREHLQYROYHG LQWKHFHOHEUDWLRQV .KULVWD%HFNPDQQ &KULVWLQD%ODNOH\ 'RQ%OHGVRH 0DWW%UXVNRWWHU -HDQQLQH&ODUN .DUL)DXONQHU %HWV\+DFNZRUWK /DUU\+DOWHUV $O+DWFK 6X]L+HDO\ /HH+LWFKLQJV 0DWW.OHLQ 6WHYH/HKWRPDD &KDUOHV/LJKWQHU 'DQ0DFLHMHZVNL 'LRQQH1HXEDXHU 1HLO1RUKHLP &KULVWLH5DQ]DX *OHQQ5HWWLJ 3KLOLS5RRQH\ 7DPHUD5RRQH\ risk of failing or dropping out of school. Students attend the online school from their homes. In April 2012, Cooper Tire announced that it is partnering with the Findlay schools to build a new track and field facility behind the high school. Cooper Tire said it plans to “commemorate its 100year anniversary in the tire industry and its heritage in the Findlay community with an investment in a new, state-of-the-art sustainable track and field complex at Findlay High School.” Cooper is contributing $600,000 toward the $1.46 million project. H a ncock C ount y voters renewed a 1.9-mill operating levy for Blanchard Valley Center in 2010. The levy generates about $3 million annually for the center, which operates the county’s programs for the developmentally disabled. Special Kids Therapy, a nonprofit organization started in 2003 to help special health care needs children and their families, moved from its location on Lima Avenue to Blanchard Valley Center earlier this year. The move is part of a partnership between the two organizations. The move is intended to increase accessibility to the group’s playroom. Kan Du Art Studio opened in 2011, bringing a new community of artists to downtown Findlay, those who are eager to show that a disability is no inability when it comes to the world of art. The studio on South Main Street is an extension of Blanchard Valley Industries, Hancock County’s work habilitative program for adults with developmental disabilities. Kan Du had operated out of Blanchard Valley Center since 2007. There have been several notable deaths in the community since 2000. Findlay native Patrick W. Rooney, who retired as head of Cooper Tire & Rubber Co., died at 67 in December 2002. Ed Heminger, chairman of the board of Findlay Publishing Co. and former publisher of The Courier, died in December 2011. He was 85. Heminger represented the third of five generations of his family to publish or work at The Courier. Byron Boutwell, who served as Hancock County sheriff for 16 years starting in 1981, died in September 2009 at the age of 82. Coming Summer 2012 Memory Care Services for Medicare and Medicaid 419-424-1808 2820 Greenacre Dr. Findlay, OH 45840 theheritagehc.com ... not your worries! BICENTEN NI A L THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 D9 Northwest Ohio Railroad Preservation, Inc. Sports: Peg Kirk Bell best of the best 11600 County Rd. 99 • I-75 #161 By DAVE HANNEMAN STAFF WRITER In her unique, pioneering way, Peg Kirk Bell knocked the skirts right out of women’s sports. And in the process she epitomized, in Findlay at first, then on a much grander scale, the trend that saw the emergence of women’s athletics overall. “Women’s golf (results) used to be on the society page,” Bell said during a return to Find lay some years back. “I guess it was considered more of a social gathering than a sport. “But when I won the district tournament, Link Groves (former Courier sports editor) put me on the sports page. And I loved being on the sports page with all the baseball and football players. I guess I was just a tomboy.” Tomboy then. Now Bell is a renowned sports fig ure. As a young girl growing up in Findlay in the 1930s, Bell faced a gender dilemma. She was an outstanding athlete, but as a female she had few opportunities to excel. Bell and the Quinlan boys and some of the neighborhood kids formed their own athletic teams. They called themselves the Hurd Avenue Red Caps and challenged all comers in baseball, football, whatever. “We played ball on Wickham’s lot,” Bell said. “But Wickham’s lot was down by Cooper, where my dad worked. And I don’t think he wanted people looking out the window and seeing his daughter out there playing ball with the boys. “So my dad bought me a set of golf clubs. It did get me off the baseball field, so he was thrilled by that.” Provided to The Courier PEG KIRK BELL, who grew up in Findlay, became one of the pioneers, and the giants, in the world of women’s professional golf, as well as one of the most respected teaching professionals in the sport. But the new sport did not come easily to Bell, a natural athlete. “Golf drove me crazy because it was one thing I just could not do,” Bell said during one of her visits to Findlay to take part in the annual Julie Cole Charity Golf Tournament. “I grew up playing team sports. Golf was the only sport I could just go out and do by myself. “But it was such a challenge. It was frustrating because for three years I played all these other sports and was one of the best athletes in the school. “Fortunately, Leonard Schmutte (former Findlay Country Club pro) took an interest in me, I think because I was strong for a girl. And with his help, I got better.” After high school, Bell enrolled at Rollins College in Florida. The school didn’t have a women’s golf team, but that didn’t keep Bell from working on her game. “I’d go to class in the morning, then head for the club and tee off with the guys in the afternoon,” she said. “I played because I loved the game, and I always played with the guys. I liked to be around men because they were competitive. “Women weren’t supposed be very competitive back then. Women weren’t supposed to do sports and golf was more of a social thing; you’d play bridge, golf, then do lunch.” Golf proved to be the perfect vehicle for Bell to blend her athletic ability and her competitive nature. And with outstanding results. A three-time Ohio Amateur champion, Bell also won titles in the North-South Amateur, International Four-Ball, Everglades Two-Ball, Palm Beach Amateur, Titleholders and Eastern Amateur. Bell was a member of the 1950 Curtis Cup team and a year later took part in the Weathervane Team competition, the first LPGA event. “My goal in golf was always to win the National Amateur and make the United States Curtis Cup team,” said Bell, who turned pro Bell’s career in brief The highlights of Peg Kirk Bell’s career in golf: • 1947-48-49 — Wins three consecutive Ohio Amateur championships; also teams with Babe Zaharias to win the Hollywood Four-Ball tournament. • 1949 — Wins the North-South Women’s Amateur and the Augusta Titleholders Tournament, and finishes second in a playoff to Helen Sigel in Women’s Western Open. • 1950 — Wins the Eastern Amateur championship, runner-up to Zaharias in Women’s Western Open, and is selected to compete on the United States Golf Association (USGA) Curtis Cup Team; turns professsional later in the year. • 1951 — Picked to be a member of the Weathervane Team, the first professional organization for women golfers. • 1953 — Peg and husband Warren “Bullet” Bell purchase Pine Needles (N.C.) Resort. • 1961 — Named Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) Teacher of the Year. • 1966 — Writes and publishes a book: “A Women’s Way To Better Golf.” • 1981 — Named LPGA Golf Professional of the Year; receives National Golf Foundation’s Joe Graffis Award, presented to an individual who demonstrates outstanding service and dedication to the educational advancement in golf. • 1980-89 — Named LPGA Master Professional; Golf Digest also names Bell one of the six most influential women in golf and one of the top five outstanding women teachers in golf; named to the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame. • 1989 — Receives LPGA Ellen Griffin Award, signifying excellence in teaching the fundamentals of the game of golf. • 1990 — Receives Bobby Jones Award, the highest honor given by the USGA for distinguished sportsmanship in the game of golf. NOTE: Bell is also the only woman golfer to compete in the four inaugural national events for female golfers — the first National Intercollegiate Golf Tournament (1940); the first National LPGA Tournament; the first U.S. Women’s Open; and the first LPGA Seniors Teaching Division Tournament (which she won by 8 strokes). Findlay’s top sports figures The Courier’s Sports Department undertook the task of selecting the area’s top 100 sports figures of the 20th century in 1999. Hundreds of nominations were processed. Hundreds of names were considered. Hundreds of careers were researched. The initial list included renowned names like Peg Kirk Bell, Ray Harroun, William Elsworth “Dummy” Hoy, “Tot” Pressnell. Now, as Findlay celebrates its bicentennial, the Courier Sports Department pared down the original list to those who are meant to represent sports figures of all ages and eras, all sports and activities. It is a cross-section of the people who have excelled not only on the field of play, but in the realm of athletics overall. This is our list, in alphabetical order. Mark Ammons 1968 Findlay High graduate ... Drafted by Philadelphia in 1973 and remained with the Phillies through early 1975 before entering the Pittsburgh Pirates’ farm systems ... first-team all-Mid-American Conference baseball player at Bowling Green State University ... MAC Player of the Year in 1972 when Falcons won the conference title and were ranked 13th nationally ... Helped lead Findlay High to first Buckeye Conference baseball title in 1968 ... Coached basketball and baseball at Arcadia. performer in 1960s ... Unofficially tied world record in 220-yard dash with a time of 20.0 in 1962 on cinders at Donnell Stadium ... In 1963, unofficially tied world record in 100-yard dash of 9.4 at Ferris State (Mich.) University ... During collegiate career, competed in prestigious Penn Relays, the NAIA Track & Field Championships and ran against Bob Hayes, Homer Jones and Edward Rob erts, who finished 1-2-3 in the Olympic sprint finals in Tokyo (1964) ... Set NFL record with Denver Broncos with 47 kickoff returns during the 1964 season. Warren ‘Bullet’ Bell Had 3-year basketball contract with Zollner Pistons in Fort Wayne ... Considered a ball-handling wizard during high school career ... 3-time all-Ohio bas ketball player (1938-40) at Findlay High and helped lead Bachman-coached teams to state tourney each season ... Earned a scholarship to Ohio State and played on fresh man team (1940-41) before entering U.S. Army ... Later designed and helped build Pine Needles Golf Resort in Southern Pines, N.C., with his wife, Peg Kirk Bell. Peg Kirk Bell Received Bobby Jones Award (1990), the highest honor given by the USGA for Distinguished Sportsmanship in the game of golf ... Received LPGA Ellen Griffin Award (1989) signifying excellence in teaching the fun damentals of golf ... Only woman golfer to compete in the four inaugural national events for female golfers — National Intercollegiate Golf Tournament (1940), National LPGA Tournament, U.S. Women’s Open, and LPGA Seniors Teaching Division Tournament (which she won by 8 strokes) ... 3-time Ohio Amateur champion (1947-48-49) ... Runnerup to Babe Zaharias in Women’s Western Open and selected for USGA Curtis Cup team in 1950 ... Turned pro in 1951 ... Named LPGA Teacher of the Year (1961) ... Named LPGA Golf Professional of the Year (1981). Dick Beltz Hailed as the greatest all-purpose triple-threat run ning back in Findlay High football history ... FHS’s all-time leading scorer in football with 491 points (19291931) ... Had 205 points as a junior O’Dell Barry Toledo native ... Standout Findlay College track and football See TOP, Page D10 Hanneman: 419-427-8408 davehanneman@thecourier.com Sun., June 17th • 1-4pm Fathers Ride Free! Sat., June 23rd • 12-4pm Trains Tour! Sun., July 1st • 1-4pm B&O Caboose Tour Summer Hours: 5-8pm Sat & 1-4pm Sun Coming again this fall! “Tracks to the Past” Pumpkin Train Train of Terror & Haunted Engine House North Pole Express 10 years of fun, educational & affordable programs. Looking toward a long future here in FindlayHappy Bicentennial! www.nworrp.org or 419-721-1175 Ad sponsored by Russell Electric Co. Since1949... Three generations proudly serving Findlay for 63 years and counting! 217 Broadway • Findlay Phone 419-422-7732 Maralube Express Over 70 Years of Service Owner/Operator Since 2008 2410 N. Main St. Findlay • 419-425-LUBE We are proud to be a part of the Findlay community and have enjoyed serving up sweet treats and fond memories to generations of customers for the past seventy five years. Congratulations Findlay on Your Bicentennial! SINK’S FLOWER SHOP Carl Bachman Cygnet native ... earned 13 letters at Bowling Green State University ... posted a 477-126 record during 43-year high school basketball coaching career, including 34 years at Findlay High ... Coached 1948 Trojans to state championship with 27-0 record ... Had five unde feated regular seasons at Findlay ... Originated the Ohio High School Basketball Coaches Association and was inducted into its Hall of Fame in 1965. and 218 as a senior when the Trojans posted back-to-back 9-1 seasons ... Also had more than 3,000 yards, handling kickoffs, punting, in 1950. Joining Bell in efforts to promote women’s golf was Babe Didrikson Zaharias, a three-time U.S. Women’s Open champion. “When she turned pro, she wanted to compete in tournaments. But there weren’t any around,” Bell said. “So Babe got a manager and she made some contacts. Then she started recruiting some of the top amateur golfers and that’s how the tour started.” Bell did more than hit the links, however. In 1953 she and her husband Warren “Bullet” Bell bought the Pine Needles Golf Course in Southern Pines, N.C., and over the years developed it into one of the most respected teaching facilities in the country. The tomboy had definitely grown up. “Golf is a great game. It’s taken me around the world,” Bell said. “... At times I think I’m too old for this. But golf doesn’t give you a chance to retire. It’s amazing what sports has done for me.” And, conversely, what Bell has done for sports. and Greenhouse Siblings Ruth Sink and Francis Sink 404 Second St. Findlay, OH 419-422-7722 ALPINE FLOWER GALLERY 2700 N. Main St. Findlay, OH 419-423-7353 86 YEARS OF QUALITY FLOWERS & QUALITY SERVICE D10 Top Continued from page D9 PATs and as a passer ... Ohio State running back in mid-1930s. Micki Bish Liberty-Benton graduate ... Never lost an event at a Blanchard Valley Conference track meet ... Was 1984 Class A state cross country champion as a freshman ... Team was also the 1984 team champion ... In her remaining three years of cross country finished second, third and fourth ... Was 1986 state 3,200-meter champ and won the 1988 state 1,600 and 3,200 runs. BICENTEN NI A L Raven Clay Detroit native ... Won 2012 NCAA Division II indoor 60-meter hurdles national championship in a University of Findlay-record 8.18 seconds ... Finished as runnerup in 100-meter hurdles at 2012 Division II outdoor championships ... 4-time indoor All-American and 4-time GLIAC indoor champion, winning 60 hurdles, 200 and 1,600 relay in 2010-11 ... UF indoor record-holder in 60 (7:33) and 300 (40.01) ... 4-time outdoor All-American (2009-11) ... named GLIAC Athlete of Meet at indoor and outdoor championships ... named GLIAC indoor and outdoor freshman of the year in 2008-09. Julie Cole Three-year letterman at Eastern Michigan ... Was the Eagles’ leading tackler, MVP and captain in 1975 ... Had 15 career interceptions ... Held EMU career tackle record for 21 years (1975-1996) ... As wide receiver at Findlay High, was selected second-team all-Ohio and Buckeye Conference first team in 1970 and was first-team all-Ohio as a defensive back in 71. Women’s professional golfer ... Finished 47th on the LPGA Tour’s final money list in 1987 ... 1996 Women’s U.S. Open qualifier ... Honored as LPGA‘s “Teacher of the Year” in 1995 for the Southeast section ... Appeared on the July/ August cover of Golf for Women magazine ... Namesake of annual Julie Cole Charity Golf Tournament held at Findlay Country Club ... Currently the director of instruction at Dana Rader Golf School in Charlotte, N.C. Kirby Blackley Aaron Craft Cincinnati native ... 2008 NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Athlete of the Year ... 2008 Division II outdoor long jump and 100-meter hurdles champion ... 2007-2008 United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Female Track Athlete of the Year ... 9-time Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference outdoor titlist ... Three-time Division II indoor All-American ... Midwest Region Athlete of the Year, GLIAC Indoor Track MVP and NCAA Top VIII Award winner in 2008. All- Ohio quarterback for Liberty-Benton (2008 & 2009), leading Eagles to Division V state runnerup finish in 2009 ... Ohio’s Division III Player of the Year in basketball (2010) after averaging 26.7 points, 7.7 rebounds and 6.5 assists in leading L-B to 20-0 record and a No.1 Associated Press Division III poll ... L-B went 79-1 in regular season with Craft in the starting lineup ... Signed a national letter of intent to Ohio State ... Named to Big Ten allfreshman team and voted the Big Ten Sixth Player of the Year as a freshman ... Took over the starting point guard spot as as sophomore and averaged 8.8 points, 2.5 steals and 4.6 assists as OSU went 31-8 and reached NCAA Final Four ... Voted Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year in 2011-12. Jeff Bixler Nelson Bolden Toledo native ... Two-time NAIA Division II All-American running back for Findlay College, rushing for 1,324 yards in 1979 and 1,079 in 1980 ... 4-year starter, helping the Oilers to NAIA national title in 1979 after a runner-up finish in 1978 ... 3-year all-district and all-conference per former ... All-time UF leading rusher, piling up 4,009 yards ... A bruising runner at 6-foot-3, 225 pounds and very durable, he carried the ball an unbelievable school-record 958 times ... Holds UF career marks for touchdowns scored (63) and total points (378) ... Had free agent tryout with Pittsburgh Steelers. Josh Bostic C olumbus ... 20 0 8 -20 0 9 National Association of Basketball Coaches Division II Player of the Year as University of Findlay captured NCAA Division II national men’s basketball championship ... NABC D-II first-team All-American 2007-08, 2008-09 ... 20082009 GLIAC Player of the Year ... Two-time first team all-GLIAC ... 8th all time on UF scoring list (1,705 points); 2nd all time in rebounding (757) ... Played professionally in Japan and Europe. Ken Brooks 1972 Ohio Class AAA Player of the Year in basketball and fourthleading scorer (933 points) in Find lay High history ... Catcher on Findlay High’s 1971 Ohio state baseball championship team ... Member of 1972 American Legion baseball team which advanced to World Series ... Played collegiately at Eastern Michigan University ... Served as Pandora-Gilboa girls basketball coach for 21 seasons, posting a 267-191 record. Jerry Carder Delphos ... Third-team NAIA all-American in basketball at Findlay College in 1968 ... 3-time allNAIA District 22 selection ... No.3 all-time UF scorer (1,953 points) ... Member of 1966-67 Findlay team that played in the NAIA national tournament ... Played on four straight Findlay teams that advanced to the district playoffs ... Retired from University of Toledo as college administrator ... Inducted into University of Findlay Hall of Fame (1982), Hancock Sports Hall of Fame (1985) and NAIA Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007. Jim Carder Delphos ... Played alongside his brother, Jerry, for four seasons at Findlay College ... 2-time NAIA all-American ... 4-time all-NAIA district 22 selection ... No. 2 alltime UF scorer (2,079 points) ... Member of 1966-67 Findlay team that played in the NAIA national tournament ... Spent 25 years as a football, basketball, baseball, cross country and golf coach at Lima Central Catholic ... Spent 11 years as a Lima Junior Golf Association administrator ... Inducted into UF Hall of Fame (1982), Hancock Sports Hall of Fame (1985) and NAIA Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007. Caitie Craft 2011-2012 Associated Press Division III all-Ohio First Team girls basketball selection for Liberty-Benton ... Most Valuable Player during the Eagles’ run to the 2010 Division III state tournament championship ... 2011 co-Blanchard Valley Conference Player of the Year ... Averaged 21.1 points, 7.5 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 5.4 steals during her senior season in 2011-12 at Liberty-Benton ... Continuing her career at Ohio State in 2012-2013. Tyler Curlis Umpire in New York-Penn League during the 2010, 2011 and 2012 seasons ... Umpired in the Arizona Fall League in 2010 ... Played baseball at Wittenburg University in 2005 ... Findlay High letterman in football, hockey and baseball ... Earned all-Ohio honors as a wide receiver, catching 18 passes in a game vs. Massillon Washington (2003), a season record 94 in 2003 and a FHS record 164 in his career (2001-03) ... Scored winning run as Findlay American Legion baseball team captured 2002 state championship ... Batted .348 and led 2002 Legion team in stolen bases (17) and walks (53) ... also pitched for state championship Legion team, going 9-2 with 3.02 ERA and 76 strikeouts. Del Drake Signed by Detroit Tigers in 1903 and played three seasons in major leagues ... In 1911, played in the Detroit outfield next to Hall of Famers Ty Cobb and Sam Crawford, batting .279 with 9 triples and 20 steals in 91 games ... hit .301 in 11-year minor league career ... Signed Findlay’s Forest “Tot” Pressnell to pro contract as a major league scout. Dale Edie Hancock County’s first Special Olympic gold medalist ... Won his gold medal at the 1995 games with a victory in the 25-meter backstroke ... Competed in numerous sports events for Blanchard Valley Center. Gene Fekete Finished eighth in 1942 Heisman Trophy voting as first Ohio State player ever considered for the honor, during a sophomore season on the national championship Buckeyes’ team under legendary coach Paul Brown ... Set OSU record for longest run from scrimmage, 89 yards against Pitt ... finished as Big Ten’s leading rusher (910 yards, 182 carries) in 1942 and set OSU mark of 92 points ... OSU career cut short by World War II, but signed with Cleveland Browns in 1945 ... Inducted into OSU Hall of Fame in 1998 ... Head basketball coach at Northern Illinois (1948-49) and assistant OSU football coach (1949-59) ... All-state in football and basketball at Findlay High ... Ran for two touchdowns, threw THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 for two, booted a field goal and four extra points against Lima Central Catholic ... Ran for nearly 400 yards against Bucyrus. Jeffrey Fout Findlay native ... Fixture atop harness racing world from 19772005 at Scioto Downs, Lebanon Raceway, Raceway Park ... Won 4,308 of 27,206 career starts, finished in top three 11,801 times ... Trained and drove Golly Goo, winner of 8 of 16 starts as a 3-yearold in 1994, 8 of 15 as a 4-yearold ... Trainer and driver of Dawn Q, winner of 11 of 27 starts over 2-year period ... 14-time winner of Ohio Sires Stakes championship ... past winner of U.S. Harness Writers Association Meritorious Award for two decades of contributions to racing. Jim Givens Shortstop at Kent State from 1986-91 ... drafted in 30th round by Tigers ... First-team all-MAC as a junior, 2nd team as senior ... First team all-NCAA Regional as a senior ... Was third on all-time MAC hit list above Ohio University’s Mike Schmidt ... At one time, held 13 Kent State school records ... played for the Toledo Mud Hens from 1993-95 ... Givens currently serves as the associate athletic director at the University of Findlay. Harry Gonso Ran for 1,000 yards in a season and had 152 points as quarterback at Findlay High ... Set Indiana University’s total offense and TD passing records by end of his junior season ... Led Hoosiers to its lone Rose Bowl appearance in 1968 ... Finished third in voting for the Heisman Trophy ... Received law degree from Indiana ... Served as Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels’ senior counsel and chief of staff during 2005 and 2006 ... Currently a partner at Ice Miller LLP in Indianapolis. Since 1887, we have proudly been a part of Findlay’s growth and prosperity. From Hancock Brick & Tile Company to Hancor, Inc. to Advanced Drainage Systems, Inc. – the years have gone by, our name has changed, but our commitment to the community still remains. We take this opportunity to thank the Findlay community and our dedicated employees and their families for 125 years of support and partnership. A.J. Granger Member of two Liberty-Benton state title teams in 1995 ... Eagles won the Division IV basketball crown and the Division III track state championship ... 1996 state discus champion ... NCAA Division I Final Four participant as junior in 1999 and starter during Michigan State University’s drive to 1999-2000 national championship ... Played professional basketball in Europe for two years ... Currently an account director at The Right Thing. © 2012 ADS, Inc. 401 Olive Street, Findlay, OH 45840 www.ads-pipe.com Antonia Guerra Wrestled in a national championship match in three of his four seasons at University of Findlay, winning the NCAA Division II 149-pound weight class at Koehler Center when UF hosted the 2006 championships ... Won a second title in 2007 ... Finished his career as a 4-time All-American and tied for the most career wins at UF with 123. Ray Harroun Drove a Marmon Wasp, No. 32, to victory in the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911, winning $14,250 ... “Little Professor” was the only driver in the 40-car field not accompanied by a mechanic ... Introduced the rear-view mirror ... Obtained 11 patents as an engineer. Whitson Properties salutes Findlay - Flag City USA on her 200th Birthday! Fred Hirsimaki Great high school athlete at Conneaut’s Rowe High School and has been a highly-successful senior Olympian ... Won a gold medal (70-74 age group) at the 1994 International Decathlon Championships in Sheffield, England ... Won gold in the 1991 U.S. National Seniors Sports Classic ... Numerous time all-American in Master’s track and field ... set an M80 decathlon world record by scoring 6,802 points in July 2005 ... Inducted into Dayton/Miami Valley Senior Olympics Hall of Fame in 2005 ... Still competes in 85-over division. 941 Interstate Drive I-75 & US 224 Exit 159 419-420-1776 www.hiexpress.com/findlayoh Jim Houdeshell Has had 62-year association with Findlay College/University of Findlay ... 30-year FC basketball coach (430-312) ... had 16 teams in District 22 playoffs ... NAIA Coaches Hall of Fame inductee ... also coached track, cross country, baseball and football as well as serving as athletics director ... Member of numerous NAIA and other national sports organization committees ... Serves as a special assistant to the president, and development officer at UF. Bo Hurley Selected as first NAIA Rawlings Player of the Year in 1997 after leading UF to 1995 and 1997 NAIA national titles ... Ran 1997 Oilers’ offense to an NAIA-leading 45.9 points a game ... Holds 10 UF offensive records, including 4,395 yards passing and 57 touchdowns in career ... 3-time NAIA Scholar Athlete and 1997 GTE Academic See TOP, Page D11 903 Interstate Drive I-75 & US 224 Exit 159 419-422-4200 www.countryinns.com/findlayoh Both hotels owned and operated by Whitson Properties BICENTEN NI A L THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 Top Continued from page D10 All-American ... Currently resides in Centerville. Josh Huston Two-time all-Ohio placekicker ... Set Findlay High record in 2002 with nine field goals ... Redshirted at Ohio State in 2000 ... After being a backup to Mike Nugent (2003 & 2004), he was granted a sixth year of eligibility on a medical redshirt and hit 22 of 28 field goals and 44 of 45 PATs for 110 points in 2005 ... Tied OSU record with five field goals against Texas ... Was undrafted in 2006, but signed with Chicago Bears ... Also spent time with the Las Vegas Gladiators (2006-07), New York Giants (2007 & 2008) and Cincinnati Bengals (2007). Amanda Hyde 2009-2010 Associated Press Division III first team all-Ohio and Northwest District Player of the Year in girls basketball as Liberty-Benton captured the 2010 Division III state championship and completed a 27-0 season ... 3-time Blanchard Valley Conference Player of the Year ... Averaged 9.4 points per game in 25 games as a sophomore at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne in 2011-2012. Nathan Hyde Liberty-Benton graduate... NCAA Division II first-team AllAmerican 2010-2011 at UF ... Two-time first-team NABC Midwest Region selection ... Two-time first-team all-Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference pick ... 12th all time in UF scoring (1,528 points) ... Ranks second in 3-pointers made for a career with 248. Mike Iriti Set three Findlay High receiving records and one state standard when he caught 101 passes for 1,411 yards and 21 TDs during 1999 season ... His 21 TDs remain the eighth highest single-season total in Ohio prep history; his 101 receptions are 12th in the state records books and his 1,411 yards are 31st. Kyle Johann Career passing leader (5,468 yards, 43 TDs) in Findlay High history, during three years as a starter ... Completed 244 of 374 passes (just 5 interceptions) for 3,009 yards and 29 TDs and rushed for almost 600 yards in 2002 when Findlay set a school record for points in a season (570) and advanced farther than any FHS football team in history, going 12-2 and reaching the Division I state semifinals. Eddie Kawolics Scranton, Pa. ... considered to be Findlay’s foremost kegler ... Inducted into American Bowling Congress Hall of Fame in 1968 ... Three times rolled a 1,900-plus all-events total, boasting a string of eight straight 1,800s through 1948 that tied an existing record ... Averaged 196 pins for 34 straight ABC tournaments ... Best 3-game series was an 803 ... Coached 1967 United States ABC team, which swept the men’s titles at the 5th World Championships in Mexico. Jim Kennedy father, Dick Kortokrax, at Kalida ... Holds UF all-time men’s basketball scoring (2,575 points) and rebounding records (1,242), season scoring record with 880 points in 1985-86 ... Was 545 of 751 shooting from the free throw line for career ... Kortokrax was a first-team NAIA All-American and the District 22 Player of the Year in 1987 when he scored 22 points per game during his senior season ... Averaged 30 points per game as a junior, earning secondteam All-American and District 22 Player of the Year laurels ... Twice scored over 50 points in a game ... Inducted into NAIA Hall of Fame in 2009 ... Currently the head boys basketball coach at Bishop Hartley High School in Columbus where he was named Division II Coach of the Year in 2011. Ted Kramer Set Findlay High hockey records as a freshman in 1984 with 61 goals and 30 assists in 25 games ... Played two years with Little Caesars in the AAA Michigan Hockey League ... Was named rookie of the year in the Metro Toronto Junior Hockey League as a senior at St. Michael’s School ... Still holds Iron Man record at University of Michigan for 173 games played with 70 goals and 70 assists ... Signed with Los Angeles Kings, skated with Wayne Gretzky and played for Phoenix of the International Hockey League ... Member of Findlay High’s 1984 state championship golf team ... Inducted into Hancock Sports Hall of Fame in 2006 ... Currently an attorney with Hammond Kennedy Whitman & Co. in Indianapolis. Luke Kraus First and only player in Findlay High boys basketball history to start all four years as Trojans posted a 59-29 record, won three league titles and made the Division I regional finals in 2006-07 ... Never missed a start in 88 consecutive games ... FHS boys basketball career leader in points (1,501), free throws (368) and field goals (497) and tied for top spot in 3-pointers (139) ... 3-time Greater Buckeye Conference Player of the Year; first-team allOhio in 2009. Jay Liles Coached back-to-back NAIA wrestling titles at MontanaNorthern with two NAIA Coach of the Year awards; coached five champions and 39 all-Americans ... Coached one state champion and 13 conference champions at Arcadia ... Was MAC runner-up and national qualifier (1978-79) and the winningest wrestler at BGSU from (1976-79) ... Was Ohio AAU freestyle champion three times, a Junior World Freestyle placer twice and U.S. Wrestling Federation state champ twice ... Recently retired from the head coaching position at South Dakota State University where he spent the past 19 years and left as the winningest coach (148-143-5) in SDSU history. Waylon Lowe Became University of Findlay’s first NCAA Division II national wrestling champion when as a sophomore he won the 149-pound class at the 2002 national finals ... He added two more championships, and was named the outstanding wrestler at the 2004 Division II finals ... Finished his career as a 4-time All-American and accumulated 112 career wins. Four-year All-American diver at the University of Tennessee ... Won 1976 NCAA 1-meter diving title ... Was a seven-time Southeastern Conference champion ... Won four AAU national titles and 1977 Swedish Cup ... Was 5th at 1980 U.S. Olympic trials ... 1972 Ohio High School Athletic Association diving champion at Findlay High ... Currently resides in Brentwood, Tenn. Joe Marsh Jr. Miron Kharchilava Chuck Merzbacher Native of Abkhazia ... Defected to U.S. and Findlay area in the spring of 1992 while traveling with a collegiate wrestling team ... NAIA national champion and most outstanding wrestler in 1995 as member of University of Findlay squad ... Was an assistant wrestling coach at Ohio State and Indiana universities ... Currently owns training facility and resides in Dublin. In his 15th season as Ohio State’s women’s tennis coach, is already winningest women’s tennis coach in school history ... His 2000 team was the Big Ten regular-season champion and he has led 10 teams to the NCAA tournament ... Coached men’s tennis at Northern Illinois (198992), winning two Mid-Continent Conference titles and women’s tennis at Kansas (1992-1996), leading the team to four Big Eight Conference titles ... 1983 state singles champion at Findlay High ... At Minnesota was a 3-time allBig Ten honoree, played on two Big Ten Conference championship teams (1984 & 1986), qualified for the NCAA tournament in singles and doubles (1985) ... played professionally from 1987-89, qualifying for the main draw singles of the 1989 Australian Open. John Kidd Punted at Northwestern University ... 15-year pro football punting career ... Set NFL record in 1985 as a Buffalo Bill with 33 punts inside the 20-yard line ... Had one of his best seasons as a Miami Dolphin in 1996 when he led the NFL with 46.3 yard-perkick average; had 26 punts inside the 20 and 11 touchbacks ... Alternate to the Pro Bowl and named to the USA Today All-Pro team in 1996 ... Currently a managing member of Kidd Communications. Randy Kortokrax Started for his legendary The World Driving harness racing champion in 1974 ... Chosen as the 1973 Man of the Year by Harness Horseman International ... Became the first man to have at least 100 harness racing wins for 27 consecutive years in 1986 ... Recorded 5,882 victories with $36.4 million in purse earnings ... Last start was in 2006. coach ... Has coached four IHSA high-point riders ... An instructor in the UF Western equestrian program since 1977. champions ... Also 22-year coach of L-B boys cross country teams. Steve Morehead Two-time Super Bowl-winning quarterback for the Pittsburgh Steelers ... Ohio’s Division I coOffensive Player of the Year in 1999 at Findlay High when he completed 309 of 467 passes (66.2 percent) for 4,041 yards & 56 TDs, both state records at that time and among the top five records nationally ... led Findlay to a Great Lakes League championship (6-0), a 10-2 overall record and the second round of the Division I playoffs ... Had record-setting career at Miami of Ohio ... Finished ninth in Heisman Trophy balloting ... Drafted 11th overall by the Steelers in 2004 draft ... As a rookie, became starter when injuries sidelined Tommy Maddox and Charlie Batch ... Won first 14 starts, doubling the existing record for a rookie QB ... Voted NFL Rookie of the Year in 2004 when he led the Steelers to the AFC championship game ... Quarterbacked Pittsburgh to a 21-10 win over Seattle in Super Bowl XL, threw a game-winning TD pass to Santonio Holmes with 35 seconds left to beat Arizona 27-23 in Super Bowl XLIII, and played in Super Bowl in 2011, a 31-25 loss to Green Bay. Longtime professional motorcycle driver who started career in 1972 ... The “Findlay Flyer” has over 20 career wins, 135 Top 5 and 234 Top 10 finishes on the AMA’s Grand National Circuit ... Best season-long series finish was fourth, which he accomplished in 1993, ’89, ’88 and ’79 ... In 1998, he won the Las Vegas Grand National Half-mile race and took four additional podium finishes in his 25th year on the circuit ... Ranked in the top 10 in 15 seasons ... Inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 2004 ... In 2000 he accepted a job as an operations manager for the AMA Grand National Championship Series. Tiajuana Newell Cleveland native ... Standout sprinter and hurdler at University of Findlay ... 12-time NAIA allAmerican ... Won indoor 60-yard hurdles in 1990 and was four-time All-American in the event ... Also 3-time outdoor 100-meter hurdles All-American ... Won 11 NAIA District championships, including five in 1991 ... Still holds four UF records ... Inducted into NAIA Hall of Fame in 1998. Ron Niekamp St. Henry native ... NABC Division II and D-II Bulletin Coach of the Year in 2008-2009 after guiding UF men’s basketball team to the NCAA Division II national title and a 36-0 season ... 5-time Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Coach of the Year ... Retired in 2010-11 after 26-year career at UF with a 598-185 career record, logging 20, 20-win seasons, 197-57 GLIAC record with 10 South Division regular-season and five GLIAC tournament titles, compiling a 353-46 home court record ... Inducted into Miami (Ohio) University Hall of Fame in 2004. Ben Roethlisberger Carlee Roethlisberger Second-team all-Ohio in basketball as a sophomore, first-team as a junior and Ohio’s Division I Player of the Year as a senior at Findlay High when she led Trojans to their only state tournament appearance ... FHS career scoring leader (1,625 points) ... All-Ohio in basketball and volleyball, RoethlisSee TOP, Page D12 Your One-Stop Bicycle Shop For Over 30 Years! 125 West Sandusky St., Findlay • 419-423-2729 www.FindlayBikeShop.com Financial security – I can help you achieve it. Let’s talk. ACH0312 CO MaryAgent W. Simmons, name FIC Financial Representative (State) Lic. (No.) 1431Address E. Main Cross St. Findlay, OH City, State 419-422-9106 Phone mary.w.simmons@mwarep.org ATULATIO R G N N FINDLAY! S 200 YEARS OF SUCCESS! Thank You To All Of Our Loyal Customers For 5 Great Years! Landing Pad 1123 Trenton Ave. the Family Pizzeria & Sports Pub (By The New Wal-Mart) (419) 425-0250 Weldy Olson Marquette, Mich. native ... Former manager of the Hancock Recreation Center ... Member of 1960 United States gold medalwinning Olympic hockey team, the 1956 Olympics silver medal team, and the 1957, ’58 & ’59 U.S. national teams ... Four-year varsity letterman at Michigan State University ... Set career scoring marks in 92 games with the Spartans: 71 goals, 54 assists ... Inducted into Michigan Amateur Sports Hall of Fame (’74), Upper Peninsula Sports Hall of Fame (’84), U.S. Olympic Amateur Hockey Association 50 Year Dream Team. John Poff First baseman and outfielder with Philadelphia Phillies (1979) and Milwaukee Brewers (1980) ... hit .218 with 19 hits (1 HR) in 87 career at-bats ... Wrote for Elysian Fields Quarterly Baseball Review in the early 2000s ... Findlay High standout carried an 18-game hitting streak into the 1970 state high school tournament and starred as an outfielder/first baseman at Duke (.257 career batting average), becoming a co-captain and MVP in 1973 and a two-time allAtlantic Coast Conference player ... Starred on the American Legion baseball teams. Forest ‘Tot’ Presnell Pitcher with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1938-40 and the Chicago Cubs from 1941-42 ... Recorded 157 strikeouts with 134 walks ... Lockered next to Babe Ruth during 1938 season when Babe was a Dodgers’ coach ... Started against Johnny Vander Meer in the Cincinnati pitcher’s second of two straight no-hitters ... Pitched in the first night game at Ebbets Field and was part of the first televised game ... Inducted into Ohio Baseball Hall of Fame in 1984. Jack Quisno Has coached Liberty-Benton to 24 Blanchard Valley Conference boys track and field championships in 26 seasons as head coach, with 10 district championships, nine regional championships and three Division III state championships ... Has coached 13 state Tired of Being In Pain? WORK INJURIES • SPORTS INJURIES • DISC DISEASE • BACK PAIN • HEADACHES • TMJ CAR ACCIDENTS • SHOULDER PAIN • LEG/HIP PAIN • FAILED BACK SURGERY On-Call for Blanchard Valley ER “America’s Top Chiropractors ‘09” Findlay’s first Chiropractor to offer Disc Decompression Therapy Cindy Morehead Has coached University of Findlay’s Western equestrian team to four International Horse Show Association national championships and one runnerup finish in seven years as the team’s head D11 Dr. Darrach DC, RRT, FIAMA, AAPM Comprehensive Treatment for Each Condition Certified Athletic Trainer Most Insurance Companies Accepted Master’s Degree in Exercise Rehabilitation Easy Payment Plans Patient Directed/ Evidence Based Care Plans Specialized Treatment of Contested Work Injuries Findlay’s only Certified Sports Chiropractor Active Release Technique Elite Provider Network Dr. Lofquist DC, MS, ATC, CCSP, ART 643 TRENTON AVE (next to Taco Bell) • 419-427-6300 • www.trentonchiropracticandrehab.com D12 Top Continued from page D11 berger elected to play basketball for Oklahoma ... 4-year letterman and started as senior, playing in 139 games, the third most in Big 12 Conference history. Chuck Rogers Played baseball and basketball at the University of Michigan ... Was member of Wolverines’ 1974 Big Ten 10 basketball title team and 1975 league champion baseball squad ... Played three seasons with the Chicago Cubs AAA farm team in Wichita and five seasons in Mexican League ... Pitched Findlay High to 1971 state championship and the 1972 American Legion baseball team to World Series ... Currently resides in Findlay. BICENTEN NI A L yards and 12 TDs in 1975 and 1,014 yards and 19 touchdowns in 1976 ... United Press International all-Ohio second team pick as well ... Played on Findlay High’s first OHSAA playoff team in 1975 ... Also lettered in baseball at FHS ... Four-year letterwinner at Michigan State, graduating in 1981. Received an MBA from the University of LaVerne, Calif. in 1990 and is currently a project manager for Intel Corp. in Phoenix, Ariz. Player of the Year in basketball at Findlay High ... single-game high of 44 points and single-season high of 521 points ... started every game at Ohio State, scoring 1,622 points, which is second among three-year players behind Jerry Lucas ... All-Big Ten as junior and senior at OSU ... Played with Cleveland Cavaliers from 1970-72 and with the Philadelphia 76ers. Shane Shockey As a senior golfer at Ohio State in 1985, was first-team All-American, first-team all Big Ten, winner of the Big Ten championship and Michigan State Invitational ... Also in 1985, runner-up and co-medalist at the U.S. Women’s Amateur, Women’s Western Amateur Championship medalist, winner of the Ohio Women’s Amateur Championship at the Findlay Country Club, and had the low amateur score at the LPGA Jamie Farr Classic ... Qualified for LPGA Tour in 1991, participating in 22 events ... In 1994, was ranked sixth on the all-time Futures Tour money list ... Won four Futures Tour events ... Currently in her fourth year as the head women’s coach at the University of Michigan. Bluffton native ... Won 2011-12 NCAA Division II indoor national championship in pole vault (17- 3/4) for UF ... holds UF indoor (17-3) and outdoor (16-10 3/4) pole vault records ... GLIAC indoor champion (2010-11 & 2011-12), GLIAC outdoor champion (201011) ... 2-time pole vault state champion at Bluffton in 2004 (14-8) and 2005 (14-9) and runner-up in 2006 ... three-time state wrestling qualifier at Bluffton. Sue Ann Sandusky Won numerous national and international rif le shooting championships as a member of the U.S. International Shooting Team ... Won 6 gold medals in world competition ... In 1978, won 3 gold medals at the World Shooting Championships in Seoul, Korea ... 3-time all-American rifle shooter at Texas Christian University in 1972, ’73 & ’74 ... Served as a U.S. defense attache at American embassy in Liberia, Congo, Cote d’Ivoire and Nigeria. Her most recent assignment was as the director of African studies at the U.S. Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, Pa. Andy Schramm Two-time all-Ohio and allBuckeye Conference running back for Findlay High, rushing for 1,222 A.J. Siebeneck Considered the premier soccer player to come out of Findlay’s youth, travel and high school programs ... Holds most Findlay High offensive records, including goals in a season (46) and career (86) and assists in career (40) ... All-league, all-district, all-state, all-Midwest and OHSAA Scholar Athlete as a senior ... Four-year starter at Duke University, helping Blue Devils reach the NCAA Final Four as a junior and senior. Ranks 13th on school’s all-time list for career points ... Graduate of Duke (1994) and Temple University of Podiatric Medicine (1998), currently a podiatrist in Latham, N.Y. Dave Sorenson 1966 Ohio Associated Press champion wrestler at UF ... Won the 142-pound title in 1995 and 150-pound crown in 1996 & ’97 ... Ninth on Roughnecks’ all-time win list, with a 86-16 record in three years after transferring from Ohio State ... Won nine tournament championships while at UF, which is second on all-time list ... Enshrined in the NAIA Hall of Fame in 2010 ... Entering his 14th season as UF assistant. Cheryl Stacy Dick Strahm 25 -year UF head football coach who guided Oilers to four NAIA national championships (1979, ’92, ’95, ’97) ... Won four national coach of the year awards ... 12-time NAIA District 22 coach of the year ... Led UF to 12 NAIA playoff appearances with 19-7-1 record ... Had career collegiate record of 183-64-5 ... Coached 38 NAIA all-Americans and 16 NAIA all-American scholar athletes. Bubba Taylor Three-time NAIA national Al Thomas Four-year basketball letterman at Bowling Green State University, helping Falcons to Mid-American Conference title and NIT appearances in 1983 ... BGSU team captain (1985) ... Third-team Associated Press all-Ohio, played in the North-South All-Star game and first-team all-Buckeye Conference in basketball at Findlay High in 1981 ... Helped FHS post threeyear record of 60-10, make two regional appearances, win two Buckeye Conference titles and put together a 35-game home court winning streak ... Three-year FHS baseball letterman as Trojans won back-to-back Buckeye Conference titles (1980-81) and had a regional appearance (1980) ... American Legion batting champion and allstar pick (1980-82) ... Played in 8 world and 9 national fastpitch softball tournaments and named third-team all-American (1993). THE COURIER MONDAY, JUNE 11, 2012 & ’12 indoors; 2010, outdoor) ... Genoa grad ... Named 2012 Midwest Field Athlete of the Year by U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association ... won GLIAC indoor and outdoor shot put titles as senior. Steve Wenner One of the most dominating inside players in Findlay High basketball history ... Set school record with 27 rebounds against Scott May and Sandusky in 1970 ... Career scoring average (21.2 ppg) believed to be a school record ... Among all-time leaders in points in a career (9th, 849), season (13th, 432) and game (19th, 35) ... 3-year starter at Ohio State and was one of the top rebounders in the Big Ten ... Played professional ball in Europe ... Owns Jack’s Heating, Air Conditioning and Plumbing. Steve Williman Has coached the LibertyBenton boys basketball team for 26 seasons, leading Eagles to 1995 state Division III championship, 510 wins, 42 consecutive Blanchard Valley Conference victories (2005-2010), 22 sectional championships including 20 in a row (1991-2010), 9 district championships, 2 regional championships and 15 BVC titles. Dave Wilson Derrick Vicars Two-time NCAA Division II outdoor national champion for UF, winning discus in 2010 (173-1) and shot put in 2012 (62-8) ... UF indoor record-holder in shot put (62-6) and weight throw (70 1/4) and outdoor record-holder in shot put (62-8) and discus (176-0) ... 3-time Div. II All-American (2010 All-Ohio quarterback after leading Findlay High to its firstever 10-0 regular season and into the state playoffs in 1975 ... Also all-Buckeye Conference in basketball and baseball as shortstop on 29-0 team ... Led Ball State to two Mid-American Conference football titles, was two-time allMAC pick and first sophomore to be named team’s MVP ... Led the NCAA Division I in passing efficiency in 1977 ... Currently serves as Detroit Lions team chaplain. Jeff Wobser Won the 50-meter freestyle state title in 1979 and the 50 and 100-free championships in 1980 at Findlay High ... Holds FHS record for both events along with several Findlay YMCA age-group swimming records ... Swam on a scholarship at the University of Tennessee for two years, before becoming an assistant coach ... Currently head swimming coach at Findlay High. Herk Wolfe 6-foot-7, 235-pound center who led the NAIA in scoring (30.5 ppg) in 1951-52 with 671 points and 704, respectively, at Findlay College ... Holds school’s singlegame marks of 61 points and 33 rebounds ... Inducted into NAIA Helms Foundation Hall of Fame. Joy Woolley Female member of Findlay High’s boys hockey team in early 1980s ... Played women’s hockey at Northeastern University and was member of two Northeastern national title teams ... AllAmerican soccer player at Findlay High, establishing school record for most goals and assists ... Also played softball at FHS ... Currently assists Findlay Area Hockey Association. Bob Wortman Became first person to officiate a Super Bowl and an NCAA basketball championship game in the same season in 1972 ... Officiated two Super Bowls (1972 & ’78) and four NCAA finals ... Findlay High and Findlay College graduate. Findlay had a professional baseball team in 1930s FDR was in the White House, pot roast was selling for 16 cents a pound, and Findlay had a professional baseball team. The year was 1937 and Findlay was a member of the short-lived Ohio State League. The team was known as the Browns. The conference, a loose-knit organization of minor league teams who often switched allegiance from one season to another, began play in 1936 and folded in 1941. But for those six years, towns like Findlay, Fostoria, Fremont, Lima, Tiffin, Sandusky, Mansfield, Marion and New Philadelphia could all claim their part of professionalb aseball. The Ohio State League was an offshoot of the expanded minor league system pioneered by Branch Rickey of the St. Louis Cardinals. Each team was owned and operated by local investors, but most had some kind of working agreement with a major league organization — New Philadelphia and Fostoria with St. Louis; Fremont with the Cincinnati Reds; Tiffin with the Detroit Tigers; Mansfield with the Boston Red Sox. Findlay entered the Ohio State League in 1937 and made an immediate impact. Under the guidance of Grover Hartley, who had played in four World Series with the New York Giants, the Browns beat Marion in the semifinals of the league playoff, then lost in the finals to a Mansfield powerhouse stocked with some talented players by the Red Sox. Problems with ownership and financing nearly canceled the 1938 season. Mansfield dropped out of the league. Marion followed suit, leaving just Findlay, Fostoria, Fremont and Tiffin. Commissioner Harry Smith, one of the major founders of the league, resigned. But his replacement, Toledo attorney Paul Shank, instilled new life into the league. An innovative experiment — night baseball — also had a major impact. Findlay, Fremont and Fostoria all installed lights at their fields and the jump in attendance was staggering. Findlay, for example, averaged 200 fans for day games, but 1,000 at night. Findlay finished second in the 1938 race. The Browns took the 1939 league title, thanks to some solid pitching by Barney Fletcher and Bill Prussing late in the season, but lost a grueling seven-game championship series to the Lima Pandas. In 1940, major league commissioner Kennesaw Mountain Landis ruled that a team could no longer stockpile players in its minor league systems. Many major league teams dropped their affiliates, including those in Findlay, Fostoria and Tiffin. Without major league backing, many of the Ohio State League teams struggled. Most lost money during the 1940 season, after which Hartley tried to sell Findlay’s franchise to a group of Marion businessmen. 200 YEARS OF COMMUNITY ACHIEVEMENT AND GROWTH. Milestones remind us of what we truly value. Happy 200th birthday, Findlay! Cooper Tire and its employees are proud to call this community home.