Historic Columbus
Transcription
Historic Columbus
HISTORIC COLUMBUS A Bicentennial History by Ed Lentz A publication of the Columbus Chamber of Commerce HISTORIC COLUMBUS A Bicentennial History by Ed Lentz Commissioned by the Columbus Chamber of Commerce Historical Publishing Network A division of Lammert Incorporated San Antonio, Texas ABOUT THIS BOOK This book is dedicated to the entrepreneurs and businesses who form the backbone of the Columbus Region—strengthening our community and economy from 1812 to 2012 and beyond. Founded to be the State Capital in 1812, Columbus marks 200 years of growth and prosperity in 2012. The Columbus Chamber produced this book, Historic Columbus, to honor the rich history that makes the Columbus community what it is today and honor just a few of the businesses and organizations that share in Columbus’ proud past. Historic Columbus tells the story of where we have been. The Chamber is proud to have served as an economic catalyst of and advocate for this community since 1884, when it was established as the Columbus Board of Trade. In 2012, the Columbus Region is at a pivotal point. As we celebrate the bicentennial, residents, neighborhoods, community and business leaders, pay tribute to the past. But we also look forward, to embrace the future with bold plans to for economic development. Together, we will ensure that we continue to grow, prosper and thrive. Happy 200th Birthday, Columbus. Michael Dalby President and CEO Columbus Chamber Jack Partridge Chairman 2010-2012 Columbus Chamber Melissa P. Ingwersen Chair Elect 2010-2012 Columbus Chamber First Edition Copyright © 2011 Historical Publishing Network All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, without permission in writing from the publisher. All inquiries should be addressed to Historical Publishing Network, 11535 Galm Road, Suite 101, San Antonio, Texas, 78254. Phone (800) 749-9790. ISBN: 9781935377597 Library of Congress Card Catalog Number: 2011938334 Historic Columbus: author: cover photography: contributing writer for “Sharing the Heritage”: A Bicentennial History Ed Lentz Larry Hamill Photography Marie Beth Jones Historical Publishing Network president: Ron Lammert project managers: Wynn Buck, Igor Patrushev, Bruce Barker administration: Donna M. Mata, Melissa G. Quinn book sales: Dee Steidle production: Colin Hart, Evelyn Hart, Glenda Tarazon Krouse, Omar Wright PRINTED IN CANADA HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 2 CONTENTS 4 A CKNOWLEDGEMENTS 5 P REFACE 6 C HAPTER I “A Most Delightful Country” 15 C HAPTER II Frontier Conflict 22 C HAPTER III Franklinton 29 C HAPTER IV A Capital Beginning 1812-1816 37 C HAPTER V The Hub of the Wheel 1816-1840 48 C HAPTER VI The City Challenged 1840-1865 59 C HAPTER VII Railroad Town 1865-1900 68 C HAPTER VIII A City of Light 1900-1930 80 C HAPTER IX Hometown 1930-1950 88 C HAPTER X All-America City 1950-1970 96 C HAPTER XI Test City to Best City 1970-1990 105 C HAPTER XII The City Rising 1990-2012 116 S HARING 199 S PONSORS 200 A BOUT THE THE H ERITAGE A UTHOR CONTENTS 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS A history book—especially a pictorial history—is never the work of one person or even of a few. As is often the case, a lot of people helped in the preparation of this book. For help with research, I am once again indebted to the reference librarians at the Main Branch of the Columbus Metropolitan Library, the Archives-Library of the Ohio Historical Society, the State Library of Ohio, the Ohioana Library, and The Ohio State University Library. As to the pictures, there are even more people to thank. There are two major sources of the pictures used in this book. The first is the Columbus Dispatch. I am especially grateful to Michael Curtin, Associate Publisher Emeritus for his help and to Linda Deitch and the staff of the Dispatch library for their extraordinary assistance in finding obscure images for a local historian. Equally helpful was the staff of the Genealogy, History and Travel Division of the Columbus Metropolitan. I am especially indebted to Bonnie Chandler, Nick Taggert, Andy Miller, and Russ Pollit—all whom spent more than a little time on this project. Other helpful assistance with photographs and their availability came from the Capitol South Community Urban Redevelopment Corporation, the Columbus Downtown Development Corporation, the City of Columbus Department of Development, the Columbus Museum of Art, the Library of Congress, the National Archives and Records Administration and the New York Public Library. Also special mention should be made of pictorial help from Parrill Hertz, Esther Miller, and Donald Schlegel. Thanks are in order to Jack Partridge and Susan Merryman of the Columbus Chamber and Ron Lammert of Historical Publishing Network for their advice and support as the book was in preparation. Finally, as always, a special thanks to my wife Andrea, who makes my work both possible and worthwhile. ✧ The Columbus skyline in 2005. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 4 PREFACE Like most cities, Columbus has been a place that has seen a lot of different people pass through over the course of the last couple of centuries. Some stayed awhile. Some did not. So at any given time there are a lot of people living in Columbus who do not know very much about the place where they are living. And this lack of knowledge is not just about who we have been. It is about who we are. Columbus is the largest city in land area in the state of Ohio. Many people living in the suburbs of one side of the city may come downtown from time to time but they seldom travel to the other side of town. In short, many of us do not really know who we are—as well as who we have been. I happen to think we should know who we are and who we have been. I came to Columbus in the late 1960s to study American history at The Ohio State University. While I was doing that I was surprised to find that no one had written a history of Columbus and Franklin County since 1930. And that history was something of a rehash of one written ten years before. And the 1920 history was a simplified retelling of a lengthy narrative published in 1892. And since there were not all that many people teaching and writing local history in central Ohio, one might say the field was rather open to newcomers who might be inclined to tell the story of Columbus. I was so inclined. I have always believed that we cannot really know who we are if we do not know where we have been. And that is what history does. It gives us roots in a society of increasingly rapid political, economic, and social change. Some might wonder what there is new to tell about the history of Midwestern capital city. Writing a weekly newspaper article about local history for almost twenty years has taught me that there is always a new story to tell. In the course of writing this book, I have learned a few things I did not know about Columbus and found a lot of new pictures that have not been published all that often and sometimes not at all. It is that discovery of new things about a familiar town that keeps me returning to the past of this place. Columbus is not only geographically in the middle of the state. As the center of state power and authority for the past two hundred years it is also the symbolic heart of Ohio. This admixture of state history and local history makes the story of this city unique and unlike that of any other place in Ohio. It is a story well-worth retelling. ✧ The Riverfront in 2009. Columbus, Ohio, has been a place where people have been meeting one with another for more than two hundred years. It is the state capital—and much, much more. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. PREFACE 5 CHAPTER I “A MOST DELIGHTFUL COUNTRY” T H E L AY O F T H E L A N D ✧ Created as Ohio’s first state park in 1896, Fort Ancient in southwest Ohio has been a place of human habitation for at least two thousand years and possibly much longer. Its people were residents of central Ohio as well. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. In the fall of 1750, a trapper, trader and frontiersman named Christopher Gist was hired by the Virginia Land Company to cross the Appalachians and report on the land beyond in and around the valley of the Ohio River. People had been living in what is now central Ohio for quite a long time before Christopher Gist came calling. Some of those earlier residents were French “Courier du Bois” and English “Long Hunters.” But none of them could or would leave a record of what they found. Passing very close to what would later be Columbus, Ohio, Christopher Gist would later record what he found. The well-known American author Washington Irving later wrote that Gist’s journal reported that the land was “clad with noble forests of hickory, walnut, ash, poplar, sugar-maple and wild cherry trees. Occasionally there were spacious plains covered with wild rye; natural meadows with blue grass and clover.” “Nothing is wanted save cultivation,” said Christopher Gist, “to make this a most delightful country.” Gist’s report was important because it convinced a number of people in the English colonies to the east that the Ohio Country was neither a wasteland nor an endless trackless forest. It was in fact a very pleasant and desirable place indeed. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 6 This was a place of extraordinary natural richness and diversity. Over the long history of North America, different sorts of people would continue to find something to like about this land between the Great Lakes to the north and the Ohio River to the south. The broad arc of the various ranges composing the Appalachian Mountains begins in the American South and moves to the northeast eventually ending in the mountains of New England and maritime Canada. People traveling east from the Great Plains would inevitably be drawn inexorably north and east into the Ohio Country. And they would like what they found. Unlike the subtropical heat of the South or the numbing cold of the land north of the Great Lakes, Ohio is a place of relatively temperate climate—occasionally very hot or cold but generally more moderate. This temperate climate produced plains with grasses more than six feet tall and mighty old growth forests whose trees soared to heights of more than one hundred feet both of which served as the home to a wide variety of wildlife. The natural cycle of death and rebirth of the plant life of the forests produced a thick rich soil, especially along the clear clean rivers running through the land. From time to time, we still find evidence of the extraordinary wildlife which wandered across the land in that long ago time—fossilized bones of the mastodon, the tree sloth, and other large animals. For at least 14,000 years, this rich land has served as the home of a wide variety of people. While people might have been here even longer than that, we will be hard put to find evidence of their presence. Prior to that time, 14,000 years ago, most of central Ohio was buried under a great glacier that covered most of the Midwest for hundreds of years. It was not the first glacier to cover Ohio. And it is not likely to be the last. But since the next one is not due for another 50,000 to 75,000 years from now, it is not a matter of current and pressing concern. The great Wisconsinan Glacier completely transformed the landscape of most of Ohio. It rerouted some rivers, eliminated whole mountains and carved out the Great Lakes as it ground its way across the Midwest. The traveler interested to know what Ohio looked like before the glacier does not have to travel very far. Leaving Columbus and driving south and east one will soon see hills in the distance beyond Lancaster, Ohio. It is here—where the flatland ends and the hills begin that the glacier stopped and began eventually to withdraw. The land the glacier left behind was a new country. To some extent we tend to be biased by our conventions in map making. Looking at a map of Ohio with roads and rivers noted, it is tempting to think of the state as a uniform kind of place. It really is not that way at all. ✧ Until about 14,000 years ago, most of central Ohio was under a very large layer of glacial ice. This map shows just how far south the great glaciers came—and what they left behind. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES. GLACIAL MAP OF OHIO CHAPTER I 7 ✧ To the south and west of what is now Columbus lay the great Pickaway and Darby Plains. The prairies of central Ohio have largely vanished under the progress of the plow. A few remain such as the Bigelow Cemetery Nature Preserve near Plain City. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES. Ohio is really several different places— from the flat lands in Northwest Ohio that were once part of the Great Black Swamp to the hills of Southeast Ohio, the terrain of the state varies quite a bit. More importantly the northern third of Ohio sees its rivers drain into Lake Erie while the southern two thirds of the state looks south to where its rivers empty into the Ohio River. It was near the places where rivers come together that people coming into Ohio as the glaciers retreated often spent some time. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 8 One of those places where two great rivers meet is in central Ohio. THE FIRST PEOPLE People have been living in North America for at least 15,000 years and possibly much longer. For many years, it was believed that people crossed over to the Americas from Asia on an ice bridge between Siberia and Alaska. It is likely that some people did arrive by that route. But in recent years, theories have also been put forth suggesting early arrival by boat. In any case it is clear, that at least some people were present in North America long before the glaciers began to withdraw. We do not know all that much about the earliest residents of central Ohio. There were not all that many people anywhere 15,000 years ago. And the people who came to North America were even fewer in number. These people were “hunter-gatherers.” They lived in small bands of closely related people and did not stay very long in one place. They followed the animal herds in their migrations across the land and relied on the animals they hunted for food, clothing, shelter and even the weapons they carried. Because the remains of animals do not survive all that well, the only real evidence we have that early people were here at all is in the stone arrow points that turn up from time to time in central Ohio. The forests were different in those days. It is important to remember that the forests and woodlots we see today in central Ohio are relatively recent. A close look will show that most of the trees are simply not all that big. The reason for this is that most of the forests of Ohio have been cut down at least once, and sometimes several times. The forests that will cover Ohio will later come to be called “old growth” forests. Some of the trees will grow to truly astonishing sizes. Some sycamore trees would be twenty to thirty feet in diameter and rise more than one hundred feet above the forest floor. Sycamore trees decay and die from the inside out. More than one frontier narrative describes sheltering from a storm or camping for the night inside the trunk of a fallen sycamore tree. Certain of the hardwood trees come to be identified with the forests of Ohio and central Ohio in particular. Some like the Maple will be prized for the syrup made from their sap. Others like the Walnut and Hickory are favored for food. And some like the Horse Chestnut are simply admired for their immense size and the value of their wood. The massive groves of Horse Chestnut trees are generally gone today from Ohio but the characteristic seed of the tree—said to resemble the eye of a deer—gave Ohio its nickname— the Buckeye State. Over the course of several thousand years, the land grew warmer, the forests and prairies flourished and in time the size of the roving bands of “hunter-gatherers” grew larger and larger. In some parts of the world, the lives of hunter-gatherers continue today much as they have for the past several thousand years. But in Ohio, a different path would be followed. What had been a culture and a way of life for generations was about to become a civilization. CITIES OF EARTHEN WONDER A number of American towns and villages have a Mound Street. But few major cities have a Mound Street only a few blocks from the center of town in the middle of the central business district. But Mound Street in Columbus, Ohio, is just such a street. When early American settlers of the Ohio valley reached the junction of the Scioto and Olentangy Rivers in the late 1700s they were surprised to see what appeared to be a large tree-covered hill standing along the flat crest of the high ridge on the eastern bank of the Scioto river. They were even more surprised when they determined that the hill was apparently manmade. Rising more than fifty feet above the forest floor, the large trees growing on the sides of the mound indicated that it had been there for quite a long time. Undeterred by this feat of prehistoric engineering, the surveyors of Columbus laid out their new town and placed the mound in the intersection of High Street and the appropriately named Mound Street. They then proceeded to use clay from the mound to make bricks for the original two story statehouse. For more than twenty years, traffic moving along High Street came to the intersection of Mound and High Street and carefully skirted around the edge of the mound blocking the intersection. An enterprising local physician named Young went to the trouble of hacking a path to the top of the mound and then proceeded to build a two story white frame house on the summit. Mound notwithstanding, it is not fully clear how Dr. Young acquired the right to build a house in the middle of a public intersection. But it is fair to note that squatters and other practitioners of less than legal occupancy were rather common on the frontier. It is also not clear why the good doctor constructed his office at the top of a rather steep hill. Presumably if one was really sick, they would make it to the top of the hill. Or it is also possible that the doctor liked his privacy and was in the habit of making a lot ✧ Most of what is now Columbus was once part of an immense old growth forest of huge hardwood trees. The forests that once covered Ohio have mostly been removed— more than once. One of the places that was missed is the Davey Nature Preserve in Champaign County. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES. CHAPTER I 9 ✧ When European explorers first came to Ohio they found thousands of Native American enclosures, mounds and ceremonial sites. As late as 1914, William Corless Mills could still show dozens of sites in Franklin County in his Archeological Atlas of Ohio. Few of them remain. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. of house calls. In any case the mound and the doctor’s house lasted until the early 1830s. By that time, Columbus was large enough and local traffic was bad enough to warrant the removal of the mound. Over the next several years the mound was removed. Since all of this took place before the invention of photography, there is no known surviving image of the Mound Street mound. But it is believed to have closely resembled the Grave Creek Mound in West Virginia—a mound which also once had a house at its crest. When some local residents were not driving around the mound or plundering it for clay and artifacts, they undoubtedly sometimes wondered who had built it. And wonder is perhaps the correct word since the Mound Street mound—while larger than most—was by no means the only mound in the valley. When settlers arrived in Ohio they found literally thousands of mounds—big and little conical mounds, enclosures of all shapes and sizes, and even an occasional effigy of an animal of one sort or another. Over the next century, many if not most of these mounds were removed by farming, road construction or the rapid expansion of towns and cities. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 10 Several mounds were located in what is now downtown Columbus. Late in the 1800s, longtime local resident Joseph Sullivant remembered that, when he was young, there were still two small mounds near the place where COSI and Veterans Memorial Auditorium is today on the west side of the Scioto. And there was a mound where the Arena District is today. All were removed by the 1830s. In the years before the emergence of archeology as a profession, there were all sorts of speculative ideas about who these mound builders might be. Perhaps the Aztecs or Mayans had made it to Ohio and lacking stone built their large mounds with dirt. Perhaps Viking explorers had built them or Egyptian sailors blown off course and looking to remind themselves of the pyramids they would never see again. It was even seriously proposed that the ten lost tribes of Israel might be responsible. Perhaps the only people not proposed as mound builders were the Native Americans whom the new American settlers were slowly but surely removing and sending away from their longtime homes in Ohio. What we know today is that the Mound Builders were a diverse and interesting group of people. We also know that all of them were Native Americans and we know how they built their mounds. But there is much we still do not know. About one thousand years before the current era, the long generations of huntergatherer peoples decided to settle down. Why they did and precisely when they did is still a subject of considerable and often acrimonious debate. For whatever sets of reasons—and there may have been differing reasons for different groups—the Native American peoples of Ohio began to build villages of greater or lesser size and stay in one place for lengthy periods of time. Archeologists have found remnants of enough of these villages to form some opinions as to how these people lived. Unlike our common image of Native Americans living in large groups in wigwam like tents, the Native Americans of Ohio built sturdy structures anchored on wooden poles planted in the ground and then covered with layers of bark for walls and roofing. Many of these structures were built and rebuilt and stayed on the same site for decades. And at least at first, these people did not live in large villages but rather in small groups of houses probably occupied by people linked by kinship and acquaintance. But most of what we have learned of these people has come not from their village sites but from their monuments, ceremonial sites and cemeteries—cemeteries in the form of mounds. We have come to call these people the Mound Builders mostly because we do not know what they called themselves. Around five hundred years before the current era a group of residents of central Ohio began the funerary practice of constructing burial mounds for their dead. As more people were buried in a mound, new layers of earth were added and the mounds became larger. Because one of the first of these mounds to be carefully excavated was located at Adena, the Chillicothe home of Governor Thomas Worthington, the builders of the mound came to be called the Adena people. The Adena were not the first people in the Midwest to build mounds. But the Adena people took up the practice and built more elaborate mounds and mounds with more extensive ceremonial sites associated with them. By one hundred years before the current era the Adena people had been superseded by a new culture that came to be called the Hopewell. The Hopewell people were named for the farmer in Chillicothe on whose land their remains were found. There are still differing opinions as to whether the Adena and Hopewell were two separate peoples or simply one people passing through a period of cultural change. In any case, the Hopewell had a much more elaborate sense of the ceremonial. Their towns were larger, their ceremonial centers like Newark and Chillicothe were extensive, and their use of a variety of items from distant locations—obsidian from Oregon, shells from the Gulf of Mexico—is evidence of a welldeveloped trade network. In time, the Hopewell yielded to yet other cultures. One of the most important of these was the Fort Ancient people who occupied the hilltop enclosure now called by that name in southwest Ohio. It appears that these later peoples were involved in lengthy conflicts as the people buried at their sites show evidence of disease and violence. Who exactly they were fighting and why is not completely clear. What is clear is that by 1500 the age of the great Mound Builder societies had ended. Of the thousands of mounds that once dotted the landscape of Ohio, only several hundred remain. Some of the best known like ✧ Above: Mound Street is named for a large mound that once stood in the intersection of that street with High Street in downtown Columbus. Removed in the 1830s, it was said to have resembled the Grave Creek Mound in West Virginia—shown here in 1848. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Below: The Native American cultures of Central Ohio produced exquisite pieces of ceremonial art. A notable example is the Adena Pipe at the Ohio Historical Society. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER I 11 Fort Ancient in Warren County and Serpent Mound in Adams County are preserved as historic sites. In fact Fort Ancient was the first park acquired by the State of Ohio in 1896. In central Ohio, two of the best preserved sites are the Jeffers Mound near Worthington and the Shrum Mound on McKinley Avenue. And hidden in the woods in the southbound interchange of Route 315 and Bethel road is a small mound. At the time of construction the entire freeway was shifted a bit to accommodate the mound. One of the men who insured the survival of the mound later said that it seemed like the right thing to do. THE NEW PEOPLE The story of central Ohio in the years between 1500 and 1650 is lost in historical darkness. The Mound Builder cultures of the Adena, Hopewell and Fort Ancient had faded away and it is not fully clear what happened next. Probably some of the groups living in the state were the ancestors of tribes who would also be around later. But European explorers—especially literate ones—would not come into the Ohio valley until well into HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 12 the 1600s. It is the people encountered by those explorers, traders, trappers, frontiersmen and priests who would be remembered as the historic Indian tribes of Ohio. What we do know is that by 1600, a confederation of Native Americans called the Erie had come to occupy much of the southern shore of the lake that bears their name. The Erie’s neighbors to the east were a recently established confederacy of five previously warring tribes along the Mohawk River valley in New York. Calling themselves Haudenosaunee or People of the Long House, these people were often called Iroquois by both friend and foe alike. Finally exasperated by continued conflict with the Erie, the Iroquois swept out of New York and virtually annihilated the Erie in a series of pitched battles. Having defeated their enemies, the Iroquois took most of the rest of what is now Ohio and part of Indiana and held it as their own private preserve for most of the next century. But by the early 1700s, the Iroquois were feeling some pressure of their own. Beginning with the travels of Jacques Cartier in 1534, French explorers were traveling up the St Lawrence River to the Great Lakes. At the same time English colonization was proceeding apace along the Atlantic coast. Responding to the growing proximity of both the English and the French, the Iroquois increasingly withdrew from Ohio to protect their homeland. Into the empty Ohio Country left by the Iroquois came a number of people from many different places. Into western Ohio from Indiana came the Miami or Twightee people. From the east came the Delaware or Leni Lenape people. These were the people who had met William Penn when he founded Pennsylvania in 1681. Their villages would extend all the way west to the county immediately north of Columbus. From the north came the archenemies of the Iroquois, another Algonquin people called the Hurons by their French friends. They called themselves “wendat” and that name would become the Wyandot or Wyandotte that they came to be called in Ohio. Their villages occupied most of northwest Ohio and extended as far south as northern Franklin County and even to what is now Columbus. ✧ Opposite, top: Fort Ancient, Ohio’s first state park. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Opposite, bottom: Located along McKinley Avenue in Columbus, the Shrum Mound is maintained by the Ohio Historical Society. It is believed to be a burial mound of the Adena people. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Above: The Jeffers Mound near Worthington, Ohio, is a Hopewell mound from 100 BC to 400 AD. It originally stood within a rectangular enclosure with two adjacent circular enclosures. Quite well preserved, it now is in the midst of a residential area. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. CHAPTER I 13 ✧ Any place where two major rivers come together will eventually attract people as well. Yet the confluence of the Olentangy and Scioto Rivers was remarkably free of people as late as 1908 when this picture was made. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. The Iroquois were not completely gone from Ohio. Much of the northeastern part of the state was still controlled by the Senecas, one of the five tribes of the Iroquois Confederacy. And scattered across the state were random bands of Iroquois who chose not to formally associate with the Confederacy. These people came to be called Mingo and they also had villages in various parts of central Ohio. And then there were the Shawnee. They came to occupy most of the Scioto River valley from what is now Columbus to the Ohio River. These were the people who had come to occupy Ohio by 1750. It is important to remember that there were not all that many of them. Although no one was taking a census at the time, it has been estimated that there were approximately 20,000 people living in Ohio at the time. And of those people, about 10,000 were Shawnee. Interestingly, these relatively recent arrivals were also the people who gave many of the places in the state the names we still use today. “Ohio” is a variation of an Iroquois word meaning “great river.” “Scioto” is a word a little more difficult to define. Its root is a Wyandot HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 14 word meaning “deer.” And the word Olentangy is probably the most elusive of all. It was originally called “Keenhongsheconsepung” or “Knife Stone Creek” by the Delawares because sharpening stones could be found within it. In fact the river is still called Whetstone Creek in the counties north of Columbus. In 1833, possibly as a gesture to the Indian tribes it had spent a generation evicting from the state, the Ohio General Assembly decided to return a number of rivers to their original Native American names. Perhaps despairing of calling it by its former name, the Assembly settled the more easily pronounceable “Olentangy”—the original name of Big Darby Creek—on the river to the north. Olentangy is a word of varied origins. It has been variously translated as “river of red face paint” and “river at rest” depending on the language one consults. Certainly red ocher face paint sources can be found along the upper reaches of the Big Darby. And compared to other nearby streams, it is today a comparatively restful waterway. But in the mid 1700s, none of the waterways were all that restful and soon many of them would run red and not with face paint. After a generation of peace, the Ohio frontier was about to become a very dangerous place indeed. CHAPTER II FRONTIER CONFLICT A CONTINENTAL CONTEST ✧ English and French North America clashed In the years after 1700, the powerful Iroquois Confederacy had withdrawn slowly from the Ohio Country to meet the challenges of French and English incursions into their New York homeland. What had followed was a generation of peace as a number of tribes had moved into the rich and bountiful lands north of the Ohio River and had generally avoided conflict among themselves or with outsiders. Now, in the 1740s all of that was about to end. Wars had come and gone before among America’s Native American peoples. But they were brief conflicts following rather strict rules of how warriors behaved one to another. Total destruction of communities as the Iroquois had done to the Erie was rare and usually was the climax of decades of conflict. Now a new kind of warfare was coming to Ohio. It pitted Europeans against each other and it also would lead to attacks by Native Americans of differing loyalties against other tribes. And finally it would lead to the destruction of entire communities of both Europeans and Native Americans. In short it was war with little mercy for both Native America and colonial settlers. And it would not end for more than sixty years. It began for the seemingly most trivial of reasons. By the 1740s, Europeans of one sort or another—English, French, Spanish and several other nationalities—had been settling on the various edges of the Americas for more than 200 years. And generally they had left each other alone. They were able to ignore the presence of people they might not have liked very much because the country was vast and generally the newcomers were few in number. violently at Pickawillany near what is now Piqua, Ohio, in 1752. Recent archeological research at the site is beginning to reveal the layout of a frontier village and trading post. A local marker reads: PICKAWILLANY LOCATED ONE MILE NORTH OF THIS MEMORIAL HEADQUARTERS OF THE MIAMI TRIBES FIRST ENGLISH SETTLEMENT AND THE MOST IMPORTANT TRADING POST IN THE WEST 1748 DESTROYED BY THE FRENCH 1752 MARKED BY THE PIQUA CHAPTER DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. CHAPTER II 15 For more than a generation, English “long hunters” had been threading their way through the passes in the mountains and making a modest living by laboriously bringing the furs and skins of the animals they had killed back over the mountains to sell in the East. But their numbers were few. When caught by the French or their Native American friends, their furs were confiscated and the men sent away. But now, in the 1740s, French traders began to notice that the numbers of Englishmen in Ohio were increasing and they were not simply hunting for a while and leaving. Some of the newcomers were traders and they were building trading posts as if they had right to do so—as if they had come to stay. To the Comte de Galissoniere, the Governor General of French Canada, such English effrontery was simply unacceptable. In 1748, he ordered Captain Celoron de Blainville to take a force of French and Indians and secure the Ohio valley for France. With more than 200 French and Canadian irregulars and fifty of their Native American allies, Captain de Blainville proceeded to his task in the summer of 1749. Following the Allegheny River south to its junction with the Monongahela to form the Ohio, Blainville forcefully exhorted every Englishman he met—and he met several—to leave what he considered French territory at once. To reinforce the point, his party also buried a series of lead plates at the places where a number of major rivers emptied into the Ohio. The buried plate and a similar sign nailed to a nearby tree said that the place belonged to France. Reaching the Great Miami River, the party turned north and ✧ Many of the people living in North America—as well as their European friends—had little idea what eastern North America looked like when John Mitchell published his large map of the area in 1755. It would remain the standard map of the region for many years. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 16 stopped briefly at a settlement of Miami Indians near what is now Piqua, Ohio. Among the residents of Pickawillany town were several English traders. Captain de Blainville ordered them to leave but he had little reason to believe that they would. Over the next few years, the English continued to come down the Ohio River and the French continued to try to get them to leave. Finally, in 1752, the French decided that enough was enough. A party of 300 French and Indians led by Pierre de Langlede swept into Ohio and burned Pickawillany to the ground. Several of the attackers seized the leader of the village—a man unfortunately nicknamed “Old Britain” by his English friends. To emphasize the point that aiding the English was unwise, the Indian allies of the French killed Old Britain and ate him. Pickawillany was not rebuilt. But the English continued to arrive in the Ohio valley. The French responded with the construction of a series of new forts from the Great Lakes to the Ohio River. The most important of these was built where the Ohio River began. It was called Fort Duquesne and occupied land claimed variously by Virginia, Pennsylvania, and the King of England. In 1754, the Royal Governor of Virginia sent a young officer named George Washington with several hundred men to order the French to leave English territory. Washington’s mission resulted in a pitched battle between Washington’s small army and a much larger French force. Washington surrendered and in short order a major struggle between France and England was underway. It came to be called the French and Indian War. When it was over in 1763, Great Britain had won control of North America—or so it seemed. A number of the Native American residents of the Ohio valley did not like the idea that the French were leaving and the British were taking their place. Many of them, at least loosely affiliated with a charismatic Ottawa leader named Pontiac, rose in revolt in 1763 and began to attack every recently occupied British fort they could find. Soon only Fort Detroit and Fort Pitt (formerly fort Duquesne) were still under British control. As it turned out, holding those two forts proved to be sufficient. As Pontiac’s revolt continued without success, the siege of the two forts became less and less popular. At length a British force under General Henry Bouquet defeated the Native Americans and relieved Fort Duquesne. While all of this was going on two British traders named Matthew McCrea and Patrick Ellison were camped at the Forks of the Scioto and Olentangy Rivers. Attacked by Native Americans, Ellison escaped but McCrea was not so lucky and became the first person whose name we know to die in what is now downtown Columbus. The combination of the French and Indian War and Pontiac’s Revolt had left Great Britain in possession of an Empire—and deeply in debt. To raise money, the British government thought it perfectly reasonable to tax its colonies in America for at least some of the cost of the war. The Crown also closed the Ohio country to settlement so Britain could continue the fur trade with Ohio’s Native Americans that had previously been so profitable for the French. The residents of colonial America—unaccustomed to heavy taxation and wanting that land for themselves—begged to differ. Over the next several years, the colonists stopped begging and began demanding. And the British government became much less accommodating. By 1774, Lord Dunmore, the Royal Governor of Virginia, was rather exasperated with his unruly residents. He began to look around for something to occupy their attention and fortuitously found an Indian war. A Mingo warrior with the Anglicized name of Logan had been a friend of the English for many years. That friendship ended when a band of border renegades slaughtered his entire family. In retaliation, Logan and several of his friends and acquaintances began to kill every colonist they could find. Dunmore marched into what is now Ohio and established a camp near what is now Circleville where he hoped to talk peace with the local tribes. Some Native Americans did come to Dunmore but Logan and many of the Mingoes did not. To emphasize the importance of his visit, Dunmore sent Colonel William Crawford and 240 mounted men north to attack what was considered to be a hostile Mingo village at the Forks of the Scioto and Olentangy Rivers. Many years later Joseph Sullivant of Columbus reported what he had been told when he was young by people who had been captives of the Indians, …there were three Indian encampments or villages in this vicinity; one on the high bank near the old Morrill House one and a half miles below the city; one at the west end of the Harrisburg Bridge; and the principal one on the river below the mouth of the Whetstone… While there indeed was a Mingo village at the Forks, it was not terribly hostile. When Crawford and his men attacked before dawn, the element of surprise was lost when one of the men fired his weapon early. Still, Crawford considered the attack a success. In a letter, he later reported, ✧ Above: John Murray, the Fourth Earl of Dunmore and Royal Governor of Virginia, led an expedition into the Ohio Valley in …the chief part of the Indians made their 1774 to quell an uprising led by Logan of escape in the dark. But we got fourteen pris- the Mingoes. oners, and killed six of the enemy, and wound- PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. ed several more. We got all of their baggage and horses, ten of their guns and two hundred Below: Major William Crawford was white prisoners. The plunder sold for four dispatched with several hundred men to hundred pounds sterling, besides what was raid an Indian village at the Forks of the returned to a Mohawk Indian who was there. Scioto and Olentangy Rivers during Lord The whole of the Mingoes were ready to start, Dunmore’s War in 1774. He fought the only and were to have set out the morning we battle on the site of Columbus in the attacked them. Lord Dunmore has eleven pris- colonial period. oners and has returned the rest to the nation… PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. With that, the only pitched battle of the colonial era to be fought on the site of what would later be the capital city of Ohio came to an end. Dunmore made a treaty of peace with the Indians that stipulated that no Indian would hunt east of the Ohio River and no white man would hunt west of the river. He then returned with his army to Virginia. It was a short lived peace. Within a few months, the colonies had revolted against Great Britain and Dunmore soon left America. On the frontier, Virginia settlements in Kentucky and western Pennsylvania would soon be attacked by raiders from the Native American encampments north of the Ohio River. CHAPTER II 17 To counter the raids, men like George Rogers Clark and Benjamin Logan would launch mounted raids of 1,000 men or more against the native villages of Ohio. Some of the largest raids took place in western Ohio near the present towns of Springfield and Xenia. Similar raids were undertaken from western Pennsylvania against hostile Delaware and Wyandot villages in northern Ohio. On one of those raids Colonel William Crawford was captured by the Delawares and burned at the stake. Throughout the troubling and violent years of the American Revolution, central Ohio was generally rather peaceful. The only major exception came when John Edwards, a Virginia trader stopped for the night on the site of the old Mingo camp at the Forks of the Scioto. A Wyandot killed him as he slept on September 3, 1775. ANOTHER KIND OF WAR After the American Revolution, the recently formed United States of America had much about which it could feel justifiably proud. Thirteen rather independent colonies—many of whom had little use for each other—had managed to hold together a fragile alliance, raise an army and navy, and had managed to free itself from one of the most powerful empires in history. Now having won its independence, the new country had a few new problems to face. Not the least of these was the simple fact that the country had very little money and was ✧ General Harmar believed that he could best defend the frontier from places like Fort Harmar near Marietta. His campaign into frontier Ohio in 1790 proved him to be correct. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 18 facing an army and many other creditors who had not been paid in quite a long time. But America did one have important asset to its name. At the end of the Revolution the new country ended up in proud possession of most of the land east of the Mississippi River. And this new land could be used to pay debts owed to soldiers, bankers and even a few states. But to do that a few other matters needed to be resolved. First there was the question of measuring the land to insure that it was properly allocated to its new owners. This issue was addressed by the Land Ordinance of 1785 which set out a system of rectangular measurement which would end up giving Ohio and the country a familiar system of square townships marching across the landscape. Or at least it did for much of the country. In some of the land grants set aside for the states in the new territory, older systems of measurement were continued. So if one ended up living between the Miami and Scioto Rivers in the newly established Virginia Military District, a system called “metes and bounds” was used to measure the boundaries of a land purchase. The next big problem was how to govern the new territories and eventually admit them—or not admit them—to the Union. The Ordinance of 1787 set up a method by which a part of the vast new territory might become a state like every other state in the United States. The Ordinance also banned slavery north and west of the Ohio River and protected certain basic civil liberties of its residents. With the passage of these laws many people began to think that the time was right to move to the new country. In 1788, Marietta became the first permanent settlement north and west of the Ohio River. It would soon be followed by a number of others. In short order, forts and other military installations began to be constructed. They were built rapidly because it soon became clear they would be needed. Even with the Land Ordinance of 1785 and the governing Ordinance of 1787, the new territory north and west of the Ohio River still had a few problems. Not the least of these was the fact that the opinion of the Native American population of Ohio of all of these new laws and ordinances had not been asked. Complicating the problem was continued occupation of parts of the new country by the British who were continuing the fur trade and selling the Indians guns and other supplies to help them in their efforts. The first Governor of the Northwest Territory was General Arthur St. Clair. A friend of George Washington, St. Clair ordered the commander of America’s northwest army, General Josiah Harmar to go forth and subdue the Indians. Josiah Harmar, like St. Clair, was a veteran of the Revolution. Modesty not being his strong suit, he had named the post he had built to protect Marietta—Fort Harmar. And it was at Fort Harmar that he would have preferred to stay. Nevertheless, he obeyed his orders and sallied forth with his small army to find the hostile enemy who had been attacking frontier settlements. Near what is now Fort Wayne, Indiana, he found them and engaged his forces in a series of running fights. Having bloodied both himself and the enemy a bit, Harmar decided that he had won, declared victory and came home. General St. Clair was not pleased. He became even less pleased when new raids began to be made all along the frontier. Determining that he could probably do what Harmar couldn’t, St. Clair assembled an army of his own in 1791 and marched north to find and fight the Indians. Marching far too late in the season with untrained and undisciplined troops—and 250 of their wives and children—St. Clair camped in the snow on November 4, 1791. Before dawn the next day, he was attacked by more than 1,500 warriors led by Little Turtle of the Miami and Blue Jacket of the Shawnee. By the end of the day Arthur St. Clair did indeed do something no other American general had done. He suffered the worst defeat ever inflicted on an American army by Native Americans. More than 700 American soldiers died that day and many more were wounded. Most of the 250 women and children also perished in the battle. ✧ Left: General Arthur St. Clair was the first Governor of the Northwest Territory. Frustrated by the lack of progress in pacifying the frontier, he personally led a new expedition into northern Ohio in 1791. It resulted in the worst defeat ever suffered by an American army by Native America. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Right: General Josiah Harmar was the senior officer in the United States Army St. Clair only avoided court-martial by the direct intervention of an appalled President George Washington. St. Clair would remain Governor of the Northwest Territory, but he would never lead an American army again. To rebuild the shattered army, Washington chose General “Mad Anthony” Wayne. A ferocious combat from 1784 to 1791. He constructed Fort Steuben at what is now Steubenville and Fort Washington at Cincinnati among other fortifications. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER II 19 general in the Revolution, Wayne was not the first person some might have picked to HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 20 recruit and train a new army. But Washington knew his generals and he had chosen wisely. Wayne took two years to assemble a new fighting force and build the forts to supply and protect it. When the new army met Native America at a place called Fallen Timbers near Toledo in 1794, the battle was over in less than twenty minutes. Wayne then retired to his newly constructed Fort Greene Ville and called on Native America to come to the fort to discuss a treaty of peace. The Treaty of Greenville of 1795 was signed by representatives of thirteen tribes and opened the southern two thirds of what is now Ohio to settlement. The northern third, including the Great Black Swamp, would remain in the hands of Native America for several more years. Hanging in the rotunda of the Ohio Statehouse is a quite large painting of the signing of the Treaty of Greenville by the noted American artist, Howard Chandler Christy. Completed for Ohio’s sesquicentennial, the painting is impressive and remarkably accurate as to the appearance and dress of the people who were present. However, some of the most important people in the story of Ohio are not shown. They are not shown because they were not there. While important ✧ Opposite, clockwise, starting from top left: Rebuilding the American army, General Anthony Wayne won a stunning victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794. The battle was over in less than twenty minutes. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Calling representatives of Native America to Fort Greene Ville near what is now Greenville, Ohio, in 1795, General Anthony Wayne negotiated a major treaty that changed the map of America. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. The Treaty of Greenville opened most of the southern two-thirds of what is now Ohio to American settlement in the years after the Revolution. The northern third remained the site of reservations until the last Wyandots were removed in 1842. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Left: A quite large painting of the Treaty of Greenville was completed by noted American artist Howard Chandler Christy in 1953. It hangs in the Ohio Statehouse and is remarkable for its meticulous and accurate detail. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. and common people, red and white, young and old gathered at Greenville, another group of men was already moving into the newly opened land and drawing the lines that would truly make the land their own. Some of the people who moved across Ohio in these years came only to see the land and move on. Others came to protect and defend it and then move on. Some, however, came to stay. CHAPTER II 21 CHAPTER III FRANKLINTON THE FRONTIER SURVEYOR ✧ Top: The Sullivant family plot in Green Lawn Cemetery centers on the large monument to Lucas Sullivant. The inscription on the stone notes that it was at this place that Sullivant first saw the place that he would soon call home. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. Above: Lucas Sullivant is the pivotal figure in the opening of central Ohio to settlement. Too young to have fought in the Revolution he came to Ohio as a surveyor in the 1790s. The portrait is from his grave stone in Green Lawn Cemetery. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. The years after the American Revolution were times of great change. It should therefore not be surprising that those times produced some remarkable people who sought a new life in the Ohio Country. A few of them were rogues, scoundrels and not very nice people at all. Most were simple, honest, and decent enough. Some of these people had lived through the war that had created a new America and they continued to be carried forward by the wave of patriotic energy it had created. Others were the children of the founders and wanted to make their own mark as their parents had done. And some were people with the hope that a new world on the frontier had to be far better than the one they were leaving behind. Men like Daniel Boone of Kentucky and Simon Kenton of Ohio loomed somewhat larger than life even during their own lives. They had left home at a young age and gone to the frontier to— as Kenton once put it succinctly—“live on their own hook”—and make a new life for themselves in a new land. One of those new people was a young man from Virginia named Lucas Sullivant. He had been too young to have fought in the American Revolution. But Sullivant grew up on the edge of the frontier and was as interested as anyone in the tales of the men who returned from the land on the other side of the mountains. And in time he would come to have reason to follow them back to the Ohio Country. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 22 The Sullivants of Mecklenburg County, Virginia, had come a long way since the family had arrived from Northern Ireland. By the time Lucas Sullivant was born in 1765, the family of Michael Sullivant and his wife, the former Hannah Lucas, had achieved some success farming the back country with a number of slaves and other occasionally hired workers. Their family included young Lucas, his older brother Michael and his sister Anne. But Michael Sullivant Senior became a bit too much accustomed to the temptations of a leisure life. Having amassed a considerable amount of debt, he died and left Hannah Lucas and her young children with little more than their home and the small tobacco farm surrounding it. By the time Lucas Sullivant was sixteen, his sister had married and left home, his brother had been the victim of an accidental drowning, and his mother had recently died. While working on the farm, young Lucas Sullivant had acquired a basic education and, with the help of a local neighbor, Colonel William Starling, Sullivant had been trained in surveying. Having little reason to remain in Virginia, Lucas Sullivant took his small share of the family’s estate settlement and left for Kentucky— then still part of Virginia. He farmed near Paris in Bourbon County for a time and later lived with a family named Treacle in Washington County. Through the next few years he perfected his surveying skills and looked with increasing interest at the land across the Ohio River to the north. In 1784, Colonel Richard Anderson was appointed surveyor of the western lands to be distributed as bounty payments to Virginia’s veterans of the American Revolution. Located between the Little Miami and Scioto Rivers, the Virginia Military District was narrow at the top but became quite wide as the two rivers diverged from each other as they flowed to the Ohio. To work as a surveyor under these conditions required men of extraordinary talent, flexibility and courage. Colonel Anderson became convinced that, along with men like Nathaniel Massie and Duncan McArthur, Lucas Sullivant was one of them. By 1795, Sullivant was leading a survey team of chainmen, surveying assistants, scouts and hunters into the northern part of the District. His son later described him at this time. Lucas Sullivant was a man “of medium height, muscular and well-proportioned, quick and active in his movements, with an erect carriage and a good walk, a well-balanced head, finished off with a cue, which he always wore; a broad and high forehead, an aquiline nose, and a blue gray eye, a firm mouth and square chin. He was firm and positive in his opinions, but courteous in manner and expression, prompt and decisive to act on his own convictions, altogether a man of forcible character, exercising an influence over those with whom he came in contact.” Sullivant and his party were under some pressure to move quickly and survey their allotted part of the District as rapidly as they could. One reason for this haste was to meet the demands of the people who were holding the land warrants. Some of them were veterans who had not been paid in years. Others were land speculators who had bought the land warrants. ✧ Simon Kenton is Ohio’s answer to Daniel Boone. Arriving in the Ohio River valley while still in his teens, he and frontier Ohio grew up together. He is reputed to have been the model for James Fennimore Cooper’s Natty Bumpo of the Leather stocking Tales. Over a very long life, he came to know central Ohio quite well. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER III 23 ✧ In 1797, Lucas Sullivant laid out a town on the west bank of the Scioto River where it met the Olentangy. An admirer of Benjamin Franklin, he called it Franklinton. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Another reason for speed was the enlightened self-interest of the surveyor who took his own payment in land and wanted to find the best property before someone else did. And a final reason was the presence and occasional pursuit of the party by Native Americans who would be less than cordial if they caught the surveyors in their homeland. Surveying along Deer Creek in what is now Madison County, the rear guard of Sullivant’s party had, much to Sullivant’s chagrin, fired on a small party of Indians accompanied by a Frenchman, killed the Frenchman and dispersed the Indians. Sullivant knew the Indians would soon be back in force from their villages along the Scioto. They returned in large numbers and forced Sullivant to hurl his large surveying compass into a tree top, disperse his party and run for their lives. Reassembling his party, Sullivant continued with his survey work with another compass. His first compass was found in good condition many years later, returned to his family and later given to a local museum. Sullivant continued his work further up the Scioto into what is now Franklin County. However, even managing to avoid local Native Americans did not reduce the danger. Once…three miles below the present City of Columbus, a panther was detected crouched on the limb of a tree, almost directly over the campfire around which the men were sitting. The tail of the beast was swinging to and fro, its eyeballs glaring…Seizing his rifle, a huntsman of the party took steady aim between the two blazing eyes and fired. The panther instantly came down with a terrible scream…When Mr. Sullivant awoke the next morning after this adventure, he felt some incubus on his person, and soon discovered that a large rattlesnake had coiled itself on upon his blanket. Giving blanket and snake both a sudden toss, he sprang to his feet and made away with his uninvited bedfellow. Despite these dangers and diversions, Sullivant continued with his work and over the next two years saw much of central Ohio. The major rivers in central Ohio had already been given names by both Native Americans and colonial explorers. But many of the smaller tributaries in the region had no name—until Lucas Sullivant gave them one. One of Sullivant’s scouts, Arthur Boke, had Boke’s Creek named for him in recognition of his service. Boke later left the area. His child out of wedlock with a Sullivant African American servant, also named Arthur Boke, served the Sullivant family for many years. Treacle Creek in Union County was named for Sullivant’s family friends in Kentucky. THE TOWN BUILDER In addition to acquiring large tracts of land of his own, Sullivant also selected potential town sites on or near land he owned and drew up town plans for a few of them. North Liberty along the banks of Big Darby Creek near what is now Plain City, Ohio, actually drew a few settlers in the assumption—wrong as it turned out—that a town might follow. Another town was planned—at least on paper—where Mill Creek entered the Scioto River at what is now Bellepoint in Delaware County. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 24 But the place Lucas Sullivant came to like more than any other was at the Forks of the Scioto and Olentangy Rivers. In August 1797, he laid out a town on the west side of the river just below the place where the two rivers came together. It was a classic town plan with a tight grid of small town lots complemented by adjacent larger outlots nearby. It seemed like a good place for a town. The two rivers provided navigable traffic to several parts of the state. And the strong evidence of Native American settlement, both recent and ancient, indicated that the land in the area had been occupied for many years. Sullivant called his town Franklinton because he was a great admirer of Benjamin Franklin. In the fall of 1797, Joseph Dixon and his family arrived to become the first settlers in the new town. Several other families soon followed and by the spring of 1798, a small village was beginning to appear. Perhaps it is a good thing that it was small because most of the village was inundated in a flood in March. Undeterred by this, Sullivant simply moved the entire town plan about a quarter mile to the west to somewhat higher ground and well within a large grove of walnut trees. Perhaps somewhat concerned about the attractiveness of the town after the flood, Sullivant set aside one street and called it Gift Street. As long as they lasted, Sullivant would give away lots to anyone desiring to live in his town. They did not last long. At the time it was platted, Franklinton was the most northern settlement in the Virginia Military District and the farthest removed from other settlements in the area. The closest town of any size was Chillicothe more than sixty miles away. Undeterred by this the new village began to attract a number of new families. Some like the Deardurffs would settle on Gift Street. Built in 1807, David Deardurff’s house later became the first post office in Franklinton and is now the oldest standing structure in downtown Columbus. Others like the McDowell, Skidmore, and Foos families would acquire town sites and later give their family names to the streets nearby. And some of the early residents had even been in the area before—quite a long time before. John Brickell had been captured by the Indians when he was a young boy and had grown up among them. He spent a number of years in the village located at what is now the corner of Neil Avenue and Spring Street before returning to the East in a prisoner exchange. Discovering that he did not like ✧ Above: Frontiersman John Brickell had been captured by Native Americans and brought to an encampment in what is now downtown Columbus. He returned later and built a cabin on the site. Still standing for this picture in 1892, it was removed in 1910. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Bottom, left: A flood in 1798 and a move of the entire town a bit to the west convinced Sullivant that settlers might require inducement. He offered one with free lots on the aptly named Gift Street. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. Bottom, right: The home of David Deardurff and his family is the oldest standing structure in its original location in Columbus. Built in 1807 the two story black walnut log house served as the first post office in central Ohio. Shown in 1983, the home is currently being renovated. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. CHAPTER III 25 “civilization” all that much, he returned to Ohio in 1797. He later moved across the river and built a cabin on the site of the former Indian village where he lived with his family until his death in 1844. Another former captive had a more flamboyant career. Jeremiah Armstrong was only nine years old and living with his family in western Virginia when his home was attacked by Indians while his father was away. Armstrong’s mother and several of his siblings were killed. He was taken with a sister and brother on a long march to the Wyandot towns near what is now Fremont, Ohio. Armstrong and his brother and sister were adopted into the tribe and began to live as their captors lived. Armstrong later remembered, “The only war dance I witnessed, was near where the Penitentiary now stands [the Arena District], when a party of them were preparing to leave for Kentucky in quest of prisoners and scalps. They returned with three prisoners and five scalps.” As part of the Greenville Treaty prisoner exchange, Armstrong and his brother were returned to their families and eventually he returned to central Ohio. With the founding of Columbus, he purchased a lot on High Street and built an inn. He first called it “The Indian Chief” and later the “Red Lion” HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 26 and in time it became one of the more popular hostelries in the city. While initially reluctant to leave the Wyandots, he then changed his mind and later said that he returned to his family “with affection and gratitude and never more had a wish to return to the red men.” In 1801, Lucas Sullivant returned to Kentucky and married Sarah Starling, the daughter of his friend Colonel William Starling. The newlyweds returned to Franklinton where Sullivant had built a two story brick home on the southwest corner of the public square. It was a grand and spacious home with large fireplaces and wide staircases and in future years would be expanded with an Italianate tower and other additions. Standing where Interstate 315 now crosses Broad Street, the house looked out on a backyard that sloped down and extended all the way to what is now the Mt. Carmel Medical Center. Lucas Sullivant’s home would have fit well into any city in America. But looks can sometimes be deceiving. In most American cities, a family could not walk out to their porch and watch a rather large and somewhat disheveled man named Corbus wrestle a bear—and win the match. And most housewives would not have had to negotiate with people like Billy Wyandot—a former captor of Jeremiah Armstrong—over the measurement of a bolt of cloth. But for all of the roughness and crudities of frontier life, Franklinton grew rapidly and successfully. Joseph Foos opened a tavern and later a ferry service across the Scioto River. Both were so popular that Foos was elected General of a local militia company and later represented the area in the Ohio legislature. Lincoln Goodale came to the village as a practicing physician but soon discovered that there was little need for doctors. Opening a store he soon began a career that would make his fortune. By the time Lyne Starling arrived in Franklinton to live with his sister and brother in law, Franklinton was a village of several hundred people with many of the amenities of villages anywhere in America. Near the Sullivant home were several stores and Sullivant’s land office. Across the square a two story courthouse would rise and nearby a sturdy log jail would meet the needs of a Franklin County that was created the same year Ohio became a state in 1803. Directly across the street from the courthouse a number of taverns, inns and other establishments sprang up. Nevertheless, life was still a bit on the rough side. When Gustavus Swan arrived in Franklinton in 1811, he was not impressed. “I feel safe in saying that there was not in the county a chair for every two persons, not a knife and fork for every four…Aged persons and invalids, however ✧ Opposite, top: Complementing his medical career, Dr. Goodale soon opened a store in Franklinton and became quite successful. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Opposite, bottom: Dr. Lincoln Goodale was a practicing physician who arrived in frontier Franklinton in 1808. He soon discovered that there was not a lot of call for doctors at the time. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Above: Lucas Sullivant traveled to Kentucky and returned with his young wife, for whom he had built one of the first brick houses in Ohio. Located on the southwest corner of what is now West Broad Street and Interstate 315, the spacious southern-style mansion was often expanded. It is shown here in 1870 after an Italianate tower had been added. Later a convent, the home was removed in the early 1960s. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER III 27 ✧ Above: In the distance behind an early Franklinton church can be seen the only known sketch of the original Franklin were respected and protected, and could avoid drinking and fighting with impunity; but even they could not safely interfere to stop a fight. There was one virtue, that of hospitality, that was not confined to any class. ” Lyne Starling had been raised in rather fashionable surroundings and his letters to relatives reflected his disdain. In 1810, he wrote to his sister: County courthouse in the middle of the village. During the War of 1812, the Our society is rather degenerating than courthouse would be surrounded with a getting better. The most of the old stock when stockade and defensive ditch and made Lucy was here are married, so that it is into a fort. difficult to collect a sufficient number of girls PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. of any description to have a party. We expect, however, that we shall have a new recruit Right: Brother-in-law of Lucas Sullivant, during the summer, as several large families Lyne Starling came to Franklinton in 1806. are expected to emigrate here during the Six feet six inches tall and a genteel summer, which will probably make up the bachelor, Starling would go on to make his assortment as complete as ever. fortune in transportation, trade and real estate development. The land he liked best lay on the ridge across the river from Franklinton. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. But for all of his disdain, Lyne Starling liked the frontier village and decided to make it his home. He took jobs clerking with his brotherin-law at first but soon was involved in business ventures of his own. He discovered that he had a knack for making money in shipping, agriculture, transportation and trade. By the time he wrote his sister, he was doing quite well and looking to new enterprises. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 28 In 1809, he had mentioned to his sister in a letter, “I have lately purchased an elegant seat and tract of land opposite town on the other side of the river, which I have an idea of improving.” In the very near future, Lyne Starling and a few friends would be quite busy with those improvements. CHAPTER IV A CAPITAL BEGINNING 1812-1816 THE SEARCH FOR A CENTRAL PLACE Lyne Starling had been living in frontier Franklinton for a while before it occurred to him to begin looking at real estate on the other side of the Scioto River. There was no bridge and getting across the fast moving Scioto was not all that simple at the place where Franklinton had been built. Secondly, the Virginia Military District ended at the Scioto. Starling’s brother in law, Lucas Sullivant, was not the official surveyor of the other side of the river and was more than happy to stay busy with his land on the west side. And there was no real demand for the land in that rather unusual land grant east of Franklinton. The land located in the easternmost part of the Northwest Territory had been allocated very quickly as land grants to a wide variety of people who were owed money by the new government of the United States. In addition to land set aside for veterans of Virginia, there were a lot of land grants for other veterans, residents of Connecticut, people who had been burned out by the British, and even a set aside for some French citizens looking for a new home. And in addition to all of these, there was the Refugee Tract. Beginning at Fifth Avenue on the north and running to Refugee Road on the south the Tract ran east from the Scioto River in a narrow strip of land for several dozen miles. The land was set aside for residents of Nova Scotia who had lost property because of their loyalty to the American Revolution. A few of those families actually traveled to the new land. Truro Township in Franklin County is named for Truro Township in Nova Scotia—the home of some early arrivals. But most of the recipients of land grants never made it to Ohio. Most of the land on the east bank of the Scioto south of its junction with the Olentangy River was still empty and devoid of settlement even as Franklinton continued to grow. ✧ The street plan of Columbus is not aligned north and south. All of the streets of Columbus are pointed twelve degrees west of true north. No one knows why. But the Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University notes the difference in the distinction between the building and the white construction attached to it. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER IV 29 ✧ Above: Most refugees never made it to the Refugee Tract. One who did was Robert Taylor. He arrived with his family in 1808 and settled at West Crest on the west bank of Big Walnut Creek. Truro Township later came to be named for the Taylor home in Truro Township of Nova Scotia. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: The Refugee Tract ran east from the Scioto River from Fifth Avenue on the north to Refugee Road on the south. It was set aside for people from Nova Scotia who had lost their property as rebels in the Revolution. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. To be completely accurate, the land along the river was not completely empty. In 1800, a man named Robert Ballentine had built a rather simple kind of mill along the river near the place where the Federal District Courthouse is today. Shortly thereafter, a man named Benjamin White—with equal disregard for the niceties of property ownership— had built a small distillery nearby. Neither venture was very successful. The businesses closed and by 1810 they were little more than ruins. Complementing the abandoned structures were a few cabins scattered along the river bank. Some of them were occupied by people who actually had bought a bit of land in the Refugee Tract. Others were occupied by people called “squatters” who would move on when pressed to do so. By 1810, Lyne Starling and a few of his friends would begin to press. They saw an HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 30 opportunity in all of that vacant land and were determined to make their fortunes with it. They believed there might be a chance to do so because the state capital needed a new home. The State of Ohio had only been around since 1803 and in a few short years it had already had several capitals. Now it was looking again. In some ways it was remarkable that Ohio as a state even existed at all. Had it been up to Arthur St. Clair the State of Ohio would have been a long time in coming. As governor of the Northwest Territory, St. Clair may not have been much of an Indian fighter, but he was a formidable politician. The Ordinance of 1787 had laid out a three step process by which residents of part of the Territory could petition for admittance as a state. No one questioned the idea that states would be carved out of this vast domain. It was rather a question of what sort of states—and when. To preserve the power of Federalist government in the Territory, St. Clair foresaw the creation of two states in what is now Ohio. The capitals of each would be Cincinnati and Marietta—both solid Federalist towns and likely to be loyal to George Washington and his friends. On the other hand the friends of Thomas Jefferson—led by Ohioan Thomas Worthington—liked the idea of one big state with a capital closer to the frontiersmen who also wanted it. St. Clair held his own until Thomas Jefferson became President in 1800 and soon forced JOEL WRIGHT’S NEW TOWN The Act of the Ohio General Assembly, passed on February 14, 1812, read in part, Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio, That the proposals made to this legislature by Alexander McLaughlin, John Kerr, Lyne Starling and James Johnston, (to lay out a town on their St. Clair from office. Thomas Worthington got his state and placed its capital in Chillicothe— down the hill from his home called Adena and where he could keep an eye on Ohio and its government. His brother in law, Edward Tiffin, became the first governor. But all was not well in Chillicothe. In addition to Federalist enemies, the new state government faced challenges from restless residents of Ohio who wanted the state capital in their town. From 1808 to 1810, the capital had been moved to Zanesville in a complicated agreement. Then in 1810 it came back to Chillicothe. Now the hunt for a permanent home was on once again. A committee of the General Assembly visited a number of towns looking for the best location. They included Delaware, Circleville, Newark and even Franklinton. After reviewing the contenders, that group recommended a place near what is now Dublin. Then the Ohio General Assembly, as it was wont to do, ignored its committee and looked at other locations. In the end it picked a site assembled by Lyne Starling and three other “Proprietors” on the east side of the Scioto on the “High Banks opposite Franklinton at the Forks of the Scioto known as Wolf’s Ridge.” Noting that the land was high and dry and “salubrious in climate” the Proprietors—Starling, James Johnston, Alexander McLaughlin and John Kerr—also promised to pay $50,000 to build buildings and make other improvements. This was an immense sum at that time and it seemed like a sealed deal. But a number of legislators balked, hoping to capture the capital for their own town at a later date. Inserting a line keeping the capital in central Ohio “until 1840 or until otherwise determined” did the trick and the legislation passed. lands…for the purpose of having the perma- ✧ nent seat of government thereon established; Left: In early 1812, the Director of also to convey to this state a square of ten Columbus, Joel Wright, laid out the city acres and a lot of ten acres, and to erect with this compass and the help of Franklin a statehouse, such offices and a penitentiary County Surveyor, Joseph Vance. The as shall be directed by the legislature) are compass is now in the Ohio Statehouse. hereby accepted… PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. The Act also stipulated that the General Assembly would soon select a Director to “view and examine the lands abovementioned and superintend the surveying and laying out of the town aforesaid; also to select the square for public buildings; and the lot for the penitentiary and the dependencies according to the proposals aforesaid; and he shall make a report thereof to the next legislature.” One week later the Ohio General Assembly passed another Act giving the new town a name. Joseph Foos, a part-time Militia officer Below: Joel Wright’s plan of Columbus reserved ten acres for a statehouse and ten acres for a penitentiary. The large open area in the middle of the plan was reserved to the four Proprietors of Columbus. The original plan is lost. Versions shown are from Lee’s 1892 History of Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. CHAPTER IV 31 and ferry operator from Franklinton was also representing the area in the legislature. In the days since the Assembly had picked a site, he had been lobbying vigorously to name the new town after his favorite historical figure. There has been an unverifiable story for many years that Foos pursued his advocacy by providing his fellow members of the Assembly with legendary quantities of strong drink. However he pursued the topic, his lobbying apparently worked. Rejecting “Ohio City” as a contender, the Assembly adopted “Columbus” as the name of the new state capital. On the same day it also adopted legislation selecting Joel Wright as the Director of the new town. Wright was a logical choice for the job. A well-known surveyor, Wright had more than a little experience laying out towns. The town plans of Dayton, Ohio, and Louisville, Kentucky, were his and he had been surveying in Ohio and Kentucky for more than twenty years. Born in 1750, Wright was a member of the Society of Friends called Quakers and had lived in Pennsylvania for most of his life. He had married there and had returned to his wife and children there after his trips over the mountains for many years. But his wife had died in 1806 and his children had grown, so Wright had moved to the Quaker settlement near Waynesville, Ohio, in Warren County. It was from there that he came to central Ohio to lay out a new capital city. Working with local surveyor and soldier Joseph Vance, Wright spent the spring of 1812 laying out the new capital city. Standing on the Indian trail along the ridge on the eastern high banks of the Scioto, in the midst of a towering old-growth hardwood forest, Vance and Wright must have appeared as an interesting pair to any observers passing by. Joseph Vance is sometimes mistakenly confused with a later Ohio governor of the same name. Born in 1775, Vance had been an early settler in Franklinton. Married in 1805, he had served as Franklin County surveyor since 1803 and would continue to do so until his death in 1824. In his frontier garb of buckskin and linsey-woolsey cloth, he would supervise the chain carriers and insure that the lines set out by Wright’s compass were properly laid. Standing at the compass and HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 32 supervising the survey of the capital city was a man who rather obviously came from a different world than Joseph Vance. There is no known surviving portrait of Joel Wright. This is not too surprising since many Quakers considered them to be an exercise in vanity. But a description of his appearance was provided in a later account by one of his heirs. “He was about medium size. He continued to wear, as long as he lived, the costume that is familiar to us in pictures of Revolutionary worthies, long surtout, long waistcoat with flaps over the pockets, knee breeches with silver buckles, low cut shoes with silver buckles on the instep, and a broad brimmed beaver hat.” Joel Wright personally selected the site of Statehouse Square and a ten acre site for the Ohio Penitentiary. He also laid out the major streets to be quite wide—a reaction in the new towns of the west to the small, twisted and traffic-filled streets of eastern cities. Statehouse Square is located at the highest point along the ridge and is almost equally distant from what were then two large ravines carrying rapidly moving water down to the Scioto. One of the creeks has now been completely removed by the passage of Interstate 70 through the city. The other is still there but well-hidden. Until the mid 1850s anyone traveling north on High Street crossed the stream that would become Spring Street over a wooden bridge. Today the stream that flows from several natural springs near Memorial Hall moves under the street in a deeply buried brick sewer. Joel Wright also gave names to the streets he created in the town plan of Columbus. The major streets drew their names from similar streets in the eastern towns Wright knew so well—Broad Street, High Street, Wall Street, Pearl Street. Others reflected the role of the new place as both a symbolic as well as local place—State Street, Town Street, Capital Alley. Some of the streets reflected a landmark like Mound Street. With a rather whimsical touch Wright named most of the alleys after the various trees that grew in the dense forest along the ridge—Maple, Walnut, Cherry. And perhaps in deference to his own denomination he named one street Friend Street. The one remarkable aspect of the town plan is that the quite straight streets do not run truly north and south or east and west. Instead the whole town plan is tilted twelve degrees west of true north. No one knows why. But a good guess can be made that Wright adjusted his town plan to fit the street alignment of nearby Franklinton. And why did Lucas Sullivant lay out his town a little to the left of center? Perhaps because there is a difference between magnetic north and true north and Sullivant did not correct for the change? Or perhaps Sullivant simply laid out his town to fit the lay of the land. In any case by June of 1812, it was done. Having made an agreement among themselves as to the division of any profit they might make and collecting subscriptions in the amount of $20,000, the Proprietors of Columbus announced: FOR SALE: On the premises commencing on Thursday, the eighteenth day of June and to continue for three days, in and out lots in the town of Columbus, established by an act of the legislature, as the permanent seat of The rematch between the United States and Great Britain for the control of a continent had been coming for some time. The continued occupation by the British of forts in the Ohio Country had provided supply bases for their Indian allies to not only continue the fur trade but to occasionally attack American settlements. A bold new generation of young political leaders like Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun had vehemently argued that Canada was weak and defenseless and ripe for the taking. At the same time, Britain had been having great difficulty finding sailors to man its gigantic fleet in its continuing campaign to blockade Napoleonic Europe. It solved this problem by boarding American ships on the high seas and “impressing” seamen presumed to be deserters from the British Navy. Some were but many were not and the American government was offended by the incursion. President James Madison had done his best to avoid a conflict but continuing abuses and an increasingly angry population left him little choice. America would go to war with Britain. ✧ The Franklinton Cemetery on River Street is one of the oldest in Ohio. Many people buried there were later removed to other cemeteries. But some of the founders of Franklinton—and Ohio—are still there. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. government for the state of Ohio.” After some further description, the announcement concluded by noting that ease of transportation would soon “make the country on the Scioto River rich and populous. Apparently a sizeable number of people— especially from across the river in Franklinton— agreed with the Proprietors and not only arrived to inspect the site but to buy lots. Most of the initial sales were of lots along High and Broad Streets for amounts ranging from $200 to $1000. These were large sums of money in a time when an average worker might earn considerably less than a dollar a day and when land could be purchased in Ohio in many places for $1 to $2 per acre. But Columbus was a new town in a new state and people felt confident about their future. Perhaps they were a bit too confident. WAR COMES TO COLUMBUS On the same day the lots were sold in Columbus, the United States went to war with Great Britain. CHAPTER IV 33 ✧ Above: General William Henry Harrison, “Old Tippecanoe” used Franklinton— among other places—as a mobilization center in the War of 1812. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: Many years after the fact, General Harrison was reputed to have used the 1808 Oberdier House as a headquarters. He probably didn’t, but the legend was enough to save the house from destruction in 1975. It is the second oldest standing structure in downtown Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. Back in central Ohio, work proceeded apace for a brief time on the new capital city. Trees were felled to begin to clear streets through the forest although stumps would remain both in the streets and on people’s lots for some time. A number of modest cabins were constructed in the forest and work began on split rail fences to surround both the statehouse square and the penitentiary site. As the summer turned toward the fall a man named John Collett learned that the new state house would eventually be constructed near the corner of State and High Streets on the square. Diagonally across the street, Collett would build the first brick building in Columbus—a two story brick tavern. A little further up the street at Broad and High, the somewhat pretentiously named Worthington Manufacturing Company would open a two story brick store at Broad and High Streets selling the essentials of frontier life— powder, shot, salt and hardware. Through most of the rest of the village of a few people in that first winter there was very little else. Most people who had bought lots and cleared a bit of land went back home and waited to see how the war would go. It would not go well. The War of 1812 began with the greatest of expectations in what was then the Great HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 34 American West. People living in the frontier state of Ohio felt quite confident that their armies, raised from local frontiersmen, would quickly and decisively defeat the stodgy British and their less than capable Indian allies. Frontier Franklinton, sitting in the heart of Ohio saw itself as the central staging area of this new conflict. And indeed it was. During most of the war, large numbers of troops would gather here, train here and march from here to do battle against America’s enemies to the north. And while all of these troops were here, they would need food, and drink and amusements of all sorts—all provided by the increasingly wealthy merchants of Franklinton. Virtually non-existent Columbus on the other side of the river would see little growth at all through the war. The commander of the American armies in the west was General William Hull. A veteran of the Revolution, Hull had fought well in that war and his brother Isaac was commanding the soon to be quite famous American frigate Constitution. But the American Revolution had ended almost thirty years earlier and Hull, now governor of the Michigan Territory, was older, weaker and frankly frightened, not of his British opponents but of their Indian allies. General Hull assembled his army at Dayton and marched north to Urbana gathering volunteers to his cause from as far east as Franklinton. Striking north, he moved through the Great Black Swamp building a road whose route is still in use today and quickly took Detroit as the British retreated before him. After a brief incursion into Canada, he fell back to Detroit and awaited a British attack. It was not long in coming. The British force, less than half the size of Hull’s demanded his immediate surrender. To the astonishment of the British and the consternation of his officers, Hull surrendered. Now the whole Northwest was open to attack. Responding to the challenge was William Henry Harrison. Grandson of a signer of the Declaration of Independence, Harrison had gone west to seek his fortune. He found it in a battle in Indiana at a place called Tippecanoe in 1811 and now desperately assembled a new force to stop the British. Franklinton became an armed camp. The newly constructed courthouse on the main square of town became a fortress and refuge with a large stockade and defensive ditch built around it. Harrison was in town repeatedly seeking men and supplies for his campaigns. A brick house in Franklinton later became associated with him. It was not his headquarters, but he undoubtedly visited it from time to time. Franklinton and the people there who provided help to him were critical to his success. By the summer of 1813, Harrison had rebuilt an army and would successfully use it to defend both Fort Meigs near Toledo and Fort Stephenson in what is now Fremont, Ohio. But to undertake a new invasion of Canada, he needed at least the neutrality if not the support of the Ohio Indian tribes. In July, 1813, he brought them together in the back yard of Lucas Sullivant in Franklinton. Under a large elm tree, he asked for their ✧ Above: In 1822, Lucas Sullivant erected this land office at Green and Gay Streets in Franklinton. He died the next year and this would be his last building. It is the only building directly associated with him that is still standing. It was placed behind Harrison House in 1983. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. Left: In July, 1813, General Harrison held a critical conference with the Native American tribes of Ohio to seek their neutrality in the War of 1812. He got it from Wyandot chieftain Tarhe under this tree in what was then Lucas Sullivant’s back yard. The picture was made in 1892. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. CHAPTER IV 35 ✧ Above: In the early 1900s, Tarhe’s tree fell victim to Dutch Elm disease and was removed. This plaque was erected nearby. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. Below: Seeing where the future lay, Sullivant built the first bridge across the Scioto in 1816. It looked something like the bridge in this 1832 sketch. The sketch is on a Staffordshire Blue turkey platter in the Statehouse. support and specifically that of Tarhe, principal chief of the Wyandots. He got it and marched to Canada. His army not only defeated the British but also killed the charismatic Shawnee leader Tecumseh. Returning from Canada, Harrison had a large number of prisoners. He put some of them on a sandbar in the Scioto with a view of the Franklinton graveyard and left them to their own devices. A number of them immediately tried to escape and were shot dead by American sharpshooters. Until it was washed away after a number of floods, the lonely place was called British Island and sometimes, Bloody Island. With Harrison’s victory, the war in the West was virtually over. The war elsewhere went on for two more years. When it was over, both America and central Ohio were ready to move on. The village of Franklinton had grown in both numbers and wealth during the war. New stores and enterprises had come into being. The first newspaper in central Ohio, the Freeman’s Chronicle, was published by James Gardiner on a press first HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 36 used in early Marietta. Large numbers of doctors, lawyers and other professionals were on hand. And now, at the end of the war, they looked across the river and saw a capital city about to be born. They crossed the river and came to Columbus. They did so quite often—so often in fact that Lucas Sullivant worried about getting them back from time to time. To solve the problem, in 1816 he built the first bridge across the Scioto. It was an open top bridge on wooden struts and was not terribly strong. But it worked. The bridge was the first recognition that a new town was coming into being across the river. Soon the first church in central Ohio— the First Presbyterian—would move across the river. So too would Franklinton’s first doctors—Lincoln Goodale and James Edmiston. And so too would many of the stores, shops and tradesmen that had made their living in Franklinton during the war. It was time to leave the village of Franklinton and travel across the river to the borough beyond the bridge. CHAPTER V THE HUB OF THE WHEEL 1816-1840 BUILDING A BOROUGH A person walking across the bridge over the Scioto River completed by Lucas Sullivant in 1816 to the new capital city of Columbus from the village of Franklinton would probably have noticed rather quickly that there was not much of a city there. In fact there was not much of a town or even a village. To say “Columbus grew slowly at first” as one early observer did, was perhaps a bit of an understatement. By the fall of 1812 two major buildings—both brick and two stories tall—had been erected in the new town. Both had drawn their bricks from clay in the Indian mound at Mound and High Streets. Their builders by no means would be the last people to do so. ✧ In 1818, John McGowan founded the first suburb of the new village—McGowan’s Addition to Columbus—at the bottom of the map. Today it is called German Village. This reproduction of the map is in the Statehouse. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. CHAPTER V 37 ✧ The very first public building in the new capital city was the Ohio Penitentiary in 1813. It was built first because prison labor would be used to build the rest of the new capital city. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. During the War of 1812, very little had been done to increase either the size or sophistication of Columbus. The Ohio General Assembly had described in considerable detail in an Act of both houses what the specifications of both a penitentiary and a statehouse should be. There was apparently some concern that without guidelines firmly set forth, Director Wright and his associates might build something too big, too elaborate and most importantly—too expensive—for the frontier state to accept. Joel Wright, the Director of Columbus, looked at these instructions and gathered material about diverse prisons and other public buildings. He then dug and placed foundations and gathered some building materials in the fall of 1812. And then he resigned, went home and sent the Assembly a bill for services rendered. In 1813, the new Director of Columbus, William Ludlow, got to work finishing what Joel Wright had begun. His first major project was the prison. It turned out to be a two story building built on the side of the sloping bank leading down to the river. Leaving the basement, open on one side, one entered a compound of a few acres surrounded by a high HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 38 fence. In the two story house of local limestone, the first floor was set aside for the warden and his family and was entered from the street. The top floor was set aside into thirteen cells—nine with light and four without. The only entrance to the top floor was from the prison yard. Entering the prison through the front door, one was interviewed by the warden. The choices were simple. Either one was released to the world or one was dropped through a trapdoor to the prison below—a place where life was not very nice at all. The Ohio Penitentiary was the first public building completed in Columbus and it was soon filled with a band of hard working but rather variously motivated people. Some prisoners worked to win favor. Others worked to dispel boredom. But virtually all of them worked—digging foundations, making bricks, and erecting the other buildings needed by Columbus. And at the end of the day, they went to their new home at the penitentiary. The prison was the first public building finished in Columbus for a very simple reason. Prison labor would be used to build the rest of the city. By early 1816, with some penitentiary help, the new public buildings for the new capital city of Ohio were either completed or well underway. Most important among them was the new statehouse. It was, as one writer put it, “a common plain brick building. seventy-five feet north and south by fifty feet, east and west, on the ground, and two lofty stories high, with a square roof, that is, eaves and cornices, at both sides and ends, and ascending to the balcony and steeple in the center, at which there was a first rate, well-toned bell. The top of the spire was 106 feet from the ground. On the roof adjoining the balcony, on two sides were neat railed walks, from which a spectator might view the whole town as upon a map, and had also a view of the winding Scioto, and of the level country around as far as the eye could reach.” A later account recorded, The halls, we are told, were ‘of good size’ and of ‘respectable wooden finish’ consisting in part of large wooden columns handsomely turned…The columns were painted in imitation of ‘clouded marble’…The interior walls of the legislative chambers were hung with maps of the state and engraved copies of the Declaration of Independence besides ‘various other articles of use and ornament.’ A year after the completion of the Statehouse, a state office building was erected adjacent to it along High Street. The building was built of brick and was one hundred and twenty-five feet long by twenty-five feet wide and two stories tall. It held the offices of the governor, Secretary of State, auditor and treasurer on the ground floor and the State Library as well as the Adjutant General on the second floor. It was not very elegant and over the course of time acquired the nickname of “Rat Row”—whether for the character of its furnishing or its occupants was never entirely clear. In 1820, a United State Courthouse was erected along High Street north of the state office building. Two stories in height and, predictably, made of brick, the building was approximately fifty feet square. The bottom floor held offices. The second floor held the court room and an adjacent jury room. The entire building was topped by an elaborate circular latticed wooden dome which was painted a rather garish green. When the dome was weakened by wood rot and fell off during a storm in the 1830s, it was not replaced. No one objected to its loss. ✧ The northeast corner of State and High Streets became the center of state government. At the corner was the two story brick statehouse. Next to it was the state office building—soon to be called “rat row.” And next to it was the federal courthouse. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER V 39 ✧ Governor Thomas Worthington and his friends had arguably made Ohio a state. Now he did his best to tidy up the new capital city. In doing so, he soon found himself in trouble with the first mayor of Columbus, Jarvis Pike. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. With the completion of these buildings the basic work of constructing public buildings in Columbus was completed. Now the work of making the capital livable was begun in earnest. In the autumn of 1816 more than a dozen ladies of the town held a sewing party in the first floor of the Statehouse and completed the first carpet of that chamber. The affair had been suggested by Governor Thomas Worthington who came by and left the ladies with a number of apples from his Ross County orchard. It was the simple way things were done in those days. Thomas Worthington was the third governor of Ohio and, more than any other single individual, had brought Ohio into being as a state. Now, just as his home in Chillicothe had been the first capital, he was determined to make the new capital his own. A man of definite opinions and accustomed to getting his own way in short order, he looked about Columbus for someone to carry out his wishes without complaint. He decided that the mayor was probably that person. It was not the wisest of choices. In 1816 a number of residents of Columbus concluded that the previous method of operating the capital had outlived its usefulness. Columbus had been managed since 1812 by an all-powerful director who could plan the city, build buildings and generally get things done. The Director—first Joel Wright and then William Ludlow—could also levy taxes on the residents, and enforce order by whatever means he saw to be appropriate. Joel Wright, the amiable Quaker, balked at using such power, and departed in less than a year. William Ludlow on the other hand treasured his authority and used it. Now political and social power in the new capital of Ohio began to shift. When they were in town, the most important people in the small village of Columbus would be the members of the Ohio General Assembly who had brought it into being. But the General Assembly—and for that matter other state elected officials—were not in town all that often. So in their absence the director of Columbus—William Ludlow—was the all-important figure. But Ludlow’s job was HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 40 primarily to lay out a town and build its public buildings. Now that job was almost done. Indeed, in 1817, Ludlow would present a final accounting to the legislature of his work and a bill from the four Proprietors of Columbus for monies expended beyond the $50,000 they had originally promised. In the end the Proprietors collected another $33,000. The four Proprietors of Columbus— Starling, Johnston, McLaughlin and Kerr— were still important men in Columbus in 1816. After all, they still owned much of the town. But their major business was in recruiting more people to come to Columbus and selling them a lot once they got here. And they were becoming increasingly successful in their efforts. By 1816, with the Ohio General Assembly soon to arrive, the prominent residents of the city—meaning the owners of the hotels, taverns and other businesses—decided they’d had enough of government by director—as honest and forthright as William Ludlow might be—and that it was time for a real town to have a real government. So the residents of Columbus incorporated themselves and the Borough of Columbus was born. Gathering together at the Columbus Inn, the new council of the Borough elected a mayor from among their number. It was to the new first mayor of Columbus that Governor Thomas Worthington came seeking help with a few undertakings he had in mind. The mayor’s name was Jarvis Pike and, like the governor, he was a man accustomed to getting things done. A not-all-that-distant relative of Zebulon Pike, of Pike’s Peak fame, Jarvis Pike was part of the younger generation that settled much of the Northwest Territory in the years after the Revolution. His father had been a captain in the Revolution and brought his family west to settle in the then-frontier lands of Oneida County, New York, in the early 1790s. It was there that young Jarvis came of age, started a family and served for a time as a judge. Born in 1766, Jarvis Pike was in his early forties when he decided to seek his fortune further west and move his family to Ohio accompanied by his brother Benjamin. Settling originally Madison County in 1812, the Pikes soon became attracted to Columbus. Jarvis Pike liked what he saw and soon became a strong advocate of the new town— as well as a political activist. In 1814, as the War of 1812 continued, Pike and his friends erected a liberty pole and a flag by the hole in the ground that would soon be the statehouse. It was soon torn down. Re-erected, the pole and flag were torn down again. Ten men, led by Jarvis Pike, formed a Vigilance Committee and offered a $100 reward for the perpetrator whom they assumed was loyal to Britain and “lost to all sense of decency.” They also vowed in due course “to give our expression in favor of those who are qualified by disposition and information to serve the people by promoting their interest and happiness.” The culprit was never found but Jarvis Pike was later elected mayor by his fellow councilmen in the first election in the borough of Columbus. Governor Worthington had a number of issues on his mind in 1816. But the one that bothered him the most when he was in Columbus was the awful condition of the capitol square. It was still full of trees, brush, and wandering animals and could scarcely be distinguished from the surrounding forest that still constituted much of downtown. So he contracted with Jarvis Pike to clear the ground and properly fence it—for a reasonable fee. The mayor proceeded to the task, probably working with his eighteen year old son, Jarvis W. Pike, a man with whom the old judge would sometimes later be confused. Judge Pike completed the job and presented his bill to the governor. The governor did not pay it. He did not refuse to pay it. He simply failed to do so after repeated requests. Exasperated, Pike swore out a capias warrant, had the governor detained and brought before Squire King, a local Justice of the Peace, to collect his money. Held at something of a disadvantage, the governor made an arrangement with the mayor. In lieu of money, which the governor did not have, Pike could have the use of the Statehouse grounds for a time until the state might need the ground for its own use. Pike agreed and grew corn on Statehouse Square for a number of years. He also built a sturdy fence to keep local pigs out of the square and local legislators in. So ended the first time a local official took Ohio’s governor to court. It would not be the last. But at least the Statehouse grounds looked nice when President James Monroe rode into town in 1817. Traveling on a tour of inspection of what was then “The West,” Monroe arrived in town from Worthington accompanied by the local Franklin Dragoons mounted militia company. After a brief welcome at the statehouse, the President complimented what he called the “infant city” on its progress and rode on. It was observed at the time that the President seemed trail worn and sunburned, but also quite happy to be on the road in what had come to be called the Era of Good Feelings. As to Jarvis Pike, the judge only served as mayor of Columbus for two years during which time he also operated an inn called the Yankee Tavern. Joining with a newcomer named William Neil, he went into the stagecoach business and had little time for politics. Eventually he became a devotee of the botanic medicine of one Samuel Thompson and editor in Columbus of the Thomsonian Recorder, a national newspaper describing the benefits of the good doctor’s practices. Remembered as the “Honorable Jarvis Pike,” the Judge died on the morning of January 28, 1836, leaving a widow, two children and a brother who “mourn at his departure.” ✧ President James Monroe rode into Columbus in 1817 on an inspection tour of what was then the west. He complimented the “Infant City” and rode on. This sketch of his arrival in town was made in 1888. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. CHAPTER V 41 ✧ Above: John Kerr was one of the four original Proprietors of Columbus. Two of the others went broke in later land speculations. Only Kerr and Lyne Starling made money in the new city. Then Kerr died young in 1823. He was buried where North Market is today. The third mayor of Columbus is still there. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: Lyne Starling, the handsome bachelor and Proprietor of Columbus, never married. At his death in 1848, most of his fortune went to establish the Starling Medical College and hospital. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. By the time Jarvis Pike died in 1836, the capital city of Ohio had gone through a period of enormous change and a whole new generation had come of age. The Era of Good feelings that had marked the Monroe Administration came to an abrupt end. The economy, artificially lifted by the War of 1812, declined in the 1820s. With that decline came a precipitous drop in the value of real estate. Lots in Columbus that had sold for $1000 now were being sold at Sheriff’s sale for $100 or less. A number of people were economically ruined. Among them were two of the Proprietors of Columbus. James Johnston and Alexander McLaughlin had continued to buy land at higher and higher prices. When the crash came, they were wiped out. Johnston returned to his former home at Pittsburgh and died there in poverty in 1842. McLaughlin ended his career as a rural schoolmaster—the only job he could find. John Kerr had followed Jarvis Pike as a later mayor of Columbus and rose out the troubles of the early 1820s rather well until he died of malarial fever in 1823. He left his family reasonably well off and was buried with appropriate honors and ceremony in the graveyard which he had given the city in 1813. The North Graveyard, and later an East Graveyard, served the city until the 1870s when they were closed and many people in them were moved to Green Lawn Cemetery. Many—but not all. Somewhere in the area where the North Market is today lies the lost grave of John Kerr—the third mayor of Columbus. Of all the Proprietors, only Lyne Starling really did well. Investing his money in a variety of businesses, Starling rode out wars, depressions and other upheavals with remarkable aplomb. Never marrying, Starling died in 1848 and left the bulk of his estate to found the first medical school and hospital in the city. Starling Medical College in downtown Columbus later became St. Francis Hospital and the medical school part of The Ohio State University College of Medicine. As Columbus entered the 1820s, despite the downturn in the economy, it was still definitely becoming the place to be in central Ohio. Lucas Sullivant had recognized this with the bridge he built across the river. In 1822, Sullivant erected a new one story brick land office only a block away from his home. It would be his last building. Less than one year later, Sullivant died in the same round of virulent malarial fever that took the life of John Kerr in Columbus. Within a year, the county seat, which had been in Franklinton since 1803, would move across the river to Columbus. Columbus was becoming the center of central Ohio. A TOWN OF RIVER RAFTS AND COACHES In the 1820s, there were many new businesses trying to establish themselves in the new capital city. Some were service businesses like the inns, taverns and hotels that had met the needs of the general assembly since the town was founded. Others were a bit more mundane. Every town of any size in the era before refrigeration and preservation of food had a public market. Columbus was no exception and opened its first public market in the middle of the intersection of Rich and High Streets—close to the statehouse and the hotels along High Street that served them. But the biggest business of these years was transportation—or trying desperately to HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 42 remedy the lack thereof. Lucas Sullivant had founded his town at the forks of the Scioto with the confident assumption that any town placed where two rivers came together had to prosper. Perhaps Columbus was destined to prosper—but not because of these two rivers. What Sullivant and other seemed to miss was the point that there was a big difference between a canoe or even a keelboat and a large flat-bottomed raft—fifty feet wide by a hundred feet long—with outriding oars to guide the huge cargo laden craft down the river. The Scioto could handle small craft very well. In fact, a number of legislators from southern Ohio took skiffs to return home from legislative sessions. But south of Columbus the Scioto River narrowed and became considerably more shallow. The only time the large flatboats full of agricultural products and livestock could successfully go down the river was for a few weeks in the early spring when the river rose in flood season. And then one took one’s life in one’s hands trying to steer one of the huge rafts down the river. Still, many people tried to do it anyway. One of the people who tried was a young man from Kentucky named William Neil. Neil had arrived in Columbus in 1818 with his wife, Hannah, determined to make a success of himself. Failing in an effort to negotiate the river with a raft, he took a job with a local bank while his wife Hannah ran a small tavern ✧ Above: In 1832, the Army Corps of Engineers came to town and built a new covered bridge across the Scioto to carry the National Road. It would last for many years. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: Thomas Kelah Wharton came to Columbus in 1831 and stayed for a brief time. An accomplished sketch artist, he drew the first known picture of the new town. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY. CHAPTER V 43 ✧ Clockwise, starting from the top: The Neil family—in addition to their other ventures—established the first Neil House Hotel in 1839—across the street from the Statehouse. It would not be the last. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. He was called the “Old Stage King.” William Neil came to Columbus in 1818. He soon drifted into stagecoaches and found he liked the business. By 1840 he was the most powerful stagecoach entrepreneur in America. Neil Avenue was his private lane. in a log house across the street from the capitol building on High Street. While another local resident named David Deshler was leaving cabinet making behind to go into banking at his home near Broad and High Streets, Billy Neil was deciding that his future was elsewhere. It was in stagecoaches. In the 1820s, it did not take much to start a stagecoach line. If one had a coach and some horses at each end of a run about ten miles long, one was in business. The first stage lines in the area ran from Columbus to Worthington or Columbus to Granville or Columbus to Circleville. They ran on a rather eccentric schedule depending on the weather and other impediments. But they did run and provided a reasonably regular way to deliver people, goods and mail around central Ohio. Working in partnership with Adam Zinn, the pioneer coachman in central Ohio, and Judge Jarvis Pike, William Neil put together a series of stagecoach companies that were faster, After his death in 1870 his farm became The Ohio State University. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. While Billy Neil was driving coaches, his wife Hannah was organizing private charity in Columbus. She was a founder of Columbus’ oldest charity, the Columbus Female Benevolent Society. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 44 safer, and cheaper than many of their rivals. It was a tough business and only the strong survived the travails of rough roads and even rougher competitors. William Neil was the toughest of them all and by 1840 his Neil, Moore & Co. stagecoach line was the biggest in the Midwest. Not trusting banks all that much, Neil put his profits—and they were quite large—into land. Arriving in Columbus, he had stayed briefly at the home of County Surveyor Joseph Vance about three miles north of Columbus on the road to Worthington. He always admired it and after the death of Vance in 1824, Neil bought the property as his country home. Over the years he added to his holdings until they included most of the land between High Street and the Olentangy River from Lane Avenue south to Goodale Park. Neil’s brother Robert, also a stagecoach entrepreneur, owned much of the land on the other side of High Street. In addition to his land holdings, William Neil bought a number of properties in downtown Columbus and in 1839 built the first of what would eventually be three Neil House hotels. It was a significant lifetime of accomplishment by a remarkable man. When William Neil died in 1870, his farm would become the home of the new Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, later The Ohio State University. While William Neil was helping redefine business in central Ohio, his wife was helping redefine charity. In the earliest years of the city, there was little in the way of organized charity except for the charitable efforts of church congregations to people in need and the kindliness of individuals in helping one another. But by the 1830s, it was becoming clear something else was needed. Families moving across the state might find themselves bereft of resources and unable to go any further. They moved into the poorer parts of town and became a burden to the community. Many of these poorer areas were located along the bed of the ravines that course through the village on their way to the river. Others were located in the wet and swampy areas scattered around Columbus. To help these people, Hannah Neil and others organized the Columbus Female Benevolent Society in 1839. It is the oldest organized charity in Columbus and still exists as a fund of the Columbus Foundation. In her later years, the Hannah Neil Mission and Home for the Friendless was also brought into being with her support. It still is serving the community. While William Neil was building his stagecoach empire, other forces were working to make Columbus a transportation center. One of them was an initiative of the federal government. The other was an activity sponsored by the State of Ohio. ✧ Above: The key to the success of the Neil family was a safe, reliable and easy to maintain stagecoach—like the one seen here at the Statehouse. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. Left: Late in her life, Hannah Neil became a sponsor of what later would come to be called the Hannah Neil Mission and Home for the Friendless. It occupied the Neville family home on East Main Street and stayed there for years. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER V 45 ✧ For a relatively landlocked city, the Ever since the country was founded, members of Congress from the western territories and then the western states had argued vociferously for federal support for transportation. If the country was to prosper, said Henry Clay of Kentucky, the national government should subsidize improvements to road, river and lake transportation. It was a tough sell. Many people living in the East did not think using their tax money to help their western competitors was all that wise. That is why a National Road begun in 1811 in the East took until the early 1830s to reach Columbus where it stopped for a few years. Many people, taking the National Road with its all-weather roadbed and safe bridges got to Columbus and saw that there was no road on the other side of town. So they decided to stay. More importantly the completion of the National Road gave Columbus a link to the East shared by only a few other cities in the state. Columbus Feeder of the Ohio and Erie Canal was a welcome sight. Combined with the effect of the arrival of the National THE CANAL COMES TO COLUMBUS Road, the city would double in size. This view of the canal entering the Scioto River was made in 1906. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. The National Road was helpful to the growth of Columbus. So too was the Ohio and Erie Canal. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 46 Canals are nothing new in the history of western civilization. People have been building them where rivers are not all that reliable or where they don’t exist at all for hundreds of years. But canals are expensive, complicated projects and were not all that common in America. At least they were not until De Witt Clinton and his colleagues completed the Erie Canal linking the Atlantic to the Great Lakes and opening up New York State to easy transportation. Then, many people—including many people in Ohio—wanted one too. An original idea had been to do something similar to what had been done in New York and build one great canal crossing the middle of the state. The difference would be that this canal would run north and south and connect the Ohio River to the Great Lakes. But it soon became clear that it was not technically possible to build such a canal through the center of the state. At this point some people might have simply given up and abandoned the idea. But the idea did not die. In fact if anything it became even more elaborate. Now instead of one canal, the people of Ohio would sell bonds and build two canals—The Miami and Erie in western Ohio and the Ohio and Erie from Portsmouth to Cleveland. Columbus would be linked to the Ohio and Erie by a Feeder Canal leading south from the city. Looking back later many people would be recognized as having helped build Ohio’s canals. Among them were legislators, engineers and the dozens of men who dug the hundreds of miles of ditch fifteen feet deep and thirty feet wide across the state. But perhaps most critical to the success of the canals—as well as many other projects over the early 1800s in Ohio—was one man. Alfred Kelley came to Ohio from New York in 1810. Settling in Cleveland, the twenty-one year old attorney served as the first mayor of Cleveland and then came to Columbus as the youngest man in the Ohio General Assembly. When he retired in 1857, he was representing Columbus and had served as a legislator longer than anyone else. Sometimes called the architect of Ohio’s banking system he was also rightly called the “Father of Ohio’s Canal System.” It was not hard to see why. Someone had to review the contracts, oversee the contractors and generally make sure the canals were built correctly. Walking the entire length of both canals, Alfred Kelley was that supervisor. Later when the state was in danger of defaulting on its canal bonds in the 1830s, Kelley pledged his magnificent Greek Revival Columbus home to insure payment on the bonds. It came to be called “The House that Saved Ohio.” William T. Martin in his history of Columbus described the opening of the canal to Columbus: On the 23rd of September, 1831, the first boat arrived at Columbus by way of the canal. About eight o’clock in the evening, the firing of cannon announced the approach of the “Governor Brown” a canal boat launched at Circleville a few days previous, and neatly fitted up for an excursion of pleasure to this place, several of the most respectable citizens of Pickaway County being on board as passengers. The next morning at an early hour, a considerable number of ladies and gentlemen of Columbus repaired to the boat in order to pay their respects to the visitors…the party proceeded back to Circleville, accompanied a short distance by a respectable number of the citizens of Columbus, and the Columbus band of music. ✧ Left: When it was completed in 1835, the Greek Revival Kelley Mansion was the finest house in the city. Offered as collateral to secure Ohio’s debt in 1837, it became “the house that saved Ohio.” Threatened with destruction in 1963, its stones were numbered as the building was taken apart. The stones still sit—in a field near Cleveland—waiting to come home. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: Alfred Kelley came to Columbus in 1816—after serving a term as the first mayor of Cleveland—to serve in the Ohio General Assembly. He never went home. He ended a long career in 1859 serving as the Senator from central Ohio. He was the father of Ohio’s banking system, the superintendent of its canal system and a promoter of a number of railroads. He had a very busy life. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Longtime Columbus resident Emily Stewart later remembered the almost magical nature of the allure of the canal. “The first canal boats seemed like fairy palaces. They were painted white and the windows had green shutters and scarlet curtains. The inside panels of the cabin contained mirrors and pictures. The officers of the passenger boats were gentlemen… For years after the canal opened, the boats always came in with a band of music playing on board. The captain of the boat usually played the clarinet for the entertainment of the passengers…A trip to Europe now is nothing to a canal trip then…” Columbus was now more open to the world than it had ever been. And that world would soon be coming to Columbus. By 1834, Columbus had seen enough new people arrive by the canal and the National Road that the village of a few thousand legally became a city of more than 5,000 inhabitants. With a newly elected and reorganized city council and mayor, Columbus was about to become a city in fact. CHAPTER V 47 CHAPTER VI THE CITY CHALLENGED 1840-1865 UPON THIS HOUSE ✧ This is the best early birdseye view of Columbus. Constructed with imagination by people making sketches on the ground and then lifting them and themselves above the city, this birdseye looks at Columbus from Goodale and High Streets in about 1854. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. July 4 has always been a day to do a little celebrating in Columbus, Ohio. But the celebration of July 4, 1839, was something of a wonder to behold. A large group of people consisting of bands of music, military companies and large numbers of people both on foot and on horseback marched and countermarched through the town until the entire group ended up on Statehouse Square at the northeast corner of what appeared to be a rather large hole in the ground. A closer examination would reveal it to be the basement and foundation of what must be a very large building. It was to be a very large building indeed. By 1836, only twenty years after the first Statehouse had been built on the corner of State and High Streets, a number of legislators and state officials had concluded that something should be done to replace the statehouse. As such things go, it took two years of internal and external lobbying until The Ohio General Assembly decided to act and authorize the construction of a new building. A contest with cash prizes of $500, $300 and $200 for the best plan for a new building was won by Henry Walter. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 48 … Walter’s design was breathtaking. Ohio, a new state with a small population—many of whom still lived in cabins—was proposing to build a new statehouse that would be second only to the United States Capitol in size and magnificence. Simply accepting such a plan, much less actually building it, was a confirmation of Ohio’s faith in its future. Now after a year of work, frugally undertaken by prison labor, the cornerstone was ready to be laid. The stone itself was a huge block of hollowed limestone more than six feet by three feet by two feet and euphemistically called “the coffin.” Filled with lead lined glass jars, the cornerstone contained copies of newspapers, public papers, local coinage and other documents. Ex-Governor Jeremiah Morrow gave the principal address of the day. He said in conclusion: And may the councils of truth and justice and public virtue reside in its halls; may discord and faction be put far from them; and may a free and united people who reared it, and whose temple it is, watch over and cherish within its walls the form and spirit of their republican institutions. And may the blessings of benign Providence, now and through all coming time, rest upon this people, and upon this house, the work of their hands. I now lay the cornerstone of the Capitol of Ohio. Would that it would have been that easy. The extraordinary and magnificent Ohio Statehouse was estimated to cost about $250,000 and take about two years to build. It would take twenty-two years and cost almost $1,500,000 to complete. It would take so long and cost so much for a number of reasons. First and foremost, many people CHAPTER VI 49 house. It would not be his last. But between Jeremiah Morrow’s benediction and Lincoln’s last visit a lot would happen in the capital city. A BUSY TOWN OF NEW PEOPLE ✧ Above: By 1855, there was a new Statehouse—as yet uncompleted—on the square. There is a Neil House Hotel to the right and a hay wagon at Broad and High Streets. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Opposite, top: Completed in 1832, the new, improved Ohio Penitentiary was considerably larger and more orderly than its predecessor. And where else would one find a tree in the midst of the prison yard? PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Opposite, bottom: By 1856, Columbus and Franklin County were beginning to grow. That growth can be seen on this map with dozens of new towns and crossroads communities. The original map is more than five feet tall. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE FRANKLIN COUNTY ENGINEER’S OFFICE. living elsewhere across Ohio knew that if this great building were ever completed, the capital city would never be moved to another town—perhaps their town. So much was done to delay and stop construction. And of course the delayers were right. Since the building was completed no one has seriously proposed moving the capital. Those disputes resolved, it still took a while to get the building built. This was mostly because the sponsors of the project, the Ohio General Assembly and the state’s elected officials, were hard people to please and often changed their minds. So the project went through numerous architects, engineers and construction managers. With all of the changes and delays, the building was still in need of a lot of work by the early 1850s. Then fortuitously, the old statehouse burned to the ground in a blatant case of arson for which no one was ever prosecuted. While local souvenir dealers made money selling miniatures of the old statehouse bell— made from the original broken bell of the destroyed building—work on the new statehouse suddenly became very busy indeed. By early 1857, the ugly board fence around the square to contain prison labor was gone, the older buildings were removed and the new statehouse was occupied after a grand ball in which guests danced till dawn. The building was not fully completed until early in 1861, when newly elected President Abraham Lincoln visited town on his way to his inauguration. It was Lincoln’s second visit to the state- HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 50 In 1840, Columbus, Ohio, was a bustling city of 6,000 people and actually was several different towns all at the same time. On the one hand it was a center of transportation and trade. The arrival of the Ohio Canal and National Road had made the city the major market center of central Ohio. Early resident John Gill remembered many years later that, “In front of every store, was a post and rail for the convenience of the country people to hitch their horses when they came to town.” In fact the horses were so numerous, especially on weekends, that they were commonly called “the cavalry.” The National Road had come into Columbus on Main Street from the east and it was commonly assumed it would leave town the same way. This gave state officials a reason to move the overcrowded Ohio Penitentiary out into “the country” on Spring Street—a move accomplished in 1832. As it turned out the move could have been postponed. Columbus merchants and hotels—mostly located on High Street—successfully persuaded the army engineers charged with building a bridge across the Scioto to build it at Broad Street. So the National Road entered Columbus on Main Street, turned onto High Street and left town on Broad Street. It was at Broad Street and the Scioto River that the local canal agent had his office. By 1840, the entire river front from Main Street to Spring Street was lined with canal boat wharfs and canal warehouses as well as foundries, factories and mills. While the original settlers of Columbus had liked the spacious lots along Front Street away from High Street, the arrival of coach and canal traffic made the whole area less desirable. Prominent families began to move further east along Broad, State, and Town Streets as well as north and south along High Street to the city limits at North Public Lane (Nationwide Boulevard) and South Public Lane (Livingston CHAPTER VI 51 ✧ Irish immigration to Columbus peaked in the 1840s as thousands fled the potato famine and came to America seeking a new life. Many of them found that life in the railyards north of the city. Saint Patrick’s Church was the beacon that drew the Irish faithful to worship in Irish Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/JOHN CANADAY COLLECTION. Avenue). Less affluent residents found themselves increasingly pushed into inexpensive housing near the factories along the river or into the ravines that still knifed down to the river near Spring and Fulton Streets. It was near the south ravine that some of the black community of Columbus had something of a residential center in what was formally referred to as Negro Hollow and derisively in a more derogatory way. Most African-American residents of the city did not live in any one defined neighborhood before the Civil War but rather were dispersed throughout the city. Beginning in the 1830s large numbers of immigrants began to arrive in America from western Europe. The movement of new immigrants to America increased even more as revolutionary movements continued to sweep across the continent. While the new people came from virtually every country, the primary arrivals in America were from Ireland and Germany. The Irish had been under increasingly burdensome British governance for centuries and the promise of a new life in America was attractive. A massive potato famine in the HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 52 1840s increased Irish immigration even more. Many of the new Irish immigrants found employment as unskilled workers on the Erie Canal and later on the canals in Ohio. Some of them died building the canals but others who survived stayed in Ohio when their work on the canals was done. The center of Irish immigration in Columbus was on the near north side along North Public Lane. By the 1850s, that street anchored by factories along the river on one end and St Patrick’s church on the other would come to be called “Irish Broadway.” The other major ethnic minority to come to Columbus in the years before the Civil War was the Germans. German immigration was more complicated than Irish immigration since Germany in its modern form did not exist until well after the American Civil War. German speaking immigrants to Columbus settled on the south end of the city and sorted themselves out by religion (Protestant, Catholic or Jewish), by geographic origins (Prussia, Bavaria or the Palatinate) or by occupation (brewery workers, trades, or crafts) to name just a few of the distinctions. The new immigrants settled north and south of the city limits for a simple reason— the land was cheap. By the 1850s, Columbus’ first railroad, the Columbus and Xenia, arrived in town and filled the near north side with noise, smoke, and traffic. There were many new jobs for Irish Columbus in the railyards but it was not a pretty part of town. In “Die Alte Sude Ende”, or the Old South End, the Germans had their own problems. The legendary south end smell—a mixture of the rather nasty detritus of Columbus drifting south along the river and the canal was complemented by really bad smelling tanneries and a literal open sewer carried in a trough from downtown over the top of the canal to empty into the river. Living on the south end required olfactory courage. But for all of this the new Irish and German communities genuinely liked the city and tried to fit in. It was not always easy. Louisa Frankenberg, a German immigrant, introduced the German concept of kindergartens to America in Columbus in the 1830s. They were not all that successful and only really became popular after the 1850s. More troubling to the newcomers was the reaction of the American Party. Founded to, among other things, oppose unrestricted immigration, the American Party was also a secret society which instructed its members when questioned to only say “I know nothing.” Many immigrants came to feel that “Know Nothing” accurately described their American Party antagonists. And there was antagonism. When the Germans marched in 1855 to celebrate the Fourth of July, they came downtown armed to the teeth. Turning the corner from Town Street to High Street, rock throwing escalated to gunfire. The Germans fired back and one young rock thrower died. The incident was a turning point in Columbus as immigrants and natives tried from this point on to better tolerate one another. Such toleration was useful because Columbus and central Ohio was continuing to grow in the 1840s and 1850s and many of the new people as well as longtime residents were working one with another. While transportation, trade and manufacturing were continuing to expand, so too was government. Unlike some other states, Ohio in the 1830s made the decision to locate its major institutions for the treatment, care and correction of its citizens in the capital city. So in addition to the Penitentiary, which had been in the city since 1813, Columbus also became the home of treatment facilities for the deaf (1827), the blind (1837), and the mentally ill (1838). Other cities in Ohio would eventually become home to prisons and treatment facilities, but Columbus was always the headquarters for these services and would provide employment to a significant part of its population. While Columbus was able to settle its differences over ethnicity and the role of public and private employment with relative ease, other disputes were not so easily resolved. Throughout the 1840s and 1850s, Whigs and ✧ Above: On the other end of the city, German Columbus was building its own community. The children of Stewart Avenue would become the civic leaders of twentieth century Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: Part of the reason for German academic success was Louisa Frankenberg and her kindergartens of the 1850s. The idea soon spread to the rest of America. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER VI 53 ✧ Much of the success of Columbus in the 1800s was due to the large institutions centered in the city. The treatment facilities for the blind, the deaf and the mentally ill combined with the prison to employ many and diversify the economy. The picture shows the many homes of the lunatic asylum before the Civil War. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Democrats fought over political principles, while other local residents argued about the merits of women’s rights, the value of temperance, and the importance of public education. But the issue that increasingly provoked the most controversy was slavery. Slavery had been prohibited north of the Ohio River by the Ordinance of 1787. But many residents of central Ohio had arrived in the area from the South, still had relatives in the South and felt that slavery had a role in American life. Other residents of central Ohio strongly believed that slavery was just plain wrong. The most adamant among them felt slavery to be an abomination and called themselves Abolitionists. Their opponents, who really felt slavery was a necessary part of American life, came to be called Fire-Eaters. Very few people in central Ohio were either Abolitionists or Fire–Eaters. But the central reason for their antagonism one to the other was quite present. It was called the Underground Railroad. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 54 The Underground Railroad was neither underground nor a railroad. Rather it was a network of trails and safe lodgings that permitted runaway slaves to escape to freedom in Canada. Driving through one of the small towns near Columbus, one is tempted to believe that many older houses were stops on the Underground Railroad. Most of them were not. After the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act in 1850, most Northerners could be fined and jailed for harboring a runaway. Remarkably, protest against the system increased, and many houses did become stops on the Underground Railroad. Several prominent white Columbus families—the Neils, the Deshlers and the Westwaters—were participants in the system, as were black families like the Poindexters, Jenkins and Wards. There are several places in Columbus that were stops on the Underground Railroad and which are still standing today. They include the Kelton House on East Town Street and the Southwick, Good & Fortkamp Funeral Chapel on North High Street. In the years since the Missouri Compromise of 1820, America’s political leaders had struggled to find enough common ground to hold the country together. And generally they had succeeded. But each time a new compromise was needed, it was increasingly difficult to find agreement. By the mid 1850s, the whole political structure of the country was beginning to change. The Whig Party of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster was falling apart. The Democratic Party of Andrew Jackson was increasingly becoming the party of the South. And, by 1854, a new coalition had begun to piece itself together from former Whigs and a variety of small independent political movements. It called itself the Republican Party and ran a candidate for President, General John Charles Fremont, the Pathfinder, in 1856, on a platform opposed to the extension of slavery to the territories. Fremont lost but gathered a respectable number of votes for a new man and a new party. As the election of 1860 approached, a number of major figures in the Republican Party—Governor Salmon P. Chase of Ohio, Governor William Seward of New York and others sought the Presidency. In the end, a divided Republican Party chose an Illinois prairie politician named Abraham Lincoln as its candidate. Running against an even more divided Democratic Party, Lincoln surprisingly won the election. Much of the South was astonished and appalled. Abraham Lincoln arrived in Columbus, Ohio, by train on February 13, 1861, on his way to Washington D.C., to be inaugurated as the sixteenth President of the United States. He had been in Columbus once before, in 1859, and had spoken briefly to a small group of friends and supporters at the Statehouse. Now he was back to briefly visit Columbus in a more troubling time. Several states had already seceded from the Union and several more soon would follow. While waiting to speak to the Ohio General Assembly, Lincoln sat at the side of Governor William Dennison’s desk in the governor’s office—a desk and an office still in use today—and learned that he had officially been elected President by the Electoral College. After addressing the legislature, he walked to the east steps of the statehouse and met with several people who had been patiently waiting for some time to see him. He spoke briefly to the group: ✧ Above: Columbus was a major switching station on the Underground Railroad. Neither underground nor a railroad, the network helped hundreds escape to freedom. The home of Fernando Cortez Kelton on The General Assembly of Ohio has just East Town Street was a “stop” on the done me the honor to receive me, and hear a Underground Railroad. It is now a few broken remarks from myself…Knowing house museum. as I do that any crowd, drawn together as PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. this has been, is made up of citizens near about, and that in this county of Franklin Below: One conductor on the Underground there is great difference of political sentiment, Railroad was James Preston Poindexter. and those agreeing with me having a little of Barber, scholar and minister, Poindexter the shortest row, (laughter) from this and the was the first African-American to serve on circumstances I have mentioned, I infer that Columbus city council and the school board. you do me the honor to meet me here without PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. distinction of party. This is as it should be…I am doubly thankful that you have appeared here to give me this greeting. It is not much for me, for I shall very soon pass away from you, but we have a large country and a large future before us, and the manifestations of good-will towards the government, and the affection for the union which you may exhibit are of immense value to you and your posterity forever. (Applause) In this point of view it is that I thank you most heartily, for the exhibition you have given me. And with this allow me to wish you an affectionate farewell. CHAPTER VI 55 Two months later, the “manifestations of good will” proved to be insufficient. Southern troops opened fire on Fort Sumter, South Carolina, on April 12, 1861, and America was at war with itself. It would prove to be the deadliest and most devastating conflict in American history. It was a war that would change America forever and Ohio and Columbus would have much to do with it. THE CIVIL WAR IN CENTRAL OHIO ✧ Abraham Lincoln visited Columbus on several occasions. After a stop in 1859, Lincoln stopped in Columbus again on his way to his inauguration. He spoke to the legislature and to the public. In Columbus, Lincoln learned that he had indeed been certified as the winner of the 1860 election. He left Columbus with some states in secession and others about to join them. Soon there would be war. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. In the beginning, few people really thought the war would last all that long. The North outnumbered the South by more than two to one. Most of the industrial might of America lay in the North and much of its best agricultural land was there. Recognizing that the seceding states posed a challenge the small American regular army could not meet, and unwilling to recognize southern states as having left the Union, President Lincoln called for 75,000 volunteers for three months to put down “combinations to powerful to suppress” by normal means. The response across the north was overwhelming. Thousands of men left their homes and flocked to the cities. Ohio alone soon had enough volunteers to meet half of the President’s needs. These men needed to be uniformed, armed and trained. But for the moment they simply needed to be fed and housed. That in itself proved to be a challenge. Men were housed in every public building in the city, in the Statehouse and even aboard canal boats in the Scioto River. In 1851, Dr. Lincoln Goodale had given Columbus its first park, a wooded site on the near north side that came to be called Goodale Park. Now in the spring of 1861, Goodale Park was commandeered to become Camp Jackson, a mobilization center for HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 56 Union troops. Trees were removed and buildings were quickly erected. But Camp Jackson soon found itself to be much too small to meet the needs of the huge number of men arriving in the city to serve. Later, in 1861, a much larger site of several hundred acres was selected on the far west side of the city between Broad Street on the north and Sullivant Avenue on the south. Honoring former Governor Salmon P. Chase, the post would come to be called Camp Chase. Camp Chase would become a major mobilization and training center housing more than 26,000 Union troops. And it was not the only military base in the city. The existing arsenal and Columbus Barracks were increased in size and new installations named Camp Thomas, Camp Lew Wallace and Tod Barracks were established. Farther up the road in Delaware, a training camp for United States Colored Troops would be built in 1863. Columbus and central Ohio became an armed camp. The war did not go well for the North. Despite its greater size and economic base, the North did not have all that much of an advantage at the outset. Both sides had large untrained armies. The South had a somewhat more experienced officer corps, shorter supply lines and the high morale that came with defending one’s home from invasion. For the first two years of the war, Mr. Lincoln had a difficult time finding good generals—with one notable exception. In the west, Ohioan Ulysses S. Grant—ably assisted by Ohioans William T. Sherman and Philip Sheridan—was winning battles. Needing a place to put the prisoners those battles produced, a Confederate prison camp— designed for 2,000 men—was attached to Camp Chase. By 1864, More than 10,000 men were living there. More than 2,300 of them are still buried there in one of the largest Confederate cemeteries in the North. A Confederate Memorial Day service is held there each year on a Sunday in June after June 3—the birthday of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Ohio would provide more men to the Union Army as a percentage of its population than any other state, prompting President 2,400 Confederate cavalrymen. His purpose was to draw away Union troops from other battlegrounds. In this effort, he succeeded admirably as he was soon being pursued by more than 20,000 rather determined Union soldiers. Checked in his attempt to cross the Ohio back into Kentucky at a sharp little battle at Buffington Island, Morgan turned back north until he and his men were surrounded and forced to surrender. ✧ Clockwise, starting from the top: In 1861, Columbus, a city of 18,000, saw the emergence of Camp Chase—a mobilization center of 26,000 Union troops. This birdseye view shows the camp and its Confederate prison camp at the upper left of the picture. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. The Camp Chase confederate prison was built in 1862 and was designed to hold 2,000 men. By 1864, it held 10,000. Twenty-three hundred of them are still there in one of the largest Confederate cemeteries Lincoln at one point to say “Ohio has saved the Union!” Around 320,000 men served from Ohio in the Union Army. More than 5,000 of those soldiers were free black men. Some 35,000 of those 320,000 men died— more than ten percent of the men who served. Thousands more were seriously injured and permanently disabled. It was a costly price and one that touched every community in the state. Having said that, most of the fighting was done in places rather far from Ohio—at least until 1863. In May 1863, General John Hunt Morgan crossed the Ohio River into Indiana and then southern Ohio with more than in the North. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. There were no battles in Columbus in the Civil War. But John Hunt Morgan, the rebel raider who brought 2,400 Confederate cavalry into the state, was caught and imprisoned in the “escape-proof” Ohio Penitentiary. It took Morgan and his officers six weeks to escape in one of the more ingenious jailbreaks in American history. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER VI 57 ✧ Abraham Lincoln’s last visit to Columbus came in 1865 after his assassination. The Lincoln funeral train stopped in Columbus for one day and more than 50,000 people filed past the casket in the rotunda for a last look at the President. A city divided by war was reunited by the last casualty of that war. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Most of Morgan’s men were sent to the Camp Chase prison where many of them died. Morgan and several of his officers were housed in the “escape-proof” Ohio Penitentiary. It took Morgan and a few of his men a little more than six weeks to escape in one of the more ingenious breakouts in the long history of the Penitentiary. Changing to civilian clothes, Morgan and a friend walked to the Union Station and bought a ticket to Cincinnati. John Hunt Morgan continued to serve in the Confederate army until his death in 1864. While Union sentiment was strong in central Ohio, it would be incorrect to assume everyone was dismayed by Morgan’s escape. A significant part of the population of central Ohio did not approve of Mr. Lincoln or his war. Samuel Medary was one of the most vocal opponents of the conflict. A longtime prominent resident of Columbus, Medary had been a Columbus newspaper editor and territorial governor in the Buchanan Administration. During the war he edited a newspaper called The Crisis which bitterly opposed the war. In addition a number of other opponents of the war also made themselves heard and opposed Lincoln’s re-election in 1864. But with strong support from soldiers voting in the field, Lincoln was re-elected. With General Grant’s victories in the east and General Sherman’s successful March to the Sea in Georgia, the war was effectively brought to an end with the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia on April 9, 1865. Five days later, a festive spirit in the victorious North was chilled with the assassination of President Lincoln. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 58 For the next two weeks, the Lincoln funeral procession moved its way west from Washington D.C., to Lincoln’s home in Springfield, Illinois. On April 29, the Lincoln funeral train arrived in Columbus. Local newspaperman William T. Coggeshall described the scene as the President’s casket was placed on a great funeral hearse drawn by six white horses. The hearse was the great center of attraction. All along the line of march it was preceded by hundreds of all ages, sexes and conditions, striving to keep as near as possible to the solemn structure…Every window, housetop, balcony and every inch of sidewalk on either side of High Street was densely crowded with a mournful throng assembled to pay homage to departed worth. In all the enormous crowd, silence reigned… Coggeshall later described the scene after Lincoln’s casket had been placed in the Statehouse rotunda. By actual count, it was found that over eight thousand passed in and out every hour from half after nine until four o’clock, and making due allowance ‘tis thought that over fifty thousand people viewed the remains in that time… With the Lincoln funeral, some of the healing of a country torn apart by war finally began. For Columbus and Ohio as well as America, a new time was beginning. CHAPTER VII RAILROAD TOWN 1865-1900 THE GROWTH OF RAILROADS After the Civil War, Columbus, Ohio, grew at a remarkable rate. After doubling in size during the four year conflict, the town of 31,000 people in 1870 would become a major American city of more than 125,000 by 1900. Of course, Columbus was not the only city in the Midwest to see this kind of rapid expansion. Chicago would become the second largest city in America in the same period and other major Midwestern towns like Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Detroit saw growth even more spectacular than that of Columbus. Still, most Midwestern capital cities like Madison, Wisconsin, Lansing Michigan, and Springfield, Illinois, remained quite small. Indianapolis and Columbus on the other hand became major industrial cities. How and why did this happen? While the story of each city is a bit different, there are some common reasons for the growth of the Midwest in this period. In a few words, the region was a place with a lot of good fortune and an Industrial Revolution. And each contributed to the other. And in a way it all came about because of the War Between the States that had just come to an end. During the Civil War, the leadership of the North, both military and civilian, quickly realized that to win the war, the nation’s armies would require immense quantities of food, clothing and weaponry. And while much of this might be readily produced by northern factories, getting it to the places it needed to be might be difficult. Many parts of the North, even in 1861, still had only the most rudimentary of railroad lines. And the lines in the South generally ran east and west rather than north and south. ✧ Completed in 1874, the second Columbus Union Depot opened for service in 1875. It replaced an older barn-like structure that had served the city since the first railroad came to town in 1850. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY CHAPTER VII 59 To remedy all of these problems, the federal government went into the railroad construction business. During the war a lot of old track was repaired and reset to a uniform gauge or distance between the rails. More importantly, hundreds of miles of new track were laid to many places that had never seen a railroad before. One of the prime beneficiaries of all of this railroad largesse was the State of Ohio. By the end of the war, thanks to government construction, Ohio and nearby Indiana had one of the most complex and sophisticated rail networks that one could find anywhere in the world. In the center of the state of Ohio and served by more than fifteen of these rail lines was the capital— Columbus, Ohio. If anyone wished to ship goods in Ohio after the Civil War, inevitably some of these goods would pass through Columbus. Part of the growth of Columbus after the Civil War can be directly traced to this railroad expansion. New lines entered the city and old ones expanded their repair shops and storage facilities. By 1875 the drafty old wooden barn that had served as the city’s railroad station since 1850 was torn down and replaced with a new multistory brick Italianate terminal and office building. Virtually every picture taken of the new terminal admiringly shows its front façade and adjacent web of tracks. What these pictures do not show is what the average traveler or railroad employee saw when they stood at the front door of the station and looked west. They saw the North Graveyard whose weather beaten white fence did little to keep local pigs and cattle from wandering among the tombstones. It was not a sight to encourage the prospective traveler. Fortunately—and perhaps with a gentle nudge from the neighbors—the cemetery closed in 1876 and the site—with at least some of the graves removed—would become the home of the immensely more attractive North Market. The railroads existing at the end of the war made Columbus into a commercial center and a transport hub. But the old railroads did not make Columbus into a factory town. For that something new was needed. That something new was yet another railroad. In 1870, The Hocking Valley Railroad ran from Columbus into the heart of southeast Ohio. Its owners proudly proclaimed, In addition to coal, the Hocking Valley together with the counties lying south of it…are rich in iron ore of superior quality. Two furnaces are now in operation on the line of this road and an almost unlimited supply of iron, coal and limestone in the immediate vicinity will lead to the speedy erection of others… HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 60 Built with Columbus capital, the Hocking Valley Railroad permitted great quantities of coal, iron and timber to be readily and cheaply available to Columbus businesses. Using these cheap resources and the inexpensive labor of local workers—native or immigrant—Columbus was now in position to make many things inexpensively, sell them at high prices and make a lot of people a lot of money. In short order that is exactly what happened. THE RISE OF INDUSTRY A few examples will illustrate how the process worked. A number of older businesses simply continued to do what they had always done but now they could ship their product further and less expensively on the new rail lines. Some businesses like the old agricultural implement and hand tool companies now could ship their product longer distances to new markets. The same was true of local breweries whose product—while perishable—could be shipped farther. Other businesses took advantage of the extraordinarily cheap resources of the Hocking Valley. One of these was the carriage trade. People had been making buggies, carriages and wagons in Columbus since the city was founded. But the custom-made hand-tooled product was expensive and time consuming to produce. Cheap wood and iron meant that more people could make more buggies more cheaply than had previously been the case. The people who did it best were the Peters brothers. George and Oscar Peters had grown up working in their grandfather’s really disgusting tannery along the creek that raced through a ravine to the river south of the Courthouse and north of the German community. Desiring to improve themselves they went into the leather trunk and carriage business and did well but wished to do even better. A local history of a century ago noted that: ✧ Opposite, top: Replacing the North Graveyard in 1875, the North Market was one of several around the city. Shown in 1888, the original North Market burned in 1948 and was replaced for a number of years by a Quonset building. The Market has been at its current location since 1995. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Opposite, bottom: Directly across the street …George M., the first son, learned the from Union Station was the North carriage-making business of the Messrs. Graveyard. Established in 1813, the city Booth, of Columbus, and from that circum- had been trying to close it for years. stance and his natural inventive genius, he The new Union Station provided the final originated the Columbus Buggy Company incentive and the cemetery was closed. and the Peters Dash Company. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF SCHLEGEL, DONALD M., THE COLUMBUS CITY GRAVEYARDS, (1985). With the help of promoter and financier C. D. Firestone, the Peters brothers went into the carriage business on a grand scale. Using assembly line methods pioneered in the firearms trade, Columbus Buggy used inexpensive materials, labor and transportation to become one of largest buggy companies in Below: Located between the railroad and Fourth Street on the near north side, the Kilbourne and Jacobs Manufacturing Company was formed in 1881 and merged hardware and tool companies formed earlier by James Kilbourne and Felix Jacobs. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER VII 61 ✧ Above: Located at 482 North High Street just north of the rail yards, the Buckeye Buggy Company operated from 1882 to 1910 and helped make Columbus “the Buggy Capital of the World.” PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Right: M. C. Lilley & Co., manufacturers of military and society goods. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: The Jeffrey Manufacturing Company. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 62 America. And they were not alone. By 1900, there were twenty two buggy companies in Columbus and one buggy in every five made anywhere was made in Columbus. The inability of the company to effectively compete in the auto industry would eventually lead to its demise. But many people in that industry—including Henry Ford and C. D. Firestone’s cousin Harvey learned a lot from Columbus Buggy. Other Columbus companies catered directly to the needs of the very companies producing the raw materials that were transforming a continent. One of them was the Jeffrey Manufacturing Company. Joseph Jeffrey was a local banker in the 1870s who became interested in a local inventor’s coal mining machine. Eventually Jeffrey acquired the patents for the machine and launched a business to make them. By the turn of the century, Jeffrey Manufacturing was one of the largest producers of coal mining equipment in the world. There were also people who simply had a good idea and found Columbus the place to let it grow. Captain M. C. Lilley returned from the Civil War and looked around for a business to make his fortune. Unsuccessful at first, he began to notice that more and more men were joining lodges and other secret societies. Most of these groups had uniforms, commemorative swords and other weaponry, badges, sashes and ribbons galore. What they did not have was a central place to buy this equipage. The Lilley Regalia Company solved that problem with its large warehouse and elaborate catalogue. It soon became the largest regalia house in the nation. And then there were the dreamers and their dreams. Dr. Samuel B. Hartman was an orthopedic surgeon who was doing well but not all that well in practice in Columbus, Ohio. One day, the ghost of an Indian chief came to Dr. Hartman in a dream and revealed the source of all disease. The source was catarrh or congestion. But this was not the simple sinus catarrh that one often had in the morning. One could have catarrh in any part of the body—catarrh of the eye, the nose, the ear etc. And the only cure was a bottle or two of Dr. Hartman’s famous formula. He called the medicine Peruna after the chief who gave it to him. The concoction was largely flavorings laced with alcohol and was marketed with paid testimonials from retired Civil War officers and other public figures. People bought the product, believed in it and used it for years. Eventually the good doctor was told in so many words to stop production or open a distillery. He took the alcohol out but continued to sell the product successfully for a number of years. CONVENTION TOWN By the 1880s Columbus no longer looked the way it had appeared at the end of the American Civil War. The downtown was larger and more diversified. Columbus now had theatres, galleries, a museum, and quite nice restaurants near the Statehouse. The wealthiest people had begun to move away from Statehouse Square onto Broad Street, Mount Vernon Avenue or Bryden road. And the poor of Columbus continued to live together in their own communities—only now they were not as close to the affluent neighborhoods as they once were. In 1886 the American Federation of Labor was founded in Columbus. In 1890, the United Mine Workers of America was founded here in a grand convention. One might wonder if these two great organizations were founded here because Columbus was a hotbed of unionism. ✧ Above: Dr. Samuel Hartman was a practicing physician who later claimed to have learned the secret of a wonderful medicine from the ghost of an Indian chief named Peruna. Pe-ru-na became a legendary patent medicine and made Dr. Hartman a very wealthy man. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: By 1888, East Broad Street, with its four lines of trees, was one of the most fashionable avenues in America and was featured in Harper’s Magazine. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ED LENTZ. CHAPTER VII 63 HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 64 ✧ Opposite, top: Central Market in 1873. The market was built in 1850 and served the city until it was removed in 1966. The upper floor served as city council chambers until a new city hall was completed in 1872. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Opposite, bottom: The Grand Army of the Republic, the Union Army veterans’ organization arrived in Columbus in 1888 with 250,000 members, families and friends. The parade of 90,000 veterans was the largest since the end of the Civil War. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Not really. They were founded here because the town was a good place to hold a convention. How really good the town was at this sort of thing was tested in 1888. In 1888, Columbus decided to throw a party. It was a party like no other and it was a party with a panache not often seen elsewhere. But mostly, it was a demonstration of how well Columbus, with its excellent system of transportation, could easily host a convention. Ohio in 1888 was celebrating (a year late) the centennial of the Northwest Ordinance of 1787. To complement the celebration, it was decided to ask the Grand Army of the Republic—the Union Army veterans’ group—if it would like to hold its meeting here. The GAR, one of the largest and most powerful organizations in America, said yes and began to hold planning meetings. The meetings were necessary because in the Above: Paul Mone and his family operated a small grocery store at 84 North High Street from 1873 to 1898. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER VII 65 ✧ Founded as the Ohio Agricultural & Mechanical College in 1870, the school was opened in 1873 and graduated its first class in 1878—all six of them. In the same year it would become The Ohio State University. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. end, 90,000 veterans and 160,000 of their relatives and friends arrived in Columbus, a town of 80,000. To put this in perspective, it would be as if 2,000,000 people showed up suddenly today and wanted to stay for a week in Columbus. What does one do with so many people? In the first place one uses every park, public building and recreation center in the city. When that space is gone, one erects large tent cities near the downtown. The highlight of the encampment was the procession of the Union veterans down High Street in the largest parade of its kind since the Grand Review at the end of the Civil War. A newspaper of the period described the march. The procession which inaugurated the 22nd National Encampment was a magnificent and incomparable spectacle…The Capital City was in holiday attire. Every dwelling, though ever so humble, bore some mark of respect to the veterans. On the principal streets, all of the business houses and private residences were decorated…The veterans marched with firm step, and in the ranks were many soldiers who would answer the call to war again if the country needed their services. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 66 With all of these conventions and the new business that went with it, it was easy to believe that Columbus could only improve in the next century. And perhaps it might, but first the 1890s had to be survived. In 1893 the nation entered a period of economic depression and business failure. The bottom fell out of a number of Columbus businesses and only the strongest industries—the railroads, tool companies, steel mills and the buggy businesses—survived unscathed. And then in 1898, just as the city was beginning to recover from four years of economic depression, the entire west side of the city was inundated in a flood. It was not the worst flood in the city’s history but it was quite damaging none the less. But all in all as the century ended and Columbus and central Ohio prepared for a new era, the city had reason to feel good about itself. It had participated in the largest economic transformation in the history of the world to that time—the Industrial Revolution—at the very center of its development and the city had come away successful. For all of that, Columbus did not end the century a totally industrial city like Cleveland, Akron, Youngstown or Toledo. It had maintained its diversified economy with people working in commerce, trade, and transport as well as industry. And it had sponsored the successful beginning of what was then a small but important new state institution. In 1870, William Neil, the Old Stage King had died, six years after the death of his beloved wife Hannah. His great farm—the old Vance farm—became available three miles north of the city. The farm was acquired and became the new home of the Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College. Opening in 1873, it graduated its first class of six students—women as well as men—in 1878. By 1900 it was somewhat larger but still not all that great in size or influence. As The Ohio State University, the new school—like the town where it was born—was about to be transformed. ✧ Above: The West Side of Columbus had been flooded many times since the city was founded. The flood of 1898 caused extensive damage but little loss of life. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: 1898 flood rescue. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER VII 67 CHAPTER VIII A CITY OF LIGHT 1900-1930 ✧ ARCH CITY Completed in 1895, the Wyandotte Building was designed by Chicago architect Daniel Burnham and became the city’s first skyscraper. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. If a person who had grown up in Columbus in the years after the Civil War had left the town and not had a chance to return until the turn of the twentieth century, an evening walk down High Street from the train station to one’s hotel would have been nothing short of astonishing. The entire face of downtown had changed. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 68 ✧ Top: The third Union Station was designed by Daniel Burnham in Beaux Arts tradition. The station was completed in 1897 and the Arcade facing High Street was opened in 1899. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Middle: By 1900, Columbus was known as the “Arch City.” The arches had originally been erected in wood with gaslights in 1888. They were replaced by metal arches lit by electricity and were the symbol of the city until 1914. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Bottom: High Street at night. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/LAURA KUHNERT COLLECTION. CHAPTER VIII 69 ✧ Top: Looking east on Broad Street from Ninth Street. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Above: In the early twentieth century, Columbus became a city of “streetcar suburbs.” The electrified streetcar means that many people could now live miles from where they worked. This is Neil Avenue looking north from Wilber in 1907. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Columbus was no longer a quiet country capital city with people’s homes scattered around Statehouse Square and along High Street amidst the stores and warehouses of a Midwestern commercial center. Now downtown consisted of a true central business district with a number of multistory buildings and bustling crowds of people on the sidewalks and in the stores. The larger buildings had come about because of a significant number of advances in building construction. Stronger types of brick and better cement to hold the bricks together were reinforced with cast iron frames that permitted buildings to rise to much greater heights. But even with those advances it still took some time before buildings got to be much taller than five or six stories tall in most American cities. Few people wished to walk up more than a few flights of steps to do their business. The development of safe and efficient elevators changed all of that. In 1894, Daniel Burnham of Chicago designed and supervised the construction of the first “skyscraper” in Columbus, the Wyandotte HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 70 Building, near Broad and High Streets. It would be the first of many that would soon begin to rise near the heart of downtown. But as a traveler walked down High Street from the rather elaborate and somewhat pretentious Beaux Arts Union Station Arcade toward one of the greater or lesser hotels in downtown, the main thing that one would have noticed as night came on was not the buildings or the theatres or the restaurants or the stores—all of which stayed open quite late to catch people leaving town for home. One would have noticed the lighted arches which marched down High Street all the way through the middle of town. And moving up the street toward the station were streetcars lighted both inside and out with electric lights. If anyone had any lingering doubt why Columbus was called the “Arch City”, this sight certainly dispelled it. Columbus had first seen lighted arches in 1888 for the annual convention of the Grand Army of the Republic. Concerned that the streets of Columbus were dimly lit by oil lamps at most corners, the city built elaborate wooden arches lit by gas lights to illuminate the downtown and provide a new level of security and safety to the more than 250,000 people who came to town. Eventually those arches were replaced by metal arches illuminated by electric lights provided by the Columbus Railway Power and Light Company. Many years later people who grew up in Columbus would remember how the lighted arches—combined with lighted stores like the F& R Lazarus Company created an effect that was often described as a “fairyland.” But while electric power was changing the way the world was perceived, a term just as important in the power company’s name was “railway.” In 1900, Columbus was still the center of things in central Ohio. This was the place where people came to shop, to work, and to be entertained. But increasingly a larger and larger number of people were not living in downtown. They were living one, two and three miles away from downtown and regularly coming downtown from their homes. This would not have been all that possible for any but the most athletic only a few decades before. But now a truly suburban lifestyle was possible for large numbers of people. And it was all due to the electrified streetcar. There had been streetcars in Columbus since 1863, but they were horse drawn and rather slow. Now a unified, electrified streetcar system served most of the city. A person could make a daily commute to downtown in less than half an hour. All along the streetcar lines, new neighborhoods—streetcar suburbs—were springing up in every direction from downtown. To keep people using the cars throughout the day and night, the streetcar companies built elaborate amusement parks at the end of the lines. The largest and most famous of the Columbus attractions was Olentangy Park along High Street to the north of The Ohio State University. With its rather elaborate grounds and a large number of rides and attractions, the park had something for everyone. A locomotive engineer, in town for a convention in 1908 was suitably impressed. “Olentangy Park is a very complete place of amusement and has a fine auditorium…” The people living in the new suburbs were not all well-to-do. Industrial America was creating a new class of people to manage its factories and provide the teachers, doctors, lawyers and other professionals who also were needed. This new middle class were the primary residents of the new neighborhoods that one began to find in the new communities along the streetcar lines. Urbanization, industrialization, electrification and new forms of transportation were creating new cities of challenge and opportunity. And many people continued to flock to these new urban areas to seek a new home and new future. Between the end of the Civil War and the early twentieth century millions of new people came to America from abroad. Many of those people went to the great industrial cities of eastern and Midwestern America where jobs were plentiful for the newcomers. By 1900 immigrants constituted a significant proportion of the populations of places like Cleveland, Detroit and Chicago. Such was not so much the case in cities like Columbus where industry constituted a smaller percentage of the work force. But while most of the newcomers to Columbus in the early twentieth century were from rural Ohio and neighboring states, certain parts of town developed a decided ethnicity. On the far south end of the city, immigrants from Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, Poland and elsewhere in Europe found jobs in the steel mills and other factories that had emerged in the 1890s. The area came to be called Steelton. The old factory district, located along the Scioto River near downtown, was sitting on land that had become too expensive to be used for factory purposes. Just as new industries moved south to cheaper available land, so too did they move north along the rail lines serving the city. ✧ Above: The riverfront, 1908. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY Below: The South End of Columbus rapidly became a melting pot in the late 1800s as hundreds of immigrants from eastern and southern Europe sought work in the factories of what came to be called “Steelton.” PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/LAURA KUHNERT COLLECTION. CHAPTER VIII 71 Along North Fourth Street, a whole line of factories provided jobs to recent immigrants as did another set of factories along the Olentangy River north of the downtown. All of these new industries complemented older factories and shops that continued to operate in old Franklinton and near the railyards north of downtown. The African-American community, which had begun to form a HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 72 business district near Long and High Street in the 1870s, also saw its developing neighborhood shifted to the east with the expansion of downtown Columbus. Shoehorned in between the downtown and the new industrial and residential areas around the city were the neighborhoods of the less fortunate. On the north side, a neighborhood called Flytown served as a point of entry for many of the people newly arrived in the city. An area called Middletown near the eastern edge of Old Franklinton and another area called the Badlands on the east side of the central business district served the same purpose. In these marginal areas, one could find inexpensive housing and a wide variety of legal—and some not so legal amusements. Columbus as the Arch City took some getting used to—even by people who had not left and returned several years later. Cities in their nature are cauldrons of change and innovation. And the bigger a city becomes, the more rapid and diverse that change becomes. And with that change and diversity also comes a certain fragility. Columbus had seen a modest amount of labor unrest over the years. But most strikes tended to be limited in both time and effect on the general population. That had certainly been the case with the strikes by streetcar workers. But this lack of disruption was due to the fact that most people did not use the streetcars all that often. All of that had changed by 1910, when a newly formed union of streetcar employees decided to go out on strike. Now, in a city full of streetcar suburbs, the strike had an immediate effect. Neither side gave way and the strike became quite violent. At length, the National Guard was called in to patrol the city. The strike lasted for most of the summer. It was the most violent time the city had seen since the Civil War. Three years later the city’s fragility was illustrated in another way. Like most people who live near rivers, the people of Columbus had come to expect the river to flood from time to time. And the Scioto and Olentangy Rivers had met those expectations no less than eleven times since Franklinton was founded in 1797. In those ✧ Opposite, top: In 1912 Columbus marked its one hundredth birthday. The celebration culminated in a week-long series of events in August when the Ohio State Fair was underway. This postcard view is looking north on High Street at Goodale Avenue. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Opposite, bottom: The 1910 streetcar strike lasted for months and became quite violent. Eventually the National Guard was called in to preserve order. The strike ended in the fall of 1910. cases, people on low ground moved to high ground and moved back when the flood waters receded. To lessen the damage caused by flooding, the city had erected levees along the river near the downtown and had limited construction along the riverfront. None of that helped in March 1913, when five inches of water on already soaked ground caused the greatest flood in the city’s history. A local resident later remembered, We had very heavy rains and all of the rivers were rising…From the window, we saw a mad brewing rush of brown water. As we watched, the Broad Street bridge slowly broke up and tumbled into the flood…It was an appalling sight. The rising rivers took out every bridge save one along the Scioto, tore through the levee and put most of the west side of the city under several feet of water. The flood came so quickly and with such intensity that many people were caught before they could flee. Ninetyfour people were soon known to be dead in the disaster and others were probably killed as well. The National Guard was called out to preserve order as the entire city shut down for six days and the west side for six weeks. Social and physical disasters such as these were only the exceptional punctuation marks to a growing concern by many people in Columbus and in urban America as a whole that the price of change had become quite high indeed. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF PARRILL HERTZ. Above: The 1913 Flood. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Left: The 1913 Flood was and remains the worst single natural disaster in the history of the city. The entire city was closed down for six days in March 1913. The west side was stricken for six weeks. At least ninetyfour people died. From the disaster came a new riverfront. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER VIII 73 HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 74 A PROGRESSIVE TIME AND A WAR TO END WAR It was not a new feeling. In the nineteenth century, many people in rural areas came to distrust the power of wealth and influence that often concentrated in the cities. Opposed to the perceived power of eastern corporations and distrustful of cities, a Populist Movement tried to roll back some of the more disliked aspects of Industrial Revolution and restore the power of rural America. In its time, the Populist Revolt captured the imagination of many Americans. But it ultimately failed in its effort to return to an era that was rapidly ending. A few years later, a new movement would arise that in retrospect is often confused with the Populists. The Progressive Movement was largely composed of people who lived in urban America and owed their success to its industry and commerce. Still many members of the new working class and middle class looked around and saw aspects of their new world that needed attention. Child labor, poverty and disease, political corruption and moral ambiguity all became concerns of a new movement convinced that reform could lead to progress. The high tide of the Progressive Movement came in the years between 1900 and 1920 and Columbus, Ohio, was caught up in its fervor. The movement—never really a major political party—expressed itself in a variety of ways—not all of them all that consistent. The Progressive Era had a decidedly esthetic side. Columbus had been designed as planned city in 1812. But there had been little if any planning since—until the turn of the century. The rapid growth of the city had led to a need for parks and a better use of the city’s open space. A panel of professionals produced a city plan in 1908 that proposed a system of parks. It did not stop there however. The plan also called for the demolition of much of the area around the Statehouse and the creation of a civic center vaguely reminiscent of the Mall in Washington D.C. Very little of the plan was adopted immediately. But in the wake of the 1913 Flood, the 1908 city plan provided the impetus for what would eventually become a civic center along the Riverfront in the 1920s. But Progressivism in its essence was a political movement. At the national level, the movement would result in regulatory agencies and antitrust activity. At the state level, Ohio saw significant reforms. The Ohio Constitution of 1851, with a certain Jeffersonian flair, had specified that the people must be asked every twenty years if they would like a Constitutional Convention. Most times the people had said no. In 1912 they said yes. The Convention that resulted gave Ohio the initiative, recall and referendum and granted cities the power to adopt Home Rule if they wished to do so. Columbus decided to do so and also moved away from ward representation to a council elected citywide in 1914. Many of the same reformers who pushed through the political changes were also lobbied heavily by advocacy groups to adopt suffrage for women and the absolute prohibition of the sale and distribution of alcohol. Both movements were extraordinarily strong in Ohio. In fact, the Anti-Saloon League of America was founded in Columbus and had its headquarters in Westerville. While not adopted in 1912, both movements would see success in a few years, both locally and nationally. By 1912 the city of Columbus had seen remarkable change both politically and physically in response to the needs of a new and changing urban society. But arguably the biggest changes had been social and cultural. Since the 1880s, the Reverend Washington Gladden had been holding forth from the First Congregational Church in Columbus with a message that favored a Social Gospel of assistance to those in need. ✧ Opposite: Columbus was a planned city in 1812. The next great plan came in 1908 and proposed parks, parkways and a rebuilt city center. Much of what was proposed was never built. But some of the plan inspired the reconstruction of the riverfront after the 1913 flood. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: The Reverend Washington Gladden came to the First Congregational Church in 1882. Until his death in 1919, he was a nationally known advocate of a “social gospel” in the time of reform that came to be called the Progressive Period. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. The one injurious and fatal fact of our present church work is the barrier between the churches and the poorest classes. The first thing for us to do is to demolish this barrier. The impression is abroad among the poor that they are not wanted in the churches… While Gladden was the best known social advocate in Columbus, he was by no means alone. By the end of his life in 1919, Gladden could see with satisfaction that a new career called “social work” was defining itself professionally and a whole series of “social CHAPTER VIII 75 settlement houses” and other charitable programs were underway to help the neediest people of Columbus. By the end of the decade of the 1910s, the driving force of Progressivism as a political movement was generally gone although its legacy remained. The end had come as America and Columbus approached another defining moment in its history. In this case, it was a war. America had not fought a major war since the end of the Spanish American War and Philippine Insurrection in 1903. And many people were not terribly thrilled with the idea of becoming involved in what had become a major conflict in Europe since its outbreak in 1914. Recognizing that the two major ethnicities in America by 1916 were British and German—two countries at war with each other—President Woodrow Wilson had run for re-election on a ticket that proclaimed “He kept us out of war.” Then, six months later he led America into a “war to end all war” on the side of Britain and its allies. German Columbus was dismayed. It became even more concerned after war was declared in April 1917, when German was banned in the public schools, the last German newspaper was shut down, and the German names of several streets were changed. In a final gesture, a large pile of German books were burned at Broad and High Streets. Some have wondered since then why the German community did not respond more vigorously to this onslaught. The reason was rather straightforward. By 1917, only a small percentage of the more than 200,000 people in Columbus were of recent German origin. Most of the sons and daughters of the original German immigrants to the city had moved away to the new streetcar suburbs. The few still left in the Old South End were in no position to resist and so the books were burned and the street names were changed. They have yet to be changed back. World War I was a transformative event in Columbus as it was for much of the rest of America. The war experience at home—as harsh as it was for Germanic Columbus— acted like a white hot flame in welding together American support for the war. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 76 In World War II, few people if any questioned the loyalty or burned the books of an American with a German name. The First World War had begun to really make us into one people. CITY LIFE IN THE TWENTIES The war changed Columbus in other ways. During the war many young men—otherwise draftable for the first time since the Civil War—avoided service and kept their jobs in vital wartime industries. The industries needed people drastically and recruited them in many new places—like the Deep South. During World War I, thousands of young men from the rural South came north looking for work in wartime industries. Many of them were African-American. It came to be called the Great Migration and by 1918, the black population of Columbus had doubled—from 5,000 to 10,000. Many of these young men would soon found families in Columbus or bring their existing families north to be with them in a place of promise. A new and strong black community began to emerge along the Mt. Vernon Avenue and Long Street corridors. By 1922, Nimrod Allen, the recently selected director of the relatively new Columbus Urban League could proudly tell The Crisis, the journal of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, that Columbus was, among other things, a city with an important black population. What Allen neglected to mention was that the black population of Columbus had been larger for much of its history, as a percentage of population, than most other cities in the state. However one measured such things, black Columbus was now, as it had been for some time, like the Irish, the Germans and all of the other ethnicities, a vital part of the city of Columbus, moving into a new life in a new decade. The 1920s will forever be the Roaring Twenties—the decade of Flaming Youth, Flapper Girls. and bathtub gin. The decade began, of course long before it was 1920. In 1919, the Volstead Act banned the sale and distribution of alcohol. It was a law that was virtually impossible to enforce in a land ✧ Opposite, top: Public support for World War I remained quite strong until the conflict ended in November, 1918. A large plaster triumphal arch at Broad and High Streets served as the focus of war bond drives and other public meetings. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Opposite, bottom: Anti-German feelings became strong with America’s entry into World War I in 1917. German schools and a German newspaper were closed. The Germanic names of some streets were changed. German books were burned in downtown Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Left: The African-American population of Columbus doubled during the First World War as many people migrated to the North seeking work in wartime industries. By 1919, East Long Street would become the commercial center of the AfricanAmerican community with businesses like Allen’s Barbershop enjoying some success. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER VIII 77 ✧ Above: The neighborhood saloon became a fixture of city life in turn of the century America. Places like Hertz’s Restaurant and Sample Room were not liked by increasingly strong groups like the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union and the Anti-Saloon League of America. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF PARRILL HERTZ. Right: The long campaign for the absolute prohibition of the sale, manufacture and distribution of alcohol succeeded with the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1919. A holiday sale in December, 1918, marked the end of one era and the beginning of another. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 78 that saw little reason to even notice its existence. In short order, people began to violate the law and could not care less that they did. People had a lot of fun in the Twenties. For the first time girls could wear lipstick, smoke cigarettes, and drink in public without too much recrimination. To meet the needs of thirsty Columbusites, a number of former saloons soon reopened quietly as speakeasies. The Twenties was a period of quite extraordinary economic expansion. Many people made a lot of money and arguably deserved to do so. It was also a time when a lot of people did not get overly concerned about who exactly it was who was selling them things that were not quite legal. Despite all of this happy frivolity, there was also a dark side to the 1920s. As society preached tolerance of others, America closed the immigration gates in 1924 that had been open since the end of the Civil War. Now Americans of many different backgrounds began in earnest to learn to live one with another. It was not an easy task. Many Americans had come to fear the immigrants. They felt the newcomers were taking their country from them and they did not like it very much. In the early 1920s, many Ohioans became enchanted with an organization born in the South after the Civil War and dedicated to white supremacy. It was called the Ku Klux Klan and by 1924 it had recruited several hundred thousand members in Ohio. The organization was anti-immigrant, anti-Jewish and anti-black, but, it was claimed, the Klan was “100% Pro-American.” How this was possible was never explained as was the ultimate purpose of the group. Fortunately for Ohio and the country, the rapidly growing Klan was cursed with a number of bad leaders and bad decisions. By 1928, it was virtually gone. Through the 1920s, a number of Americans had more or less followed the rules of American finance and did their best to make themselves millionaires. It was a time that came to be thought of as a New Era—a time in which all things were possible. America and Columbus soon discovered the limits of those possibilities. ✧ Above: Womens suffrage, 1920. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: The years after World War I were a time of great prosperity and social change in America. Not the least of these changes was the new freedom women were given as they received the right to vote. Now women began to smoke in public, dress more casually and even go bowling with their male counterparts as these employees of the Jeffrey Manufacturing Company are doing in 1919. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER VIII 79 CHAPTER IX HOMETOWN 1930-1950 AN AIR HARBOR ✧ The Curtiss Seagull was one of many different aircraft produced by the Curtiss Wright Corporation Columbus during World War II. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. In more than a few ways, July 8, 1929, was something of the high tide of the 1920s in Columbus, Ohio. As the precocious and sometimes tragic decade wound its way to a close, most people still believed that the 1930s would be much like the 1920s—brash, bold and economically prosperous. Republican Herbert Hoover had run for president in the fall of 1928 with a campaign slogan of “a chicken in every pot” and a continuation of the policies that had seemed to make most people more money most of the time. He had handily beaten his Democratic opponent, Al Smith, by a wide margin. Now in the summer of 1929, Columbus was about to experience something the city had been looking forward to for more than a quarter of a century—regularly scheduled passenger air transportation. The city was welcoming an airport of its very own. Port Columbus was open. It had been a long time in coming. Like most Americans, the residents of Columbus had been fascinated by the flights of the Wright Brothers of nearby Dayton. Columbus had seen its share of aerial stunts over the years. These had included the arrival of a bolt of silk from Dayton by plane in 1910 and the spectacle of an airplane racing a car at a local track. And local fields had been training pilots of one sort or another for a number of years. But the possibility of any American—with enough money—being able to board a plane and fly across America seemed to be nothing more than a dream. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 80 ✧ Above: Radio moved from being an experiment and a toy to a common Until that day in July, when Transcontinental Air Transport lifted into the air and followed a route laid out by Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh across America. To be fair, it was only a partial achievement. Since airports were few and far between, the original trip in 1929 involved riding trains for a considerable distance and then flying the rest of the way. Still, as historian George Hopkins later recounted, to the traveler boarding the plane it must have been rather impressive to hear an attendant announce, “All aboard by air for Indianapolis, St. Louis, Kansas City and points west.” To the people of Columbus and distinguished guests like Lindbergh, Henry Ford and Amelia Earhart, it seemed like the beginning of new and exciting chapter in the city’s history. And it was. Air travel and air transport over the years would play an increasingly strong role in the success of the city. But that would be many years in the future. household fixture in the 1920s and 1930s. Stations like WBNS sent their powerful signals across much of central Ohio. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Left: July 8, 1929, was a landmark date in the city’s history as Transcontinental Air Transport made its first flight from the new Port Columbus airport. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: With the onset of World War II, the Curtiss Wright Corporation came to Columbus and built a major production facility near the Port Columbus Airport. At peak, it would employ more than 25,000 people. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER IX 81 D E P R E S S I N G D AY S ✧ Clockwise, starting from the top, left: In 1937, Bill Moose Crowfoot died a little before his one hundredth birthday. After travels with the Sells Brothers Circus, he settled in central Ohio. The death of the “Last Wyandot” attracted more than 10,000 people to his funeral on Wyandot Hill overlooking the Scioto River. He once claimed to have cast his first vote for Abraham Lincoln. In the short run, the hopes of Columbus and America that had seemed so bright in the summer of 1929, literally came crashing down in the massive stock market collapse of October of that year. Many people today still believe that the massive economic dislocation that came to be called the Great Depression started that day with the stock market crash. It didn’t. The economy actually rallied a bit after the crash and the real economic disaster did not begin until many months later. Even after the downturn began in earnest, many Americans continued to believe that the troubled times would be limited. After all, America had not had a major economic collapse since the “Panic” of 1893. It said something about how America had come to look at the ups and downs of capitalism that a difficult time was coming to be called a “depression” rather than a “panic”—as if it PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. The 1930s were the years of the Great Depression. Times were hard but people coped with groups like the Food Conservation League who gathered up discarded food and gave it people in need. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. WPA or Works Progress Administration workers at The Ohio State University. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Street car tracks lead West Town Street into South Gift Street, 1937. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 82 were more like a spell of bad weather than a mad rush for an economic exit. But this downturn was no simple period of brief economic decline. By the time it was over it would be the worst economic catastrophe in the nation’s history. The Great Depression of the 1930s would last more than a decade and transform the lives of a whole generation. The causes of the Great Depression were many and diverse. It took a long time for the public and private sectors to recognize and come to grips with the problems they faced. Most early efforts to meet the challenges of the Great Depression involved assistance to large businesses to “prime the pump” as the phrase went at the time. It was only as the Depression deepened that government began to intervene and directly employ people in need. By the end of the decade, the federal government had spent more than 33 billion dollars to fight the problems of the Great Depression. And the Depression still continued. It was a very difficult time. The years between 1930 and 1940 saw very little growth in the city. A city that had seen significant positive growth for most of its history barely grew at all. In the course of the decade, the city only increased in size from 290,000 to 316,000 people. Many new people arrived in Columbus trying to find a future when there was little work in the country side. But many others left the city and moved in with family or friends in the small towns they had originally left for the lure of the city. While cities like Columbus with diversified economies probably rode the Depression out better than the great industrial cities with their double digit unemployment, it was still not a good time to be looking for work. Many local employers—stretched by debt and declining markets—cut wages and hours in an effort to keep as many people working as possible, as long as possible. Many people were faced with a choice of less work or no work. They chose less work. As budgets tightened, many companies dependent on recurring public spending began to suffer. Restaurants, department stores and specialty stores all lost business. Some businesses collapsed completely. Since the turn of the century Columbus had been the home of a number of major amusement parks. By 1937, the largest of them— Olentangy Park—was forced to close due to lack of income. So what did people do with their spare time in the 1930s? They did things that did not cost much. They went to the movies. They listened to the radio. They socialized with family and friends. It is no accident that the 1930s saw the increasing popularity of inexpensive entertainments like newspapers, pulp magazines and paperback books. ✧ Top: As some forms of entertainment were beginning, others were ending. The large amusement parks had been built by the streetcar companies to get people to ride somewhere in their spare time. Now in the 1930s, high costs and competition from movies, radio and other attractions doomed the parks. Olentangy Park closed in 1937. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Above: Shoot the Shutes, Indianola Park. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/REEB, DEIBEL, RUFFING COLUMBUS POSTCARD COLLECTION. CHAPTER IX 83 People still had their heroes and heroines in these years. Sports figures and other local people who had made something of themselves were always welcomed back to the city enthusiastically. Some of these people like Eddie Rickenbacker—America’s Ace of Aces—and Elsie Janis—the Sweetheart of the American Expeditionary Force—had made their names in World War I. Others like Mary Catherine Campbell—the only two-time Miss America—were celebrities from the 1920s. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 84 And new heroes like Jesse Owens, the track star of the 1936 Olympics, also were admired. By 1940, America’s Great Depression had been going on for a decade. There had been times in those years—notably in 1934 and 1937—when it seemed like the worst might be over and the economy might be on its way to recovery. And then, for various reasons, hard times returned and people resigned themselves to patiently waiting for the worse to end. ✧ Opposite, clockwise starting from top, left: Born in Alabama and raised in Cleveland, Jesse Owens came to Columbus to attend The Ohio State University. On one day in 1935 he set three world records and tied a fourth and in 1936 Owens won four gold medals at the Berlin Olympics. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Long trips and expensive pastimes may have ended for many in the 1930s, but since WAR COMES TO COLUMBUS The wait came to an end on December 7, 1941, with what President Franklin Roosevelt characterized as a “dastardly attack” by “naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan” on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. America was at war. For all of the suddenness of the attack at Pearl Harbor, the coming of war to America was not entirely unexpected. The peace that had been hoped for in Europe after World War I had not materialized. The enormous burden of reparation placed upon a defeated Germany had sparked a ruinous economy that devastated the country’s middle class. Increasingly discourse in Europe moved to the extreme left and the extreme right. At the end of the 1930s, fascist regimes in Italy, Germany to Spain were on the march. By late 1939, Europe was at war. Asia had been at war even longer. A lengthy conflict between Communists and Nationalists in China had provided an opportunity for Japan to take Manchuria in 1931. By the end of the decade Japan was looking to manage a Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere—whether its potential members liked it or not. Throughout the 1930s many Americans had tried to avoid these conflicts. But since 1940, it was becoming increasingly clear that the United States—the strongest economy in the world—would probably play some role in the coming conflict. But many Americans still entertained the hope that the national role would be an indirect one. All of that changed after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Within hours, American sentiment was overwhelmingly in favor of war. In short order, the conflict became a world war with the United States at war in both Europe and Asia. It was a war like no other in American history. Implementing a peacetime draft for the first time in 1940, America ultimately would increase its small peacetime military to encompass more than 16,000,000 people. To feed, clothe, arm and train so many people required the conversion of existing companies and the construction of whole new factories. Some of the new factories transformed the economy of the city. Curtiss-Wright Aviation came to Columbus and acquired a site near the Port Columbus airport. It then proceeded to construct a factory that would eventually employ 25,000 people building warplanes. In its later roles as North American Aviation and 1926 the Palace Theater has offered a lift to the spirits for one low price. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. In her youth, Columbus native Elsie Janis (second on the left) was one of most famous women in America. A child star in vaudeville, she went on to become the “Sweetheart of the AEF” after her trench tours in World War I. Her later career included singing, acting and writing several books until her death in 1956. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Captain Eddie Rickenbacker was a genuine American hero. The World War I “Ace of Aces” went on to a storied career in aviation over the next several decades. His modest home on Livingston Avenue is a National Historic Landmark. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Above: Begun by the Army during World War I, the Columbus Quartermaster Depot was greatly expanded during World War II and employed more than 10,000 people. After no less than fourteen name changes, the facility is known today as the Defense Supply Center Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH. Left: John Thomas Blackburn, first soldier from Columbus to be killed during the attack on Pearl Harbor. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER IX 85 ✧ World War II moved toward a rapid conclusion with the surrender of Japan on September 2, 1945, on the deck of the battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay. Back in Columbus, many people were happy to see the end of the war. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. North American Rockwell, the plant would be part of Columbus for many years. Similar to the experience of the Civil War in Columbus, just as important as the private sector companies were the military installations that were developed as part of the war effort. In 1917 the Quartermaster Corps of the Army had purchased 281 acres of farm and swampland near three major railroads in and around the community of Whitehall on the far east side of Columbus. By the end of the war the Army was operating six warehouses at the site. Not all that active during the 1920s and 1930s, the facility became critically important during World War II. Acquiring another 295 acres and eventually employing 10,000 people, the Columbus Quartermaster Depot became by war’s end the largest military supply depot in the world. It also became the temporary home of 400 German prisoners of war. The Depot would go through many other reorganizations over the years—including no less than fourteen name changes—to become the Defense Supply Center Columbus which continues to serve the nation today. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 86 As one might imagine, all of these thousands of jobs being created by World War II proved to be extraordinarily appealing to people who had not seen many job opportunities in the previous decade. Thousands of people flocked to Columbus looking for work. They came from the small towns and crossroad communities of rural Ohio. And thousands of other people, black and white, came to Columbus from terminally poor communities in southeastern Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee. It was an area we today call “Appalachia”. In those days, it was simply “the South.” It was the greatest mass migration to central Ohio since the great immigration waves of the nineteenth century and would change both the politics and culture of the city yet again. By the end of World War II, thousands of people from Appalachia were living in Columbus. The Urban Appalachian Council in Cincinnati describes the result succinctly. “In the years following World War II, 3 million people left the Appalachian region.” Yet, Appalachian people and their culture have not always been embraced in the city. The early migrants found the city a strange place and had a hard time adjusting. In return the city did not always understand the ways of “these newcomers.” But eventually, over the years, the newcomers and the city began to understand and accept one another. One of the more interesting aspects of wartime life in Columbus was rationing. Because so much was needed, many commodities came to be in short supply. The government came up with an elaborate rationing system for critical items like gasoline, tires, sugar and coffee. Since most people had been living for a decade without many of these items, the addition of rationing was not all that burdensome. In fact, some people became quite adept at trading ration stamps and acquiring things that they never would have had during the Great Depression. The war was a long unnerving, terrifying experience. Today it seems—many years later—that the Allies victory against European fascism and Japanese militarism was inevitable. It wasn’t. And the people living through those years knew it. As unlikely as we know today it might have been, people in Columbus looked nightly from their rooftops for German bombers. They had seen the newsreels from London and they had listened to Ed Murrow wishing them “Good Night and Good Luck.” Unlike most of Western Europe—Columbus was the recipient of both. THE COST OF CONFLICT But the city America’s veterans returned to was not the same as the one they had left behind. After a brief recession in 1946, the economy refitted itself to domestic rather than wartime production. It was at this point that civic leaders began to realize the true and total cost of almost two decades of depression and war. During the hard times of the Great Depression, little local money had been available and little had been spent on public improvements. During the war, most public money was spent on war time needs. And while the federal and state governments had undertaken some notable public works projects like the new Federal District Courthouse in 1937, a lot remained undone. Now the bill was coming due and Columbus was in dire need of new money for schools, hospitals and roads and bridges to meet the need of the large new population who had come to the city in the war years. The problem was that residents of Columbus had gotten into the habit of rejecting bond issues and other taxation and convincing them of the city’s needs was not easy. To try to resolve the impasse, the mayor of Columbus decided to try something new and different. James A. Rhodes had come to Columbus in 1932 from southeastern Ohio. After a brief time at The Ohio State University, he went into politics and was elected to the Columbus School Board. By 1944 he was one of the youngest mayors in the city’s history. Rhodes would go on to a long and storied career as auditor of state and ultimately as the longest serving governor in Ohio history. But in 1945, the young mayor had a more limited objective—get a few bond issues passed. Rhodes held a meeting in his office with a number of governmental and private sector leaders. Out of this came a series of meetings leading to the formation of a group that came to call itself the Metropolitan Committee. Informally called the “Committee of 100,” the organization consisted of representatives from every part of the city’s leadership— management and labor, social and cultural groups, and local county and municipal government. Proposals to fund a variety of institutions—from schools to water treatment plants—were presented to the committee. If the proposal was approved by this very diverse group—many of whose members did not like each other all that much—the Metropolitan Committee would recommend it and push for its approval by the voters. Local journalist Adrienne Bosworth later quoted one of the leaders of Committee as to how the organization operated. “We wouldn’t support any issues that benefited one vested interest or one end of town. We only supported the things that everyone recognized were needed.” The strategy worked. Over the years from 1945 to 1965, more than $80 million in bond issues were approved by voters and much of Columbus was rebuilt and refurbished. And as it turned out, the money started arriving not a moment too soon. ✧ Born in Coalton, Ohio, James A. Rhodes had come to Columbus to attend Ohio State. By 1945 he was mayor of the city and was facing a lot of work left undone by two decades of war and economic depression. The Metropolitan Committee was formed to get things done. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. CHAPTER IX 87 CHAPTER X “ALL-AMERICA CITY” 1950-1970 A RUSH TO THE COUNTRY At the end of World War II, the United States was unquestionably the strongest single country in the world. The men and women returning from the war were looking for several important things. They were—a spouse, a car and a house—and not necessarily in that order. In short order, thanks to the “GI Bill of Rights” at least some of those desires were met. Returning servicemen soon discovered that they could buy a house, go to school, and generally improve their position in society. And they did. In the years after World War II, Columbus, like many American cities, was a place in the process of redefining itself. Prior to World War II, houses had been built individually. Even if a developer proposed a new subdivision, he would do little more than lay out the streets, make sure that sewer and water lines were available, and then sell lots to homebuyers. The owner of the new property would build his own house. In some of the more exclusive suburbs of the 1920s, like the Upper Arlington of King Thompson and his brother Ben, developer approval of the house design was mandatory. In most parts of town, an owner could build whatever house he liked. He could hire an architect or buy a plan and hire a contractor to build it. Or if the owner was in a rush, he could buy a whole house and have it delivered to his home site. Before World War II, the most popular place to do this was in the pages of the inimitable Sears and Roebuck catalog. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 88 ✧ Opposite, top: By the end of World War II, even with wartime rationing, the automobile had become the preferred means of American transportation. The last streetcar in Columbus took its last ride in 1948. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/PRESTON REICHARD COLLECTION. Opposite, bottom: By the late 1950s Columbus had done so much, so rapidly and so well that Look Magazine declared it to be an “All-America City.” Columbus liked the title and for the next several years called itself “The All-America City.” This is a statue of Christopher Columbus that stands on Statehouse Square. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. After the war, a new Columbus company offered yet another alternative. An all-metal Lustron house could be built quickly and the cost of the porcelain panels covering its outside was quite inexpensive. The houses boasted internal radiant heating and magnets to hang pictures where nails could not be used. The Columbus company advertisement described the advantages. Above: Through much of the 1950s, many people still did much of their shopping in downtown Columbus. Here Easter shoppers Here is America’s new standard of living. It offers cheerful convenience, room for living, crowd High Street in April 1950. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. the strength and permanence of modern steel construction—without the penalty of price. Below: Millions of servicemen came home after World War II looking for wives, cars, and homes. At times there seemed like there were not enough of any of them. To help meet the demand for housing, the newly formed Lustron Corporation in Columbus began making and selling houses that were mostly metal. The company was not successful but many of their houses are still around. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER X 89 ✧ Top: The Great Southern Shopping Center. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Above: A number of new shopping centers were built in the 1950s to meet the needs of a rapidly growing city. Among them was Great Western by the Casto Company. The center was opened in 1954 and included the “Walk of Wonders” miniature models of the Wonders of the World. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Below: To serve the new residential Hundreds of the houses were sold and can still be found across America. Unfortunately, to be profitable the company needed to sell tens of thousands of the houses rather than hundreds and the company soon went out of business. The people who did make money selling a great many houses worked with different rules than the developers of the past. Recognizing the enormous pent up demand for new housing and the availability of inexpensive financing through the GI Bill and Federal Housing Administration loans, new builders built new houses in groups that they subdivisions around the city, new shopping areas began to be built. The first of a new generation of shopping centers, Town and Country, was completed by the Casto Company in 1949. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 90 called “communities” or “neighborhoods.” Because the houses were built on inexpensive land and with the same general floor plans, the houses could be built quickly and sold at relatively low prices. Ranch, townhouse and split level designs were always popular. Aided by the National Defense Highway Act, which used federal money for interstate highways, and the rise of shopping centers the number of new suburbs several miles from downtown began to grow. The freeways meant that the thirty minute journey to work could now be made from Worthington, or Reynoldsburg or New Rome—places thought to be out in the country only a few years before. While many people were involved in building highways, one man in particular made shopping centers the magnet which kept suburban people in suburbia. His name was Don Casto. About the same time he was helping bring the Port Columbus Airport into being, Casto pioneered a strip of stores with parking in Grandview Heights near Columbus. In 1948, he opened Town and Country, the first modern automobile-based shopping center in the city. Its success would lead to other Casto centers. They included Northern Lights, Graceland and the Great Eastern, Great Western and Great Southern shopping centers. ✧ Left: The National Interstate and Defense Highways Act of 1956 transformed America. Over the next two decades large interstate highways would permit people to live farther than ever from where they worked. And freeway construction would divide entire urban neighborhoods as was the case when Interstate 70 passed through downtown Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: Accompanying freeway construction was a federal, state and local policy of THE CENTRAL CITY REBUILDS All of this movement to the edges of Columbus and beyond led to a precipitous decline in the population of the central city. A popular view of planners and government officials was that when parts of a city became “blighted,” the diseased section of the city needed to be removed. Across America the program was called Urban Renewal. In Columbus, it was called Slum Clearance and Redevelopment or SCAR. Beginning in the early 1950s, plans were made in concert with freeway construction to level certain sections of town and rebuild them as part of a new downtown. Sixty acres on the southeast side of downtown were acquired and the venerable 1850 Central Market was removed to make way for a new bus station. On the north side, most of the old Flytown neighborhood also was removed. Many people noticed the important progress Columbus was making. Look magazine was impressed enough to give Columbus an All-America City award in 1958. Columbus was not the first All-America City nor would it be the last. In fact Columbus would win the award again. But few places took the award as seriously as Columbus did. Columbus was a place in search of an image of itself to project to the world. For a time in the early 1900s, Columbus had been the Arch City. But by the 1950s, the arches had been gone for decades. So when Columbus got a new title, the name stuck. For the next twenty years, Columbus was the All-America-City. But not everyone was thrilled with the city’s progress in reshaping itself. Some people were angry and upset that whole neighborhoods were being removed. And the point was not lost on a significantly larger AfricanAmerican population, boosted by wartime Urban Renewal. In Columbus it was called Slum Clearance and Rehabilitation (SCAR) and took more than sixty acres of downtown in the Market Mohawk project. Reacting to the loss, nearby residents quickly bought, fixed and resold houses to prove a neighborhood need not be lost. The homes were saved and came to be called German village. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER X 91 ✧ Above: More than nice neighborhoods were saved in Columbus. In the late 1960s, the 1928 Ohio Theatre was threatened. A grassroots community movement raised money and the theatre was saved. It soon became the home of the Columbus Symphony. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: Mayor M. E. Sensenbrenner presided over a period of unprecedented population and geographic growth in the 1950s and 1960s by requiring subdivisions taking sewer or water service to be annexed to the city. Columbus would become the largest city in land area in Ohio. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. migration, that some of the areas being removed and the sites of new freeways were the homes of black Columbus. Old organizations like the NAACP and the Columbus Urban League were joined by new organizations born in the “Civil Rights Revolution” of the Deep South in opposing the displacement of their community. Groups like the Reverend Martin Luther King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference worked with groups like the Congress of Racial Equality in seeking a new future for the African-American community of Columbus. Joining them were a not insignificant number of white people who also felt the loss of whole downtown neighborhoods to be a tragedy. Many people not only made their views known, they began acting upon them. Fearful that the old German neighborhood might be the next target of urban renewal, a number of people in the 1950s began buying houses, fixing their exteriors and reselling them. By 1960, a German Village Commission was in place regulating owners’ use of their property and a German Village Society would soon be active. In the 1960s, organizing for historic preservation of the built environment was a relatively new idea in Columbus. There had been efforts over the years to attempt to save individual buildings from time to time. The battle to save the historic Kelley Mansion in 1963 had been unsuccessful. The house was removed stone by numbered stone from its site on Broad Street by Memorial Hall and the HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 92 stones were placed in storage. They are still in storage. But it says something about the success of historic preservation in Columbus that by 1969, a movement to save the historic Ohio Theatre succeeded admirably. The 1928 movie palace was saved and is now the home to the Columbus Symphony. In 1977, the Columbus Landmarks Foundation was founded to further historic preservation in Columbus. In 1978, Victorian and Italian Villages on the near north side became preservation districts. They would not be the last by any means as Columbus became quite successful in saving its older neighborhoods. Looking back over fifty years of success in historic preservation, the German Village Society today declares that “German Village, Columbus’ premiere downtown neighborhood is one of the preeminent historic districts in the United States. German Village is 233 acres of ‘living history’ where the old meets the new and the result is a vibrant and charming community.” But none of these efforts would have mattered much had it not been for the selfdescribed “dynamic” mayor of his “dynamic” city. Maynard E. “M. E.” Sensenbrenner was a mayor like none the city had seen for some time. Short, thin and not all that imposing in appearance, Sensenbrenner had come to Columbus from Circleville and had made a success of himself as a Hilltop businessman. Quite patriotic, he was a man of enormous energy and was deeply committed to his adopted town. Entering politics, he surprised many people by winning the mayoralty in the early 1950s. Forced to sit out a term after taking the blame for the west side flooding of a stream called Dry Run, Sensenbrenner returned as mayor in 1964 and would serve until 1971. Like many successful politicians, Mayor Sensenbrenner knew his limitations and looked for good people to advise him as to the direction he should take. These men working with many others established a political dynasty that would eventually come to control county as well as city government. Their advice to the mayor was succinct—annex, and then annex some more. Many large cities in Ohio and across America were being slowly strangled by a ring of new suburban communities that were preventing further urban growth and taking some of the most affluent taxpayers in the city with them. In Columbus, this process was checked by linking approval of sewer and water line extensions to annexation to the city. A developer could and sometimes did build subdivisions with septic tanks and wells. But they were never as popular as places whose homes had city sewer, water and police and fire services. With this policy in place, Columbus soon grew to become the largest city in land area and ultimately the largest city in population in the state. As Columbus entered the 1960s, it was growing for a number of reasons. A wise policy of annexation combined with inner city rehabilitation and revitalization put the city in position to be able to grow. Probably the most sophisticated freeway system in Ohio saw major roads coming into Columbus from every direction with traffic easily diverted to any part of the city by a fifty-five mile outer beltway surrounding the city as Interstate 270. ✧ Left: German carriage ride from the past. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Right: German village was not the only neighborhood helped by historic preservation. In the late 1970s two neighborhoods bracketing High Street in the Short North—Victorian and Italian Village (seen here)—also became quite successful. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER X 93 ✧ Right: The Ohio State University grew in the years after World War II. From 17,500 students in 1940, the campus exploded to 26,000 students by 1950. By 1952 it was clear that filling the stadium on an autumn afternoon would not be a problem. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/PRESTON REICHARD COLLECTION. Below: Legendary football player, Chic Harley. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. Bottom: The Ohio State University basketball team leaving for California, 1960. THE IMPORTANCE OF A GREAT UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Still, even with space and access, a city needs people in order to grow. Columbus would soon see them for a number of reasons, the most important of which was 3.3 miles north of the Statehouse Square along High Street. Since 1870, the country home and extensive farms of William Neil, “the Old Stage King,” had been the home of The Ohio State University. Ohio State has been such a large part of the recent history of Columbus, Ohio, that it is sometimes easy to forget that it was not all that long ago when the campus and student body were rather small. For most of the early history of the university, the campus was the HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 94 home of a few hundred and then later a few thousand students. Affluent residents of the city often built large spacious homes near the small university in exclusive neighborhoods with names like Indianola, Northwood Park and Dennison Place. The University area was a nice quiet place near a nice quiet campus. Some of that calm began to dissipate in the early twentieth century when football games—especially those featuring the legendary Chic Harley—began to make a lot of noise at Neil Park along High Street. The growing success of Ohio State’s teams would support the construction of a new Ohio Stadium that would draw even more thousands of people to athletic contests. But for all of that, Ohio State was still a small school in a state rather filled with colleges. All of that changed at the end of World War II. The GI Bill of Rights provided a means for thousands of veterans of limited means to come to Ohio State—among many other places—and complete a college education. The campus grew in size and complexity as a result of these new students. But the real growth of the land grant college would really begin after most of the veterans had received their education and left the campus. The continued growth Ohio State owed its success to World War II—but for different reasons. Many of those veterans returning home after World War II found their dream in a new house, a new car and a new wife. The result was also new kids. Most people had put off family building during the Depression for economic reasons. During the war, most men were elsewhere. Now in the years between 1946 and 1964, America saw an extraordinary surge in the birth rate. It came to be called the Post-War Baby Boom and it would affect the culture and society of America for many years. By the early 1960s many of these young people of the postwar generation began to attend college. Because it was inexpensive and because it was THE state university, many young people came to Columbus. By 1965 the campus at Ohio State was the home to more than 50,000 students. And it was an interesting time—to say the least. Many of the young people coming of age after World War II had grown up as the children of affluence with advantages their Depression born parents had never had. Many of these new children from the era of the 1960s embraced the open culture of that time. Of course, many more did not. But the acceptors of the status quo are often forgotten because they make so little noise. In an oral history interview in 1985, former OSU President Novice G. Fawcett remembered the students of the 1960s. “The greatest satisfaction I had during my years at the University was working with students. I was always available to students…I had great faith in the students. In every student body there is always a small minority of people who think otherwise…Most of the students wanted to continue with their academic studies, but a lot of them got caught up in one of these movements or the other.” There were a number of movements to choose from. The Civil Rights Movement in the South was complemented by the Free Speech Movement in the North. And with protest about the Vietnam War thrown in after 1965, it would be only a matter of time before the gigantic campus would explode. On April 28, 1970, twenty thousand students and their friends appeared on the Oval in the center of the Ohio State campus and began a protest that would eventually become the greatest civil disorder in the city since the 1910 streetcar strike. By the time it ended, the campus had been closed, the National Guard was called in, and hundreds of people had been arrested. It was a difficult time but the university worked its way through its difficulties. As it did, it became increasingly clear that places like Ohio State made Columbus a rather distinctive sort of city. Now Columbus was about to succeed while much of the rest of the state fell behind. More than once in its history, Columbus had proven itself to be a special place. It was about to do so once again. ✧ In the early twenty-first century, the campus of Ohio State continued to grow. In 2002, there were more than 48,000 students attending the main campus. By the time Ohio played Penn State in fall of 2010, the enrollment had climbed to 56,000. Even a greatly enlarged stadium had no trouble staying filled. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER X 95 CHAPTER XI TEST CITY TO BEST CITY 1970-1990 THE TEST CITY ✧ The F & R Lazarus Company has been an innovator as well. Founded by Simon Lazarus in 1851 as a men’s store, the founder’s sons, Fred and Ralph, made “Lazarus” into the biggest department store in the city. Succeeding generations founded Federated Department Stores and a national business. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. In the years after World War II, the United States became the strongest economic power on Earth. Most of the success of American business can be directly traced to a striking evolution of American trade and commerce. The movement to a consumer based economy had started in the 1920s and continued through the Great Depression and World War II. In the 1950s and 1960s, dozens of companies began to make their money selling lots of products to lots of people. In a real sense this was the golden age of the department store and the supermarket and Columbus, Ohio, had a large number of both. Founded in an abandoned roller rink near OSU, Big Bear stores became one of the biggest supermarket chains in the Midwest. And the venerable F & R Lazarus Company began a whole chapter of department store success by complementing its huge downtown store with shopping center locations. To compete in an increasingly crowded marketplace, the purveyors of everything from laundry soap to candy bars were forced to advertise in all sorts of places from billboards to newspapers and from radio and TV shows to free samples hung in a bag on a door knob. All of this promotion cost a lot of money. Many manufacturers wanted to know whether a product would sell before releasing it a waiting world. What was needed was a “test market.” By the end of the 1960s, one of the most commonly used test markets in America was Columbus, Ohio—so much so in fact that it came to be called “Test City USA” by Reader’s Digest magazine. Columbus was used so often because its population was a veritable cross-section of America. It had a population of working people and a large number of government, service and commercial employees. The city’s still active downtown was ringed by both older established neighborhoods and brand new subdivisions. Furthermore, the city was also politically diverse. Columbus was not unique in being so diverse, but it was one of the largest cities close to the commercial and industrial Northeast and Midwest with these traits. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 96 In an interview in 2009, OSU professor Neeli Bandapudi explained the appeal of the capital city to America’s marketers. “So Columbus, Middle America, it was the idea that it truly was representative of the broader trends of the nation.” But by the 1970s, much to the chagrin of marketers and advertisers working in Columbus, the city was no longer the test city it once was. In fact, the city was no longer a mirror of most of America. The people of Columbus were younger, better educated and generally made more money than most of the people in cities of comparable size across the country. In short, Columbus was no longer a versatile test city because of its continuing economic prosperity. This extraordinary success was all the more remarkable when one considers the condition of the rest of the country and the Midwest specifically in the 1970s and 1980s. It was not a very pleasant time for a lot of people. The great industrial cities of the East and Midwest were in decline. Many companies were moving their factories to the South and West where regulations were few and labor was considerably cheaper. In time, many of those same factories that brought benefit to a “New South” and a “New West” moved even farther away to Latin America, to Canada and even to Asia. And competitors from the rest of the world were providing a new challenge to American products and services. All of these difficulties were compounded by high priced oil controlled by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). Very few cities were able to meet these formidable challenges and emerge successfully. Columbus, Ohio, was one of them. There were a number of reasons why. First and foremost Columbus had always had something of a diversified economy. Manufacturing had never composed the majority of business in the town. The commercial, transportation and government sectors had always been strong. While Columbus never grew quite as fast as other industrial cities, it never suffered quite as much in hard times. But the secret to success in Columbus was more than simple diversity. The city was innovative too. Since 1929, Columbus had been the home of the Battelle Memorial Institute. Originally a metallurgical research organization, Battelle had become the largest ✧ Top: In the early 1970s, the City of Columbus was still reasonably well populated during a working day like this one at Broad and High Streets in 1974. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ESTHER A. MILLER. Above: Columbus had always had its share of innovators. Big Bear opened its first store in 1934 near OSU and was the first selfservice supermarket in the Midwest. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER XI 97 ✧ Above: Columbus has been a favorable market for new restaurant ideas for almost a century. The White Castle Company was founded in 1921 and came to Columbus in 1934. A former executive with Kentucky Fried chicken, Dave Thomas decided he wanted to open his own chain. Taking his daughter’s name, he opened the first Wendy’s across from Memorial Hall in Columbus in 1969. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/NICK TAGGART COLLECTION. Below: Children’s Hospital was founded in 1894 with nine patient beds. In 2007, a gift of $50 million from the Nationwide Foundation led to its renaming as Nationwide Children’s Hospital. It is consistently ranked as one of the best hospitals in America. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. private research organization in the world. With its neighbor, The Ohio State University, Battelle pointed the way to new types of business in Columbus. While other Ohio cities were desperately seeking manufacturers to replace lost jobs, Columbus became the home to Chemical Abstracts Service, the OCLC library cataloging center, and Time-Warner communications with its innovative QUBE cable television service. And even more traditional businesses like the Limited Stores, Nationwide Insurance, Cardinal Health and Worthington Steel were successful because they did a number of new things with flair and style. In addition, education has always been important in Columbus. Like most of the HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 98 rest of the state, central Ohio is home to a number of colleges and universities. They include some like Capital, Franklin, Otterbein and Ohio Dominican that have been here for more than a century and others like Columbus State and DeVry that are more recent in origin. Columbus also has a long history of innovation in health care. The establishment of Starling Medical College in 1848 when Columbus was a city of a few thousand people began a tradition of excellence that would include what would eventually become Nationwide Children’s Hospital as well as a host of other excellent health care providers. And then there is food and its preparation. As people who operate certain eating places will tell you, many successful chains like McDonald’s and Burger King are NOT “fast food” restaurants. They are “fast service” restaurants. Having settled that issue, it should be pointed out that Columbus is corporate home to several of the best ones. As early as 1929 the White Castle Company moved its business to Columbus from its birthplace in Kansas City. In 1969 former Kentucky Fried Chicken executive Dave Thomas started his own restaurant and named it after his daughter—“Wendy’s Old Fashioned Hamburgers.” Remarking on his success, Thomas later explained, It all comes back to the basics. Serve customers the best-tasting food at a good value in a clean, comfortable restaurant, and they’ll keep coming back. Columbus became the largest city in Ohio in land area with its aggressive annexation policies. It became the largest city in population by being a good place to work in a lot of different kinds of places. DOWNTOWN CHALLENGED Despite this success and economic stability, the 1970s and 1980s still proved to be years of challenge to the City of Columbus. While the city continued to grow in size and population, much of that growth was taking place away from the downtown. A whole new generation of shopping centers—Northland, Eastland and Westland—was built even further from downtown. Unlike the older shopping centers, the new ones eventually would all be covered to provide comfortable year round shopping. And they began to draw more and more customers away from downtown. The availability of inexpensive land meant that whole new factories were built not near the old working class neighborhoods but along the distant Interstate 270 Outerbelt corridor. While some historic districts near downtown prospered in the 1970s and 1980s, many of the neighborhoods adjacent to downtown were not German, Victorian or Italian Village. And to be fair, many of them did not want to be. As business shifted from downtown to the suburbs, more and more property owners began to tear down old buildings that lacked tenants and replace them with parking lots that were easier to maintain. There were some success stories. In 1974, the 1895 Wyandotte Building, Columbus’ first skyscraper, was renovated. And even though the landmark Neil House hotel on Statehouse Square was removed, the Huntington Center that replaced it became a landmark in its own right. The old headquarters of the Columbus Area Chamber of Commerce was removed and the Rhodes Office Tower that replaced it became the tallest building in the city. Even venerable Central High School was saved from the wrecking ball after it closed. But over the 1970s and 1980s, more and more empty blocks began to appear in the downtown cityscape. Perhaps the best known symbolic loss to downtown came in 1976. ✧ Top, left: The third Neil House Hotel had stood across High Street from the Statehouse since 1924. In the early 1980s it was replaced with the thirty-seven story Huntington Center which opened in 1984. The Center is the fourth tallest building in the city. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Top, right: In 1969 the 1885 Columbus Board of Trade building was removed and replaced with the James A. Rhodes State Office Tower. A statue of Governor Rhodes, the longest serving governor in state history, stands in front of the building. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: Central High School.. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/DAVID LUCAS COLLECTION. CHAPTER XI 99 ✧ Above: Plans to build a new convention center in the 1970s originally included the retention of part of the Union Station Arcade. Plans changed and an unannounced demolition proceeded quickly in October, 1976. When the destruction was halted only one great arch remained. It now stands in McFerson Park in the Arena District. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY/PRESTON REICHARD COLLECTION. Below: Court ordered desegregation of the Columbus Public Schools began in 1979. It proceeded in a peaceful and orderly way. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. The Beaux Arts Union Station Arcade had been planned to have been incorporated into a new civic center being developed on the site of the old train station. Immediately to the south along High Street, Nationwide Insurance had made a major commitment to stay in the downtown and it was hoped that the new convention center would incorporate the best of the old and the new. It was not to be. In October 1976, the Arcade was removed. By the time demolition could be stopped, only one great arch of HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 100 the old arcade remained. The arch would be saved and rebuilt elsewhere. The movement to preserve it led directly to the establishment of the Columbus Landmarks Foundation in 1977 and the birth of a modern movement in Columbus pledged to historic preservation and sound new design. The social fabric of the city was tested in these years. While Columbus had its share of low-to-moderate-income neighborhoods, the city had not seen the intense inner city violence that had characterized much of the rest of urban America in the 1960s. While there had been instances of civil disorder in those years, they were few and far between. Even so, the imposition of court ordered busing for the purpose of school desegregation in 1979 became a cause for concern among many residents of the city. America’s experience with forced busing had not been pleasant. In many cities—north and south—the reaction had been violent. School officials, civic leaders, and most importantly the people of Columbus, were determined to see busing proceed peacefully. And it did. In releasing the Columbus Public Schools from court ordered busing in 1985, Federal Judge Robert Duncan observed that the “defendants have had significant success in doing what many view as impossible.” The peaceful implementation of busing in Columbus was not all that surprising to many people living in the city. It was yet one more example of how the city’s groups—public and private—were generally committed not to partisan advantage but to the betterment of the city even as the city’s leadership changed. Democratic control of city hall changed with the election of Republican Tom Moody as mayor of Columbus. He would be followed by two other Republicans—Greg Lashutka and Dana Rinehart and the composition of City Council would change as well. But the generally cooperative relationship between private and public Columbus would make possible some innovative responses to the problems facing the city. In addition to keeping old businesses and finding new ones, the major challenge facing Columbus in these years was to reverse the decline of downtown. In the early 1970s agreement had been reached that only way to effectively revive a declining downtown was to make it competitive with the suburbs. DOWNTOWN REBORN It was not that there were no people downtown. Thousands of people came downtown every day to work, and dine and even occasionally shop. The major great old theatres—the Ohio and the Palace—had been restored and still drew large audiences from time to time. And special events like the Greater Columbus Arts Festival and the Red, White and Boom celebration on the Fourth of July drew hundreds of thousands of people to the riverfront. The problem was not special events. Columbus was very adept at staging special events. The problem—as one wag put it— was Tuesday night. On an average Tuesday night, one could “shoot a cannon up High Street and not hit anything.” To resolve the problem the City of Columbus acquired four city blocks east of High Street and immediately south of the Statehouse. The city cleared the area and transferred it to the newly created Capitol South Urban Redevelopment Corporation. “Capitol South” as it came to be called would rebuild the area, first with a rather unsuccessful roller skating and ice rink called the Centrum and then with a very successful multilevel enclosed shopping mall called City Center. From the time it opened in 1989, City Center was quite obviously the best place to shop in central Ohio and thousands of people came to Columbus from across the state to visit it. ✧ Top, left: On June 15, 2000, five Columbus mayors met socially one with another at the Ohio Statehouse. Left to right: Tom Moody, Greg Lashutka, James Rhodes, Dana Rinehart, Michael Coleman. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Top, right: While people still came to Columbus for special events, getting them downtown on weekday nights was a problem. Acquiring three blocks south of the Statehouse, the Capitol South Community Urban Redevelopment Corporation opened a combination skating rink and roller rink on the site in 1979 while other uses were being planned. Called The Centrum, the rink was heavily used at first—as can be seen in this 1980 holiday picture. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER XI 101 By 1990, the City of Columbus had demonstrated time and again over the previous twenty years that the people of the town had the ability to respond effectively and well to difficult problems as diverse as central city decline ✧ The Nationwide One Building. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 102 and school desegregation. Columbus also had amply demonstrated that it knew how to manage large public events. Many of these—like the Arts Festival—were located downtown. But others were located elsewhere around the city. In 1973, one of the best known sports figures in the history of the city—golf legend Jack Nicklaus—decided to bring a major professional golf tournament to the city. The development of the Memorial Tournament led to the building of the Muirfield golf course. The golf course led to the construction of the Muirfield residential community and the transformation of suburban Dublin, Ohio, from a sleepy village with quaint stone houses to one of the fastest growing areas in the state and home to numerous companies. They included Dave Thomas’ Wendy’s International. And anyone seeking instruction in how to handle large crowds of enthusiastic people on a sustained and regular basis need only visit the Ohio State Fair in Columbus every summer or any OSU home football game in the fall. ✧ Probably the largest single one night gathering in Columbus in recent years is the annual “Red, White and Boom” Independence Day celebration. The one in 2006 is seen here. One will usually find about 500,000 people at the annual event. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER XI 103 ✧ Top, left: The decision by golfing legend Jack Nicklaus to sponsor the Memorial Tournament at the Muirfield Village Golf Club near Dublin in 1976 led to commercial, residential and recreational development in much of northwest Franklin County. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Top, right: To celebrate the 500th anniversary of the voyage of discovery of Christopher Columbus, the largest city named for the explorer held a major horticultural exhibition called Ameriflora ’92 in Franklin Park. The exhibition ran from April 20, 1922, to October 12, 1992, and attracted 5.5 million visitors. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Right: Battelle Memorial Institute.. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: As part of the Quincentennial of the arrival of Christopher Columbus in The 500th Anniversary of the arrival of Christopher Columbus and his band of adventurous explorers was observed in 1992. In several parts of America, various events— social, cultural and literary—centered on the event. Variously called the Quincentennial or the Quincentenary—depending on who was talking—the celebration of the coming of Columbus was eagerly anticipated by some, especially people of Italian descent, and bitterly detested by others, especially Native Americans. Columbus, Ohio, had its share of both. But as the largest city anywhere named for the explorer, a lot of people felt that the 500th anniversary was a good time to hold an event in honor of the “Admiral of the Ocean Sea.” It was quickly decided not to erect another stature of Christopher Columbus—the city already had three. America, the city acquired an exact replica of his flagship, the Santa Maria, in 1992. It is moored just north of Broad Street Bridge at Battelle Riverfront Park. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 104 A major event of the celebration was an internationally sanctioned floral exhibition. “Ameriflora” was held at Franklin Park and the event spurred a massive expansion in size and scale of the venerable 1895 Franklin Park Conservatory. Ameriflora was quite successful and attracted several million visitors to the city. The other notable arrival in the city during the 500th anniversary was a replica of Columbus’ flagship—the Santa Maria. Moored just north of the Broad Street Bridge near Battelle Riverfront Park, the ship became and remained a popular tourist attraction. As Columbus entered the 1990s, the city seemed poised to continue to enjoy continued remarkable growth and economic success. And it would—but not without a few slight turns and a few bumps in the road. CHAPTER XII THE CITY RISING 1990-2012 A PROSPEROUS DECADE The 1990s were years of change in much of America as well as in Columbus, Ohio. The 1980s had posed economic and social challenges to much of the country. Occasional military confrontations notwithstanding, the decade of the 1990s was one of general economic prosperity. Not since the 1960s had the country seen such continued economic growth. Many people looking for work were able to find it—especially in the high technology “dot.com” companies that came to capture the imagination of investors and customers alike. While the West and the South benefited most in growing these new businesses which specialized in a savvy understanding of both media and technology, cities like Columbus did not do all that badly. The high concentration of educational and research institutions which had been a hallmark of the city since the end of World War II was helpful to the new companies of Columbus. And older more established companies in retail and service industries also prospered. What was hidden in the success of the new economy was the continued decline of the old manufacturing businesses that once had been the core of the industrial Midwest. In 1988 the large White Westinghouse plant on the far west side that had been operating in the city since 1954 closed for the last time and its large factory building became a warehouse. The century old Jeffrey Manufacturing Company had been acquired by Dresser Industries in 1974. In 1995, the thirty-two buildings constituting most of the closed factory were demolished. The site would remain vacant for a number of years. A better ending followed the closing of the local Lennox Industries factory near The Ohio State University in 1994. Within two years, the site had become the home of the Lennox Town Center shopping mall. ✧ An awesome rainbow broadcasts a Clippers game at Huntington Park on April 20, 2009. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER XII 105 ✧ Above: The 1990s continued to see a loss of industry in the city. The Jeffrey Manufacturing Company had been part of the near north side of Columbus for more than a century when it was acquired by Dresser Industries in 1974. In 1995, the entire site was leveled. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: Columbus had opened a new convention center in the Ohio Center adjacent to the Hyatt Regency Hotel in 1980. But more space was needed. A strikingly modern new center was opened in 1993 and expanded in 1999. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. In fact one could trace the growth of the city by following the trail of its major retail centers. The great enclosed shopping malls of the 1960s and 1970s that had once replaced an earlier generation of unenclosed strip malls now saw themselves superseded. A whole new series of shopping centers began to be built around and beyond the northern tier of Interstate 270. In 1997, The Mall at Tuttle Crossing opened on the northwest side of the city. Similar in look and concept to City Center in downtown Columbus, Tuttle Crossing was followed in 1999 by a development that was more of a new community than a shopping center. Beginning in the 1980s, retailer Leslie Wexner had partnered with developer Jack HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 106 Kessler in the acquisition of a large amount of land near rural New Albany in northeast Franklin County. Beginning in 1991, the New Albany Company transformed the small village into a fashionable residential community with large tracts of commercial office space and the Easton Town Center. Easton was and is not so much a shopping center as a shopping experience. It describes itself as a “1.7 million square foot urban town center featuring pedestrian friendly streetscapes, open air gathering places, fountains, children’s parks and more than 170 best-in-class retail, dining tenants.” Easton was soon followed by Polaris Fashion Place on the north side in 2001. While a more traditional multi-story mall in general appearance, Polaris offered more amenities and a wider variety of shopping than had previously been the case in many Columbus retail locations. The combination of these new shopping areas proved to be too much for Northland Mall. The shopping center closed in 2002 and by 2004 most of its buildings would be demolished. The success of the new shopping malls soon attracted a wide variety of other businesses large and small to nearby locations. But the new shopping centers, like the ones that preceded them, were not so much a cause as an effect. The suburban population of Columbus was moving inexorably to new suburbs near and then beyond the Interstate 270 Outer Belt. That is where new businesses were locating and the stores were moving to where many of their customers lived and worked. DOWNTOWN REINVENTED The success of the fringes posed a conundrum to the civic leaders working to maintain and enhance the urban core of Columbus. By the early 1990s, it was clear that, while City Center was still thriving and many people were still coming daily to downtown and would continue to do so, that a formidable economic challenge to the urban center was emerging in the suburbs. In the belief that the core of Columbus could and would be as successful as the suburbs, a number of important and valuable projects went forward in the 1990s. One of the great strengths and successes of Columbus in the years after World War II had been its historic districts. The initial districts—German, Victorian and Italian Village—had been adjacent to downtown. Split from the city by the freeways encircling the downtown core, these neighborhoods had nevertheless increased the population of the areas around the core. The success of these neighborhoods led to the creation of many more in many other parts of the city. In the case of the Brewery District—created in 1993—the historic area was primarily commercial rather than residential and provided an example of a whole new sort of historic property preservation. Historic districts have at times in American history been somewhat controversial as low to moderate income people living in older neighborhoods saw their communities being “gentrified” by middle class newcomers. Sometimes this did happen. But in many cases it did not and neighbors old and new learned to live one with another. The neighborhoods were saved and strengthened the nearby central city. So too did the convention center—in a rather lengthy and somewhat convoluted way. Columbus has been a convention city for quite a long time. All of those railroads passing through Columbus and later freeways and air traffic made Columbus a good place to hold a meeting. In the mid 1800s, meetings were held in any place with a lot of room—a church, a school or even a theatre. By the late 1800s, large public meetings were often held in public auditoriums. The Board of Trade had one attached to their building on Broad Street. When not in use for conventions, its alternate use can be deduced from the still surviving Ringside Café on Pearl Alley. A real addition was made to convention trade with Memorial Hall at the turn of the century and with Veterans Memorial Auditorium after World War II. But by the late 1960s, it was clear a new convention center was needed. Battelle Memorial Institute provided much of the capital needed to build one adjacent to a new Hyatt Hotel on the site of the old train station. Unfortunately, the rapid growth of the city and its conventions soon showed that center to be too small as well. In the early 1990s, architect Peter Eisenmann designed a new convention for the city in the deconstructionist style for which he had become wellknown. Controversial in appearance, the new ✧ In 1989, a major shopping mall called City Center was opened in downtown Columbus. For the next several years it was the place to shop in central Ohio. Then in 1997, a new mall called Tuttle Crossing opened on the northwest side in 1997. It was followed by another innovative mall called Easton Town Center—seen here in 1999. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER XII 107 ✧ Top: The Scioto River at dusk in 2008. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Above: Franklinton had not seen the kind of renovation dollars that poured into other neighborhoods near the downtown after the success of German Village because it was still prone to possible flooding. Things began to change in the 1990s with the beginning of construction of a major flood protection program. “The Floodwall” was completed in 2004. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: The Ohio Statehouse in 2008. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. center was nevertheless provided much needed convention space and was extended with an addition in 1999. The success of the convention center sparked a revival in the last public market in the city which was across the street. The North Market had been located on the site of the old North Graveyard since the cemetery was abandoned in 1876. The Market burned after World War II and was replaced by a rather large Quonset Hut. Now the market would be revitalized. In 1995, the North Market reopened in a former warehouse building adjacent to its longtime former site. The Quonset Hut was removed to make way for a parking lot. And this was not the only success to come to the north side of downtown. In 1832 the State of Ohio had left the original Ohio Penitentiary site and built a new prison far from the city at what is now the corner of Spring Street and Neil Avenue. The prison stayed there for more than 150 years. By then it had become an altogether unsavory and unhealthy place indeed. Replaced by a new prison at Lucasville, the “Pen” stood empty until 1995 when it left state hands. In 1997 the prison was leveled and became part of a new development—the Arena District. Efforts to bring professional hockey to Columbus were successfully led by local industrialist HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 108 John McConnell. The result was the arrival of Columbus Blue Jackets hockey team and the construction of Nationwide Arena as a place for them to play in 2000. When the Arena opened, John McConnell said, “Columbus has been good to me. I think this is good for Columbus.” Surrounding the new facility, a new area of shops, offices, apartments and condominiums called the Arena District came into being and was a successful part of a revitalizing downtown. But it was only one part. Some of the most important changes to downtown were being undertaken by government. The Ohio Statehouse is and always has been the preeminent symbol of state power and authority in Columbus. Begun in 1839 the building had taken twenty-two years to complete and had been in continuous use ever since. By the late 1980s state leaders were convinced the great building needed a makeover. Over most of the next decade it got one. By the time the work was done in 1996, the Statehouse had been returned to the way it looked in the late 1860s. It had cost more than $100 million to do it, but most people who have seen it come away convinced it was worth the money. Other parts of the downtown were seeing some change. The combined impact of several cultural organizations on the east side of downtown was significant. But that impact was muted because of the lack of an organized way to promote all of the schools, colleges, museums and library facilities in the area. The Discovery District became the marketing vehicle to let most of the rest of Columbus know what this remarkably creative area was all about. The District and its constituent organizations became much more strongly supported as a result. The Center of Science and Industry, on the other hand, literally went in another direction. Housed in the former Memorial Hall, the Franklin County Historical Society had transformed itself in 1963 into the Center of Science and Industry or COSI. By the 1990s, the leaders of COSI felt a new home was needed. That home would take part of the front of the 1924 Central High School and wrap an entirely new building around it along the Scioto Riverfront. Opened in 1999, the new COSI was a wonder to behold. In the years that followed, WOSU Public Media partnered with COSI and constructed a broadcast studio within the museum building. All of this helped spark a rediscovery of the Franklinton neighborhood in the late 1990s. In 1997, Franklinton celebrated the two hundredth anniversary of its establishment by Lucas Sullivant in 1797. A statue of the explorer was unveiled along the riverfront. Until then, there had been three statues of Columbus in the city but none of the man who had built the first town. It was not hard to see why. A lot of people had simply forgotten about Franklinton. Neighborhoods in every other direction had been restored, rehabilitated and renovated over the years—but most of Franklinton had not. There was an important reason why—water. Franklinton had flooded many times and might flood many more. While that was possible, people wishing to renovate found it almost impossible to do so. All of that began to change in the 1990s with the slow laborious construction of a multimillion dollar Flood Wall to protect the Franklinton Community. Completed in 2004, the Flood Wall has permitted rehabilitation and new construction to go forward. BEYOND THE MILLENNIAL MOMENT By the turn of the Millennium, Columbus and central Ohio were moving forward in a variety of positive ways. Much of the rest of the state continued to suffer from the loss of business and the migration of people to places with better prospects. And one of those places was Columbus. The events of September 11, 2001, awakened a new spirit in Columbus as it did in most other American communities and one of the object lessons of those days was that it was important for America to be strong and fair at home it if it wished to be strong and fair around the world. This point was especially well-taken in Columbus which began to see significant immigration for the first time in many years. Because of its educational and research facilities, Columbus had had a more diverse population than most Ohio cities. But the numbers of recent immigrants were relatively small. That changed in the years after 1990. Asian immigration increased as a number of Asian companies began to build factories and produce products in the state. Latin immigration also increased. While still small, the Latin population doubled over the last decade. And in the same years, Columbus, Ohio, became the home of the second largest Somali population in America. In 2000, Columbus inaugurated a new Mayor. Michael Coleman had worked his way up through Columbus City Council and developed an ability to work with the widest variety ✧ Above: In 2000, Michael Coleman became the fifty-second mayor of Columbus, and is currently serving in the post. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Bottom, left: The Latino community of central Ohio is growing rapidly. Each year the Latino Festival draws thousands of people to the Riverfront. Seen here in 2010, the festival has become an anticipated downtown event. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Bottom, right: One of the fastest growing new populations in Columbus consists of relatively recent arrivals from Somalia. Today Columbus, Ohio, has the second largest Somali community in America. Somalian Flag Day was celebrated on the Statehouse grounds on July 1, 2009. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER XII 109 In his 2011 State of the City address, Mayor Coleman reiterated his continuing commitment Rebuilding neighborhoods is among the most important work we do, and the most difficult work we do. True neighborhood revitalization does not take place overnight. It requires dedication, patience and a strong spirit. But when it is done successfully, we strengthen our city, bringing new hope to our residents. ✧ Above: The King Arts Complex opened in March, 1987, after a $2.7 million renovation of the 1925 Pythian Theater on the Near East Side of the city. With an additional $1.8 million renovation, Phase II opened in October, 1989 creating a 60,000 square foot facility. The King Arts Complex of people—a skill that would come in handy as he was re-elected twice over the next decade. One of the things Coleman and a number of civic leaders wanted to accomplish was the continued revitalization of inner city neighborhoods. On the Near East Side of Columbus, a number of initiatives would be undertaken with the best known project being the renovation of the historic Lincoln Theatre—a project finally completed in 2009. Similar intensive work to bring communities together and move forward was undertaken in places as diverse as Weinland Park in the North, the Hilltop to the West and in the Far South Side of Columbus. is a major center for cultural and educational activities in the City of Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Right: The historic Lincoln Theatre in 2005. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: Weinland Park is a neighborhood in transition. Long a working class area adjacent to factories along the railroad, the area saw significant change as the factories closed. Now a multifaceted partnership of The Ohio State University and other local institutions is involved in a long term effort to help the people of Weinland Park reach community goals. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 110 As Ohio celebrated its Bicentennial in 2003 and Franklin County celebrated its two hundredth birthday in the same year, it was becoming increasingly clear to governmental and private leaders in Columbus that the key to the downtown was housing—and a certain sort of housing at that. Columbus had lost much of its downtown population in the years after World War II. But it had not lost all of it. Downtown had always been a continued to be a home to people of both high and low incomes. The loss of so many residents in downtown had made much of the surviving housing rather inexpensive. In addition, the wealthy had always been able to find a place to live downtown. In former years the better hotels had served that purpose and more than one governor spent his entire term at the Neil House Hotel. The hotels were always complemented by a bit of luxury housing. In recent times, the Waterford had opened in 1979 next to the Cultural Arts Center. In 2001, it would be followed by Miranova a little farther down the river. But what was missing was housing to induce the middle class to return to the city they had left for the suburbs. A series of inducements—to both developers and their customers— were created with a goal to provide housing for 10,000 middle class residents by 2010. It was sometimes stated that with that many people, it might be possible for a genuine nightlife to reemerge in downtown Columbus. ✧ Top: In 1997, Nationwide Insurance announced it would a build a major new Arena in downtown Columbus as part of an effort to redevelop the former site of the Ohio Penitentiary. The Columbus Blue Jackets played their first game (seen here) on October 7, 2000, in Nationwide Arena. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Middle: The Columbus Crew Professional Soccer Club was granted a franchise in 1994 and played its first game in 1996. Since 1999 the team has played in Columbus Crew Stadium near the Ohio State Fairgrounds. To date, the team has won five major trophies including the Major League Soccer Cup in 2008. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Bottom: Fans of The Ohio State University Buckeyes. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER XII 111 ✧ Clockwise, starting from top left: As Columbus moved into the twenty-first century, it was recognized that attracting new residents to downtown was critical to its revival. To complement existing upscale projects like the Waterford (1979) and Miranova ( 2001) hundreds of new rental and sale units would be needed as well. Until the Recession of 2008 set in, substantial progress had been made to reach that goal. Initial efforts to repopulate the downtown were quite successful and hundreds of new residents moved to new homes in the downtown over the middle part of the decade after 2000. But the magic goal of 10,000 was not to be easily reached. By late in the decade, a saturated real-estate market slowed as the Great Recession of 2008 held America in its grip. But even in those difficult times, the number of people living downtown and returning downtown continued to increase. The last few years in Columbus have in some ways been years of transition. City Center, increasingly unable to compete against the newer centers to the north, closed and was razed in 2009. But in its place a new PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. The Scioto Mile is a major redevelopment of the riverfront from the Arena District to the Cultural Arts Center. Opened in the summer of 2011, the Scioto Mile includes water features, plazas, paths and bikeways. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF CAPITOL SOUTH. Columbus City Center closed in March, 2009. Demolition of the mall while retaining its parking garage was completed in March 2010. Replacing the mall was nine acres of green space called Columbus Commons when it opened in May, 2011. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF CAPITOL SOUTH. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 112 meeting place in downtown called Columbus Commons with a band shell and a carousel was coming into being. Complementing a new Main Street Bridge is a new series of parks, plazas and bikeways along the Riverfront from the Arena District to the cultural Arts Center. It is called the Scioto Mile. While one area in the heart of downtown was being transformed, another area near it was being reborn. Nationwide Realty Investors, the developers of the Arena District, opened the first phase of Grandview Yard in 2010. The Ohio State University completed the enclosure of the open end of its horseshoe ✧ Greater Columbus Arts Festival, 2004. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. CHAPTER XII 113 ✧ Above: The Topiary Park, located in downtown Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Below: Opened in 2009, the Grange Insurance Audubon Center transformed part of the industrialized Whittier Peninsula into a conservation and nature based learning center through the cooperative efforts of the City of Columbus Recreation and Parks Department, Metro Parks and Audubon Ohio. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. football stadium in 2001 and immediately filled it with even more enthusiastic fans. This is a town that sometimes wistfully wishes to be known for something other than college sports. Nevertheless, if it is sports by which the place is known, it would be well if their teams won. And in the case of The Ohio State University, generally they do just that. As is sometimes the case, the other teams in town even get a new place to play. Minor league baseball did in 2009 with the opening of the Huntington Center in the Arena District for the Columbus Clippers. The Columbus Crew professional soccer team also got a new home just north of the fairgrounds in 1999. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 114 And has been the case since Columbus was founded the city always is looking to the future. Columbus was founded in 1812 as a planned city with a dream of future greatness. And for most of its history, it has been a place where great plans have been made. In the 1820s, Ohio wished to link its few thousand residents to the fortunes of the east with a grand canal system. Columbus with a population of less than 2,000 wanted to make sure it was not left out. And it wasn’t. In the 1830s Ohio had the audacity to propose building a Statehouse second only to the U.S. Capitol in a town of mud streets full of pigs and people. In the 1850s we were planning parks and numbers of public institutions in a country where most cities had few if any of either. In the years after the Civil War, railroads changed America and streetcars transformed Columbus, and the city reinvented itself once again—with occasional rhyme if not always with reason. The result was a city that really needed a plan and in 1908 it got one. Ignoring some of the 1908 plan, much of it later came into being in the streets structures and parks of 20th Century Columbus. And then there was the Metropolitan Committee that not only made plans but also made sure they were followed. Should it really be all that surprising that in a time when times are hard and people are in need of hope as well as help, we will once again do a bit of planning and—unlike many places—actually do what we plan to do. One group of public and private leaders calls itself Columbus 2020 and hopes to create 180,000 new jobs in central Ohio by that date. Another group calling itself Columbus 2050 is looking at how the city might look in that year and steps to take to make it so. And then there is 200 Columbus. On February 14, 2012, Columbus will celebrate its two hundredth birthday. It will be an occasion to look back at who we have been, look around at who we are, and look forward to who we might be. It will be a very good time—as most times have been in this good place and “most delightful country” ✧ Top: What Columbus may look like in the future as foreseen in the 2010 Downtown Strategic Plan for the city. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION. Middle: Scioto Mile Promenade at night. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Bottom, left: Columbus Commons. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. Bottom, right: Columbus, the celebration of 200 years of Ohio’s capital city will look back in pride as we remember who we have been while we look forward with anticipation to the world we will soon call our own. It has been a long road to this good place, but our journey has really only just begun. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF 200 COLUMBUS. CHAPTER XII 115 ✧ The columns and arch are all that remain of Union Station which stands in contrast to nearby Nationwide Arena, 2006. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 116 SHARING THE HERITAGE Historic profiles of businesses,organizations, and families that have contributed to the development and economic base of Columbus Quality of Life ..........................................................................118 The Marketplace ........................................................................144 B u i l d i n g a S t ro n g C o l u m b u s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 7 6 SHARING THE HERITAGE 117 ✧ Skating in downtown Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 118 QUALITY OF LIFE Healthcare providers, school districts, universities, and other institutions that contribute to the quality of life in Columbus N a t i o n w i d e C h i l d re n ’s H o s p i t a l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 0 M e t ro P a r k s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 4 Columbus Blue Jackets ................................................................126 Ohio Education Association .........................................................128 City of Dublin ...........................................................................130 OhioHealth ...............................................................................132 Columbus Police Reserve .............................................................134 C a rd i n a l H e a l t h , I n c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 3 6 Columbus Academy ....................................................................138 I s a b e l l e R i d g w a y C a re C e n t e r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 4 0 G i r l S c o u t s o f O h i o ’s H e a r t l a n d C o u n c i l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 4 1 Columbus Clippers .....................................................................142 Columbus Zoo and Aquarium .......................................................142 C o l u m b u s M e t ro p o l i t a n L i b r a r y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 4 3 Center of Science and Industry ....................................................143 QUALITY OF LIFE 119 NATIONWIDE CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL For more than a century, Columbus, Ohio has been home to a pediatric hospital where everything matters in improving child health. Although it is now the nation’s second largest children’s hospital, Nationwide Children’s resides in the same downtown setting in which it was founded in 1892. When a group of central Ohio women established Children’s Hospital 120 years ago, it was done with the belief that everything matters in the care of a child. To this day, Nationwide Children’s embodies this promise every day, ensuring everything will be taken into consideration to make children well. This promise stems from its century-old mission to provide the best care for all children regardless of their family's ability to pay, a commitment that has never changed. Having remained accessible to patients across central Ohio for generations, Nationwide Children’s has proven its commitment to provide local families with exceptional care without needing them to travel exceptional distances. Yet the hospital has become more than a community treasure. Nationwide Children’s has become a homegrown resource with riches to share. It has drawn patients from every state and around the world. It is ranked as one of America’s best children’s hospitals by U.S.News & World Report and Parents Magazine, as well as a top 10 recipient of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) funds to free-standing pediatric research centers. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 120 Nationwide Children’s Hospital’s new 12-story main hospital draws attention to the amazing growth of a pediatric facility that started with just nine beds. As the City of Columbus celebrates its bicentennial in 2012, Nationwide Children’s celebrates its 120th year in central Ohio. The Hospital’s reputation as a growing and passionate leader in pediatric care is engrained in its history and came from humble beginnings. When the hospital first opened, all beds were filled two months after opening. Demand was such that even at the first annual meeting, the trustees were already developing expansion plans. At the turn of the twentieth century, the hospital had an operating budget of 56 cents, which was only possible after its president had written a check for $10 to cover a shortfall of $9.44. When the president was asked about the situation, he said, “We may be poor in funds, but we are rich in resources. What we lack in currency, we more than make up for in character.” And so began Children’s Hospital’s world-class attitude. Over the next several decades, Children’s Hospital grew tremendously with local philanthropy. The constant desire to expand and be of greater service to the Columbus community brought significant changes, and with each milestone, Children’s advanced, eventually becoming the first pediatric center in Ohio to be certified as a pediatric Level 1 trauma center in 1991. Advances rapidly continued. In 2004, Children’s Hospital’s outpatient laboratory became the first national pediatric reference lab. In 2005, Children’s became the first freestanding pediatric hospital in Ohio to achieve Magnet status, which measures quality patient care and innovation in nursing practice In 2006, the hospital marked a transformational milestone in central Ohio philanthropy, receiving a $50 million gift from the Nationwide Foundation. To honor the vision of Nationwide Insurance’s leadership, hospital trustees unanimously elected to change the name to Nationwide Children’s Hospital. The hospital’s current five-year strategic plan, to be fully completed in 2014, is Nationwide Children’s most recent commitment to optimal health for children in central Ohio and beyond. The strategic plan is designed to extend expert pediatric care across all horizons of a child's development helping them to reach their full potential and optimal quality of life. The first goal is always to ensure every child the best hospital experience and to extend this outstanding care between and after treatment. Yet what sets Nationwide Children’s strategic plan apart is its ambitious goal to improve child health beyond the traditional reach of the hospital. Nationwide Children’s serves as a catalyst and coordinator for the long-term health of all children in the central Ohio community. Working beyond its walls, the hospital embraces the responsibility of caring for all children, not just those who come through the main campus. An integrated health care delivery system and a network of health care, academic and community partners allow powerful preventative care. Advocating for nutritious school lunches and leading the fight to end child abuse, allows Nationwide Children’s to play a part in making sure children reach their full potential. Nationwide Children’s doctors represent every major pediatric subspecialty. They have achieved at the highest level, with vision and relentless determination. They could pursue their life’s work at literally any hospital they choose. Yet, they’ve all chosen Nationwide Children’s. This talent has built Children’s signature programs, including heart, cancer, gastroenterology, neurosciences and neonatology care, which are internationally recognized for boldly raising the standard of pediatric care. QUALITY OF LIFE 121 Nationwide Children’s also has a passion for answers and, alongside Battelle and Ohio State, is one of central Ohio’s top three research centers. The Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital is also an international leader in pediatric research and is one of the nation’s top ten free-standing pediatric research centers based on National Institutes of Health funding. The Institute works to enhance the health of all children by engaging in high-quality, cutting-edge research. More than 100 faculty scientists focus on discoveries to improve child health and support an environment for training and mentoring the next generation of scientists in pediatric research. Nationwide Children’s doctors are also scientists, with forty percent of research faculty serving as practicing physicians. Nationwide Children’s is more than a hospital at the corner of Livingston and Parsons Avenues. Sixty-eight facilities extend out across Ohio and beyond to provide pediatric expertise whenever and wherever it’s needed. With more than one million patient visits in 2012, the hospital is growing to meet a growing need. At 1.3 million square feet, the main campus expansion is the largest pediatric construction HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 122 endeavor in the nation to date. The expansion has added 2,000 more hospital and research jobs and will generate a projected $1.3 billion in new regional economic activity. The centerpiece of the expansion is the new main hospital. At 750,000 square feet, the 12-story inpatient building is connected to the current facility. Imagine a unique combination of cutting edge medical facilities, a first-class hotel, an inspiring museum and a blossoming garden and you’ll be close to the design of this new structure. Beyond the underground parking garage providing direct access to the main hospital, patients and families are immersed in a healing environment. Educational exhibits and natureinspired niches along with panoramic views of the outdoors give rise to a hospital atmosphere meant to inspire hope and comfort. The firstfloor acoustic ceilings decrease ambient noise so that families and visitors can concentrate on finding their way through the cheerful halls. The entire new main hospital is equipped with wireless internet access. Expansive views of nature-inspired design elements bring a sense of the outdoors in. Whimsical animal features engage the imagination. Parents, children, nurses and doctors provided input on patient room design. The result is a patient room that mimic a child’s bedroom. Large windows allow natural daylight to spill in. Sound-absorbing materials reduce ambient noise. These details do more than inspire a healing atmosphere for patients and families. They ensure a safer environment for the delivery of care. This commitment to detail carries from the latest addition to Nationwide Children’s research campus. From cascades of natural light to laboratories designed for collaboration, every detail has been considered in the construction of research facilities. The hospital’s third research building houses a 75-seat conference facility with videoconferencing capabilities and laboratory space for research faculty. Initiatives housed in Research Building III include preterm birth and prematurity, cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases, child safety and injury prevention and computational biology and mathematical medicine. This $93 million world-class facility supports 680 new jobs in research and brings Nationwide Children’s pediatric research space to more than 500,000 square feet. A place that feels like home couldn’t be complete without a spacious front lawn. The new front lawn to the hospital adds close to six acres of greenspace to the campus. The park is designed to provide activity space for patients and families with benches, serene gardens, walking pathways and a maze. Additionally a new environmentally friendly, LEED-certified Central Energy Plant powers the entire campus. Every detail is taken into consideration beginning the moment patients and families pull up to the hospital. The inpatient visitor garage is located under the new green space and provides 420 parking spaces connected via tunnel to the new tower. Because convenience matters. Together, the stunning new facilities, ambitious strategic plan and world-class clinical care and research programs have created an unsurpassed atmosphere of care. From Nationwide Children’s humble beginning to its long-held place in the national spotlight, the hospital has become a Columbus landmark. Nationwide Children’s is proud to call Columbus home and will continue to provide outstanding, accessible care to patients across central Ohio and around the world for coming generations. Continuing in the spirit of passionate founders, Nationwide Children’s embodies the belief that when a child needs a hospital, everything matters. QUALITY OF LIFE 123 METRO PARKS ✧ Above: Picnics were a popular activity for visitors to Blacklick Woods, the first Metro Park that opened in 1948. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF METRO PARKS. Below: Bison were re-introduced at Battelle Darby Creek Metro Park in 2011, after an absence of more than a hundred years, to demonstrate the natural role of large herbivores in the prairie ecosystem and educate visitors about our nation’s largest mammal. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF KIM GRAHAM. The largest metropolitan park district in the state, Columbus and Franklin County Metro Parks features more than 26,000 acres of land and water in 16 natural area parks where visitors can get out, get active and connect with wildlife and the wonders of the natural world. Each year over 6.5 million visitors spend time in the parks. The park system provides vital health and social benefits for individuals and the community while having a positive impact on the economy of Central Ohio. Each month park naturalists offer more than 300 free programs for preschoolers through senior citizens, ranging from full moon hikes to searching for owls and other wildlife, and from HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 124 wildflower walks to identifying waterfowl, all aimed at helping visitors discover the wonders of the outdoors. When Blacklick Woods, the first Metro Park, opened in 1948, it was considered “out in the country,” and many people thought that no one would travel twelve miles from downtown Columbus and then drive down a two-lane dirt road to get to the park. Today Blacklick Woods is one of the busiest parks, attracting a million visitors a year. The park features two golf courses that have achieved award-winning certification as “Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Courses” for their environmental management practices. In addition to featuring picnic and play areas, the parks offer lodges that can be rented for family gatherings or company outings. Fishing, canoeing and kayaking are among the favorite activities in the beautiful streams and lakes at several parks. More than 175 miles of trails for biking, hiking, rollerblading and jogging are available, as are trails for horseback riding, exercising your pet or cross-country skiing. Interested in history? You will enjoy Slate Run Living Historical Farm, where visitors can explore Ohio’s agricultural past while strolling through the farmhouse, barns and fields. You will even see costumed staff doing chores as they were done in the 1880s, before gaspowered tractors and electrical refrigerators. The park system is also home to one of Ohio’s largest botanical gardens. Nestled within a scenic nature preserve, the 121-acre Inniswood Metro Gardens is a continual source of inspiration for Ohioans of all ages. Streams and woodlands filled with wildflowers and wildlife provide a majestic backdrop to the beautifully landscaped flowerbeds, rock gardens and lawns. Dedicated to the enjoyment, cultivation and preservation of nature’s treasures, Inniswood boasts more than 2,000 species of plants, specialty collections and several theme gardens, including the rose, herb and woodland rock gardens. Visitors will enjoy the seasonal beauty of the gardens and natural areas as they stroll along three miles of trails and paved pathways. For more than forty years Metro Parks has worked with sixty other agencies and private organizations to preserve, protect, and restore the scenic Big Darby Creek Watershed so that this and future generations may benefit from its rich diversity. Recognized nationally as one of a dozen “Last Great Places” in the Western Hemisphere, the Big Darby Creek system boasts a remarkable array of fish and wildlife, many of which are threatened or endangered. Metro Parks has also been a partner in the Franklin County Greenways Initiative, an extensive network of recreational trails along some of the area’s most valuable natural resources. The trails provide opportunities for people to enjoy the many streams and forests in Central Ohio. Metro Parks maintains over sixty miles of Greenway trails. The parks got their start when local and statewide garden clubs, the Columbus Chamber of Commerce, Columbus City Council, Columbus and Franklin County Planning Commission, Wheaton Club, and many other proponents of creating a park district attended a public hearing held August 14, 1945. With no formal opposition, the park district was established and three citizens were appointed to the first board of park commissioners. Park commissioners are volunteers who serve without pay and make the policy decisions needed to chart the future course of the Metro Parks. Since that day, Metro Parks has grown steadily, now operating sixteen natural area parks and providing more than 175 miles of trails, and working to conserve and enhance habitat for the more than 2,400 species of animals and plants that thrive within the parks. The system’s first urban park, Scioto Audubon, opened near downtown Columbus in 2009, with Metro Parks joining with the City of Columbus and Audubon Ohio to turn a blighted once-industrial area into a green oasis. This park features one of the largest free public outdoor climbing walls in the country, and is home to the Grange Insurance Audubon Center, a sustainably designed 18,000 square foot urban ecology-learning center. Metro Parks spent millions of dollars and obtained grant money for structural demolition and brownfield remediation to clean up the ninety-four-acre park. The importance of Metro Parks is reflected in the tremendous increase in the number of visitors—from 200,000 in 1953 to 6,855,800 in 2011 as well as by overwhelming support by Franklin County voters over the years in support of the Metro Parks levy. For more information about Metro Parks, please visit www.metroparks.net. ✧ Above: Metro Parks offers more than 175 miles of trails where visitors can enjoy nature as they hike, bike and jog. These scenic paths wind through wetlands, woodlands, meadows and fields and past streams, rivers and lakes. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF MARGARET WALKER. Below: Metro Parks ponds, streams, forests, and fields provide a safe haven for barred owls and thousands of other species of wildlife. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF KARL HASSEL. QUALITY OF LIFE 125 COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS ✧ Above: Blue Jackets majority owner and Founder, John H. McConnell, is joined by NHL Commissioner, Gary Bettman, for the ceremonial puck drop prior to the franchise’s inaugural game vs. the Chicago Blackhawks on October 7, 2000. PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF GREG BARTRAM. Bottom, left: Rick Nash, the top overall pick of the 2002 NHL entry draft is a five-time All-Star and the Blue Jackets’ all-time leader in goals, assists and points. Bottom, right: Fans during a Blue Jackets home game at Nationwide Arena. PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF GREG BARTRAM. On June 25, 1997, the National Hockey League awarded the city of Columbus an expansion franchise that would begin play in 2000. On October 7, 2000, the Columbus Blue Jackets took the ice for the first time at Nationwide Arena in the capital city’s brandnew Arena District, ushering in a new and exciting chapter in central Ohio sports history. Local business leader and philanthropist John H. McConnell was the driving force in bringing a major league sports franchise to Ohio’s largest city. An early investor in the Columbus Crew (MLS) and a former minority owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates, he led a group of investors whose efforts brought the NHL to the city. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 126 Since the Blue Jackets began play, over seven million fans have attended games at Nationwide Arena witnessing countless memorable moments. The club’s first team, under head coach Dave King and led by goaltender Ron Tugnutt and leading scorer Geoff Sanderson, posted a 28-39-6 record with its 71 points among the highest ever accumulated by an NHL expansion team. The Blue Jackets posted their best season in 2008-09, compiling a 41-31-10 record and 92 points to earn a Stanley Cup Playoffs berth under head coach Ken Hitchcock. Goaltender Steve Mason burst onto the scene, posting a 33-20-7 record with a 2.29 goalsagainst-average, .916 save percentage and league-leading 10 shutouts on his way to earning NHL rookie of the year honors. During its first decade, a number of memorable players have called Columbus home. They include early fan favorites like Tugnutt, Sanderson and Tyler Wright; All-Stars Espen Knutsen and Ray Whitney; long-serving Jackets like David Vyborny, Jody Shelley and Rostislav Klesla; and new favorites such as former Ohio State All-American R. J. Umberger and Jared Boll. However, no player has stood taller than Rick Nash, who Columbus selected with the first overall pick of the 2002 NHL Entry Draft. He made his NHL debut at the age of eighteen and scored a goal in his first game against the Chicago Blackhawks on October 10, 2002. The following year, he became the youngest player in NHL history to lead the league in goals when he scored forty-one. Nash has taken his place among the NHL’s elite players, appearing in all five All-Star Games played since 2002 and representing Canada at the 2006 and 2010 Olympic Games, winning a gold medal in the latter. He has led Columbus in goals every season since 2003-04 and in points in four-straight from 2007-11. Off the ice, Nash also won the NHL Foundation Player Award in 2009 in recognition of his work in the central Ohio community. The team’s arrival also brought an influx of development and community pride, as well as national and international attention, to Columbus. Nationwide Arena was the site of Team USA’s training camp in August 2004 in advance of that year’s World Cup of Hockey Tournament and the Blue Jackets welcomed the hockey world to central Ohio in June 2007 for the NHL Entry Draft. The club’s commitment to the community has been reflected by the work of the Columbus Blue Jackets Foundation. Since its inception 2000, the foundation has donated $3.5 million to various central Ohio nonprofit organizations in support of its four pillars of giving: pediatric cancer, education, children’s health and safety and the development of youth and amateur hockey. The club’s work on behalf of the latter has seen the number of youth hockey players registered in the Columbus-area grow from 150 in 1995 to over 4,500 today. Central Ohio was home to just two sheets of ice in the early-1990s compared to thirteen today. The arrival of the Blue Jackets and Nationwide Arena has meant much more to central Ohio than what has happened on the ice. Economic impact studies conducted by the John Glenn School of Public Affairs at the Ohio State University in April 2009 concluded that the team and arena had driven a local economic impact of more than $2 billion since 2000 including: $850 million in spending directly attributable to the Blue Jackets, Columbus Destroyers (Arena Football Team from 2004-08) and Nationwide Arena, $160 million in indirect spending at area hotels and restaurants via out-of-town visitors attending games and events at the arena and the generation of approximately $4 million in local income tax revenue since the fiscal year 2002. “Taken as a whole or separately, the results speak for themselves,” said Blue Jackets President Mike Priest, praising the “incredible partnerships and remarkable leadership” of the late John H. McConnell, current owner John P. McConnell and others who have been instrumental in giving Columbus the NHL franchise and Nationwide Arena. “Today our entire community benefits from their vision, and we are happy to be a part of the growing strength of our downtown.” ✧ Left: Former Ohio State All-American R. J. Umberger joined the Blue Jackets in 2008 and has set a franchise record by playing in 246 consecutive games between 2008 and 2011. Right: Nationwide Arena has hosted numerous special events since 2000, including the NHL Entry Draft in June 2007, and serves as the anchor of Columbus’ vibrant Arena District. QUALITY OF LIFE 127 OHIO EDUCATION ASSOCIATION ✧ Below: Left to right, OEA President Patricia Frost-Brooks, Columbus Education Association President Rhonda Johnson, NEA President Dennis Van Roekel and Principal Andrew Smith visit a South Mifflin STEM Academy classroom as the 2010 school year begins. Since 1847 the Ohio Education Association, formerly the Ohio State Teachers’ Association (OSTA), has advocated on behalf of its members and for strong public schools in Ohio. In 1851 the OSTA set broad goals: to build a strong public sentiment for schools, to promote the adoption of a better plan of school organization, and to improve teachers and elevate the profession of teaching. Over the past 175 years, the organization has continued these early aims, elevating public schools through sound instruction and curriculum; by standards of teacher preparation and teacher certification; and improved working conditions with a state minimum salary schedule and state teacher’s retirement system. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 128 The organization’s first president, Samuel Galloway, served as Ohio Secretary of State during most of his term. Some years later President Abraham Lincoln called upon him for advice on the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation. Other early highlights included a self-reporting plan of school control, which was outlined in 1857 by James A. Garfield, then an Ohio teacher in his twenties, who would later become U.S. President. Teachers in Ohio who felt an interest in their profession and the improvement of the state’s schools were encouraged to attend the first OSTA convention and assist in organizing the association and promoting its interests. Early on, “teachers’ institutes” promoted professional development of teachers and helped to encourage statewide association unity; professional development days continue throughout Ohio today. The OSTA recognized the importance of political action to achieve better teaching and school organization and funding. The initial focus was on teachers’ institutes, then on normal schools for professional education of teachers, both aimed at improving teaching. OSTA worked toward state support of teacher training and establishing state-funded normal schools, resulting in passage of a supporting law in 1902. A survey in 1913 examined school conditions in Ohio, leading to a complete revision of rural education, and to minimum standards of teacher preparation and changes in teacher certification requirements, all embodied in what became known as the Cox School Code. In part this 1914 legislation created positions of county and district school superintendents, and for the first time based teachers’ certificates on holding a college diploma with required academic and professional courses. In 1920, when the minimum Ohio teacher salary was set at $100 per month, membership surged from 12,000 to 21,309, then in 1930 to over 40,000 classroom teachers, administrators, elementary and high school principals. The Department of Classroom Teachers was formed as its own group, separate from administrators, principals and superintendents in 1924. OEA’s legal services, school law expertise and consultation programs began in 1954. OEA’s new headquarters building was constructed in 1965 at 225 East Broad Street in Columbus. In support of changing times, OEA created an Urban Affairs Committee to assist in dealing with problems that arose in city schools in the 1960s. Field operations for local advocacy, political action and negotiations were built with a commitment to teacher rights. The average teacher’s salary in the 1970s was $8,798. Through successful lobbying at the federal level, an exemption was secured to avert a wage freeze that potentially would have affected all Ohio teachers. The state minimum salary schedule was implemented through extensive lobbying, resulting in salary increases for 37,000 teachers in 486 school districts. Superintendents, principals and other administrators split from OEA in 1969-70. By the mid-1970s—before any statutory provision for public employee bargaining was enacted—OEA helped win negotiation agreements for local associations in two-thirds of the state’s school districts. The Ohio Supreme Court ruled in 1975 that negotiated master agreements and binding arbitration were legal and enforceable. During the fifteen-year period between Ohio’s first strike at Tallmadge in 1966 and the passage of Ohio’s Public Employee Collective Bargaining Law in 1983, teachers in every major city in Ohio went on strike, peaking in 1969-70 with twenty-eight walkouts. In the 1980s, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled in favor of four cases involving OEA members, establishing legal precedents in areas of fair dismissal and salary credit for teaching experience. OEA’s membership level continued to grow when it expanded to include school support personnel. As OEA continued its advocacy for school funding in the 1990s, the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s decision in DeRolph versus State of Ohio, finding that the State failed to meet the requirement to fund a “thorough and efficient system of common schools.” OEA continued promoting educator standards and public accountability. Current OEA goals include ensuring public education funding, preserving collective bargaining rights and the economic security of OEA’s 130,000 members; and offering great public schools for every student. These are in keeping with the OEA mission: To lead the way for continuous improvement of public education while advocating for members and the learners they serve. QUALITY OF LIFE 129 CITY OF DUBLIN ✧ Above: The Artz Quarry operated at the north end of the Village of Dublin on the west bank of the Scioto River. Much of the stone was used to build many of the limestone fences in the town. The original stone fences are still seen throughout the town today. With a long and colorful history and a continuing story of service to its more than 40,000 residents and 60,000 corporate citizens, the city of Dublin is a vital part of the metropolitan Columbus area. The land that is now Dublin can trace its recorded history to 1795, when Lieutenant James Holt acquired title to 889 acres here. By 1803 the Sells family of Pennsylvania owned 800 acres of the property, and six years later Ludwick Sells and his wife Katherine traveled by flat-bottomed boat on the flooded Scioto River to build their log cabin home and the Black Horse Tavern, a way station for travelers along the Scioto Trail. John Shields, an early visitor, surveyed and platted Sells’ land into small lots that became Dublin. Legends about the name’s origin vary, but all of them agree that it was chosen to honor Dublin, Ireland. Early settlers included George Michael Karrer, Charles Mitchell, Samuel Davis, Henry Coffman and Holcomb Tuller. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 130 Fertile land along the Scioto produced wheat, alfalfa, corn, clover, timothy, hay and other crops. Early businesses included Edward Eberly’s blacksmith shop, John Ashbaugh’s pottery, and a sawmill operated by Henry Shout, who floated large quantities of lumber down river to Columbus. Limestone, the residue from the bottom of a vast sea in centuries past, was quarried and dressed in Dublin for use in constructing buildings, bridges and fences beginning in the mid-1800s. The Pinney family, Eli, Earl and Frank, were among the best-known stonemasons. Dublin was one of three sites considered “finalists” to become state capital in 1912. According to legend, Dublin lost the honor to Franklinton (which would later become Columbus) in a high stakes poker game. The representative favoring the third contender, Worthington, was the first to fold, leaving Sells facing Franklinton’s proponent, a Dr. Smith. When the players showed their cards, Sells confidently turned over three kings, a ten and a two, but Dr. Smith showed three aces, a jack and a three. Is the story true? No one really knows, but however it happened, Columbus became the state capital. While Dublin may have not been selected as the state capital, in 1966, it was chosen as the site for Jack Nicklaus’ world-class golf course, Muirfield Village Golf Club. It was Jack’s desire to create a tournament that would remember and honor the great golfers of the past, and those individuals who built the foundation to a game that today is played and enjoyed by millions around the world. Thus, the Memorial Tournament was born. The course was officially dedicated on Memorial Day, May 27, 1974. In 2013, Muirfield Village Golf Club will host The Presidents Cup when the biennial competition returns to the United States. Dublin is the only city in the world to have hosted the top three international matchplay golf tournaments—The Ryder Cup, The Solheim Cup and The Presidents Cup. In addition to the Memorial Tournament, the city hosts numerous other special events, ranging from the Dublin Kiwanis Frog Jump to the Dublin Irish Festival. Dublin is a great destination for leisure and business travelers alike with its attractions, restaurants, shopping and hotels. The Dublin Convention and Visitors Bureau, a nonprofit organization, was founded in 1988 to help market and promote Dublin, Ohio as a travel destination. The Bureau has developed innovative programs and sports marketing packages to attract visitors from various markets. The Bureau is funded by a portion of a bed tax that is levied on visitors to Dublin’s hotels. This bed tax revenue generates approximately $2 million each year and helps fund a variety of local events and programs, including the Dublin Arts Council, which offers Central Ohio’s most vigorous public art program, “Art in Public Places.” Located in the northwest area of metropolitan Columbus, Dublin’s central location and energized corporate climate attracts national and international companies. Wendy’s International, headquartered in Dublin, has become one of the city’s largest employers. Other internationally recognized companies such as Cardinal Health, Verizon and Ashland are headquartered in Dublin. The city’s recreational programs and extensive parkland acquisitions enrich both green space and leisure-time activities. With a proactive police presence, Dublin is recognized as one of the safest cities in Central Ohio. The city also has an aggressive capital improvements program financed by a two percent income tax, which allows Dublin to invest in infrastructure to accommodate development and maintain a high quality of life for residents and corporate citizens. In fact, in the 2009 National Citizen Survey, the residents of Dublin rated their community higher as a place to live than residents in any other city in the United States. The city’s scores are significantly higher than the norm for such surveys, according to Tom Miller, president of the National Research Center, Inc., an independent organization that conducted the survey. “Clearly something remarkable is happening in Dublin, demonstrated by empirical evidence that residents truly appreciate so many aspects of community quality,” Miller said. ✧ Above: Field of Corn, 1994. Below: The 18th Hole, the Memorial Tournament, Muirfield Village Golf Club. QUALITY OF LIFE 131 OHIOHEALTH OhioHealth has a long history of delivering on its mission to improve the health of those it serves. A faith-based, not-for-profit family of leading healthcare providers, OhioHealth is the largest health system in central Ohio. What started as a single hospital in 1891 has grown into a system of providers with collective strengths and specialties that together make up a complete array of high quality care and services for the community. With 8 member hospitals, including 5 in central Ohio and 3 in the region, more than 40 care sites and countless programs and services that deliver the highest quality care and service to its patients and visitors, OhioHealth is more than a health system, it is a belief system. Together, OhioHealth’s more than 16,000 associates, 2,000 physicians and 3,000 volunteers, plus the patients, families and communities it serves believe in the power of their shared strength—the power of WE. Many people know OhioHealth’s central Ohio hospitals by name: • Riverside Methodist Hospital • Grant Medical Center • Doctors Hospital • Grady Memorial Hospital • Dublin Methodist Hospital What they may not know, however, is that no matter which facility or service patients choose within the OhioHealth system—whether it is HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 132 home health, an OhioHealth Neighborhood Care center, or a hospital—they have access to the most advanced technologies and most knowledgeable physicians and associates. “All members of our community deserve access to high quality healthcare services. As a not-for-profit health system, we have grown to provide the care our community members need close to where they live, and developed programs and services that help them achieve their best health,” says Dave Blom, OhioHealth’s president and chief executive officer. From providing the most advanced, worldclass care for patients with acute illnesses like heart disease or cancer, to offering preventive care and health and wellness programs, OhioHealth is committed to providing the highest quality care. OhioHealth was named one of the top ten health systems in the country for clinical performance by Thomson Reuters for the third year in a row–a further reflection of the quality and value it provides. One of the most tangible measures of OhioHealth’s value to the community is the amount of “Community Benefit” it provides annually. Even in challenging economic times, OhioHealth has succeeded in fulfilling its health ministry mission and providing responsible stewardship of community healthcare dollars. In Fiscal Year 2010 (July 2009 to June 2010), OhioHealth provided $191 million in Community Benefit–a $22.9 million increase over the previous year. OhioHealth’s Community Benefit includes $81.2 million in charity care, $35.1 million in net unreimbursed cost of medical education, and $2.0 million in community health services, just to name a few of the ways OhioHealth brings value to the community. Every dollar OhioHealth earns is reinvested in the communities it serves to improve quality of care and enhance service to patients and families. Instead of paying dividends to shareholders or owners, OhioHealth uses its earnings to provide a wide array of community benefits, including subsidizing essential community health services such as trauma centers, poison control or psychiatric service that some patients may not otherwise be able to pay for on their own. “There is nothing more important than the health of our community members. Because we work together as a family of healthcare providers to be stewards of our resources, we are able to deliver on our commitment to the communities we serve and reinvest into community health in a number of ways that make a significant impact,” says Dave Blom. Additionally, OhioHealth supports a broad range of vital community outreach services, with particular emphasis on the most vulnerable and historically underserved community members. Through investing in research, innovation and technology, and medical education and training, OhioHealth works to advance medical knowledge and support a strong network of highly skilled healthcare professionals in central Ohio who provide the care needed to keep the community healthy. Employing 16,000 associates and working with 2,000 physician partners, OhioHealth is an economic driver in central Ohio. As a large organization in the community, it is an important part of the strength of the local economy, creating a substantial economic impact. OhioHealth’s belief in the power of WE is the driving force in how it cares for the health of those it serves. Bringing together the collective strengths and specialties of the people and facilities that make up the system allows OhioHealth to do more for more people and to make the community strong, vital, healthy and whole. As OhioHealth continues to grow, its focus on delivering the highest quality care at the lowest cost will be essential for the health of its patients and the future of the community. WE includes the patients and community members who trust OhioHealth physicians and associates to care for them and those they love, and with them, OhioHealth is working to make the community healthier. And that is an invaluable investment in the future of central Ohio. QUALITY OF LIFE 133 COLUMBUS POLICE RESERVE Excellence in Service. The Columbus Auxiliary Police was organized in 1945 as part of the Civil Defense Administration for use in civil defense emergencies during World War II. It was abandoned after the war ended, but was reactivated in 1951 by the Columbus Division of Police. The unit came under the direct control of the chief of police in 1954, and continued to work the streets armed only with a nightstick and a flashlight. Members were trained in the use of firearms in 1961, and permitted to carry their weapons while on duty. The Reserve unit, with volunteers from all walks of life, augments the division of police by aiding its personnel, providing additional patrol officers on precinct cruisers normally staffed by a single patrol officer. The volunteers, who serve without pay, maintain full time employment outside the division, while fulfilling an interest in police work and community service. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 134 Tragedy struck the Reserve in 1969 when an armed robbery suspect shot and killed Sergeant Lawrence Kipfinger in the line of duty. He was buried with full police honors, and his name appears on the Columbus Police Memorial. The dedicated men and women of the Reserve attend the Columbus Police Academy in the evenings and weekends, and after graduation each of them completes field training and a one-year probationary period. They are fully trained to meet the State of Ohio’s standards for police officers, and receive the same training as full time division officers. In 2003 the chief of police authorized the Reserve to carry their firearms while in an off-duty status within the corporate limits of the city of Columbus. Officers purchase their own uniforms and firearms, and must donate a minimum of eight hours a month to the division, as well as being required to attend monthly training sessions and complete all Division mandated training and firearms qualifications. The Reserve Unit meets or exceeds all standards established by CALEA. Members are authorized to work special events within the city upon approval by the police chief. Those working such approved special events are compensated at the current special duty rate, with twenty-five percent of these earnings deposited directly to the Reserve Police Operating Fund for use in purchasing uniforms and equipment for the unit. Reserve officers are held to the same moral and ethical standards as the division of police sworn personnel, and they must abide by the division directives. In 2005 the Columbus Police Reserve celebrated sixty years of “Excellence in Service” to the Division of Police and Police and the citizens of Columbus. The chief of police appoints the commander of the unit, and that commander is given the rank of colonel. Current and past commanders of the unit are: • Major Roland Sedgwick, 1951-1954 • Major Ember Schaer, 1954-1956 • Lieutenant Colonel Robert G. Hutchinson, 1956-1970 • Colonel George Gladdon, 1970-1972 • Colonel Lincoln R. McFarland, 1972-1974 • Colonel David Stewart, 1974-1980 • Colonel Robert E. Reiss, 1980-1984 • Colonel Rocco A. Eramo, 1984-2000 • Colonel Michael York, 2000-present Members serve without pay, and must possess both a valid State of Ohio driver’s license and personal vehicle insurance. Approval from both the chief of police and the city safety director is required. A member must take an oath of office and commit to three years as a Columbus Police Department Reserve officer. The service commitment requirement is waived if the member is accepted for full time employment as a Columbus police officer. “From the first group of auxiliary officers, who worked the streets unarmed and without the powers of arrest, the unit has evolved into professionally trained and fully certified law enforcement officers who are granted full powers of arrest,” said Colonel York. “I am truly proud of all those who serve now, and those who have selflessly served before us.” Any person over age twenty-one interested in becoming a Police Reserve officer must apply on a standard form available by contacting the Columbus Police Reserve at www.cpdresv.com. After returning the completed personal history questionnaire, the applicant will be subjected to a criminal record check, a background investigation, an in-home interview, a polygraph examination, a physical exam, and an oral board review. Upon successful completion of the requirements, the candidate will be accepted for training. This consists of over 650 hours of classroom and practical training conducted by experienced, certified instructors. The training sessions are usually conducted from 6 to 10 p.m., Monday through Thursday, though many eighthour Saturday sessions are also scheduled. Most of the training is held at the Columbus Police Training Academy at 1000 North Hague Avenue in Columbus, Ohio. This training is in excess of the State of Ohio minimum standards. Upon graduation, Police Reserve officers are certified by the Ohio Peace Officer Training Council. While on duty, the Police Reserve officer has the same authority, arrest power, and responsibility as a full-time police officer. For more information, call 614-645-7136, or visit on the Internet at www.cpdresv.com or www.columbuspolice.org. ✧ Opposite, clockwise, starting from the top left: Excellence in Service. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS POLICE DEPARTMENT. Current Staff: Colonel Mike York, retired Colonel Rocco Eramo, Major Dave Bowers, Major Bruce Hamler, Captain Dave Kienzel, Captain Rebecca Kienzel, Captain Charles Smith, Lieutenant Pam Badgley, Lieutenant Jack Bledsoe, Lieutenant John Dimond, Lieutenant Robert Livingston, Sergeant Robert Hurford, Sergeant Thomas Chilicki, Lieutenant Dallas Baldwin, Sergeant Tony Luzio, and Sergeant Dave Ross. Sergeant Harry West working Red, White and Boom. Lieutenant John Dimond guarding cars at the Columbus police impound lot auction. Captain Dave Kienzel working traffic at WCMH Channel 4 Toy Drive with Brutus Buckeye. Below, left: Sergeant Harold Rausch working Operation Safe Child booth. At Scioto Super fest. Below, center: Reserve officers in classroom training. Below, right: Reserve police officers inspection. QUALITY OF LIFE 135 CARDINAL HEALTH, INC. Cardinal Health, Inc., is a Fortune 19 healthcare services company that improves the cost-effectiveness of healthcare. As the business behind healthcare, Cardinal Health helps pharmacies, hospitals and ambulatory care sites focus on patient care while reducing costs, and improving efficiency and quality. Cardinal Health employs more than 32,000 people worldwide. Cardinal Health helps healthcare providers focus on what is most important—improving people’s lives. The company is an essential link in the healthcare supply chain, providing pharmaceuticals and medical products to more than 60,000 locations each day. It is also a leading manufacturer of medical and surgical products, including gloves, surgical apparel and fluid management products. Pharmacies, hospitals, ambulatory care centers and clinics rely on Cardinal Health to help improve quality, safety and productivity. When Robert D. Walter bought a small, regional food distribution company in 1971, he set in motion a growth story few entrepreneurs in business can match. At age 25, with an engineering degree from Ohio University and an MBA from Harvard Business School, he returned to his hometown of Columbus, Ohio, and opened a small distribution company he named Cardinal Foods. Less than 10 years later, his company became a prominent regional food distributor. A transformational acquisition occurred in 1979, when the company purchased a drug distributor in Zanesville, Ohio, and changed its name to Cardinal Distribution to reflect distribution capabilities outside of the food industry. While small, this acquisition provided a new growth platform for the young company. Cardinal Distribution had its initial public opening in 1983. Its common stock opened on the NASDAQ at $1.03 per share. Its fast-growing pharmaceutical distribution business expanded further during the next decade, with the acquisition of more than a dozen U.S. drug distributors, which expanded service to the Northeastern United States, including markets in New York and Massachusetts. By 1987, Cardinal Distribution was recognized as a leading wholesaler in each of its regional markets. The company’s pharmaceutical distribution business had grown to be almost twice the size of its food distribution business, and in 1988, the company sold its food distribution business to focus solely on the fast-growing healthcare industry. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 136 The company grew rapidly over the next few years, with revenues in 1991 exceeding $1 billion. Cardinal Distribution also expanded through the formation of National Specialty Services, Inc. of Nashville, Tennessee, which opened up a new offering for pharmaceuticals that require specialized distribution capabilities. The company also expanded through the opening of distribution centers in Mississippi and Florida, bringing a broad-based presence in the Southeastern region. Through additional acquisitions including Whitmire Distribution Corp. of Folsom, California; Humiston-Keeling, Inc. of Calumet City, Illinois; and Behrens Inc. of Waco, Texas; Cardinal Distribution became the third-largest pharmaceutical distributor in the United States and had grown from a regional distributor to a national healthcare services provider. In 1994, the company changed its name to Cardinal Health, reflecting its commitment to the healthcare industry. It began trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol CAH, and Cardinal Health had established itself as a leader in the drug distribution business with a nationwide presence and annual revenues of approximately $6 billion. In 1999, Cardinal Health merged with Allegiance Healthcare Corp., a manufacturer and distributor of medical-surgical and laboratory products and services, which had been serving hospitals since 1922. The combination of Cardinal Health and Allegiance created a healthcare supply chain services company that could offer a one-stop shop for both pharmaceuticals and medical products across the United States and Canada. In 2009, Cardinal Health spun off CareFusion Corp., a division of the company that offered medical devices that promoted medication safety, as well as respiratory equipment and infection prevention products. This allowed Cardinal Health to focus on its core capabilities of healthcare distribution and services. In 2010, Cardinal Health became the first U.S. healthcare distributor to expand outside of North America with its acquisition of Yong Yu, which created a platform for growth in the fast-growing Chinese healthcare market. Today, Cardinal Health provides an integrated offering of innovative products and services to help hospitals, pharmacies and other healthcare providers meet the growing challenges of a dynamic industry. As a multinational healthcare industry services provider, Cardinal Health applies its resources, knowledge and expertise to help healthcare manufacturers and patient care providers meet their most pressing challenges of providing safe, high-quality and cost-effective care. Cardinal Health is also committed to giving back to the communities where its employees and customers live and work. The Cardinal Health Foundation supports programs that improve healthcare efficiency, quality and cost-effectiveness, and that promote healthy and vibrant communities. Since 2001, Cardinal Health and the Cardinal Health Foundation have contributed more than $150 million in cash and product donations to nonprofit organizations, domestically and abroad. Cardinal Health is located at 7000 Cardinal Place in Dublin, Ohio, and on the Internet at www.cardinalhealth.com. QUALITY OF LIFE 137 COLUMBUS ACADEMY ✧ Top: Small class sizes means more individual attention for each Columbus Academy student. Above: Intellectual curiosity is the hallmark of a Columbus Academy education. In 1911 a group of area businessmen founded the Columbus Academy to provide a local educational option for boys in grades 5-12. They adopted the independent country day school philosophy that academic preparation was a cooperative effort between the school and the home. Thus, Columbus Academy began as a college preparatory school dedicated to the highest standards of intellectual, social, moral, aesthetic and physical development. Columbus Academy’s first home was situated on four acres along Alum Creek on Nelson Road in Columbus and the number of students quickly grew in grades 5-12. The school’s first headmaster, Frank P. R. Van Syckel, instituted a strong liberal arts program coupled with vigorous athletic instruction, and he established a tradition of excellence that is reflected in the school’s motto, “In Quest of the Best.” HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 138 In 1916 demand prompted the addition of a lower school so that area young men could complete their elementary and secondary educations at one institution. During the 1950s, Columbus Academy grew in several ways. Facilities—such as new classrooms, a pool and a new gymnasium—were built as the campus expanded to thirteen acres. A reputation for academic excellence was also growing, thanks in large part to the selection and retention of a highly qualified and dedicated faculty. Columbus Academy had the opportunity to become more and more selective regarding the composition of the student body: waiting lists for admissions were established. In the 1960s, the confluence of several factors (outdated facilities, a growing school population, and lack of space for science and other specialized programs) brought about another major change: relocation from the Nelson Road campus to 231 acres in Gahanna (eight miles northeast of Columbus). Funds were raised and a new five-building complex helped to double both the size of the student body and the faculty, as well as the curricular offerings. In the fall of 1990, eighteen females were admitted to the Academy and the school became a coeducational institution. By the 1992-93 school year, females were admitted into every grade, and Columbus Academy graduated its first females in June of 1993. During this time, the student population grew from 595 to 825, and a major capital campaign was undertaken to enlarge the school to accommodate the increased student body. In recent years, the school’s enrollment has continued to grow, primarily due to the success of coeducation and the increased number of female students. The Academy’s current facilities include: distinct building areas for lower, middle and upper schools (263,569 total square feet), 6 state-of-the-art computer labs and campus-wide wireless Internet access, a centralized performance and visual arts complex, a library for each division with online access to holdings, a large dining hall serving both family style and buffet meals, an indoor, 6-lane swimming pool, 3 developmentally designed playgrounds, 2 full-sized gymnasiums, a well-equipped fitness/weight room and a wrestling/multipurpose room, and lighted football, soccer and field hockey fields, 2 baseball diamonds, an all-weather 8 lane track, 8 outdoor tennis courts and an on-campus cross country course. Currently, Columbus Academy operates as a PreK-12 coeducational independent school with 1,072 students (51 percent boys, 49 percent girls with 25 percent students of color and 24 percent receiving $3.1 million in financial aid and tuition remission) and over 3,500 alumni. Of the 127 full-time and 21 part-time faculty members, 67 percent hold advanced degrees (master’s and/or doctoral) and the average teaching experience is twenty years. Fully coeducational for almost twenty years, Columbus Academy graduated its first class consisting of more girls than boys in 2007. The school, which promotes a well-rounded experience, has won over sixty state championships in a dozen sports, has students selected for state and national art awards on a yearly basis, and consistently has Central Ohio’s highest percentage of seniors recognized by the National Merit Scholarship Corporation. Columbus Academy has also made significant efforts in recent years to boost its financial aid offerings and to make the school more visible throughout Central Ohio. In May of 2010, Columbus Academy was one of only three schools in the United States selected as a 2010 recipient of a $2 million endowment from the Malone Family Foundation to provide scholarships for top-level students with financial need. With the award, Columbus Academy became the only Malone Scholarship School in Ohio and one of just thirty-one nationwide. As the school celebrates its Centennial in 2011, Columbus Academy will be in an outstanding position to continue excelling for its next 100 years. ✧ Above: Academy’s picturesque 231-acre campus is just ten miles from downtown Columbus. Below: Columbus Academy draws students from over fifty different zip codes in and around Central Ohio. QUALITY OF LIFE 139 ISABELLE RIDGWAY CARE CENTER The genius of the human spirit is our ability and capacity to serve. This capacity to serve is intrinsic and innate in the lowest of us; and the noblest of us, rich or poor, black or white, all have the God-given ability to serve. by Guy S. Schley, Chaplain. ✧ Isabelle Ridgway. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 140 Consider this person of Columbus’ history, Mrs. Isabelle Ridgway. After the death of her husband, Mr. John P. Ridgway, Mrs. Ridgway transformed the pain of her tears into a passion of purpose as she embarked upon an endeavor that would define her Christian witness and work. Mrs. Ridgway realized that there was a need in the community for someone to care for and to serve the aging and ailing of central Ohio. She was inspired to serve the least of these in our community. What is so compelling and utterly amazing is that Mrs. Ridgway’s care and service to the aging population occurred during a period when there were no entitlement programs such as Social Security, Medicaid or Medicare. She inspired others to give of their time, talent, and treasure to meet the needs of the elderly. Women (black or white) in 1912 had no identity or status outside of their husbands. Mrs. Ridgway, with two strikes against her, started and inspired work that has outlived the normal span of her mortality. Mrs. Isabelle Ridgway was born in 1858, five years before the Emancipation Proclamation was signed and issued into law on January 1, 1863 by President Abraham Lincoln. And though she died on April 4, 1955, at the age of ninetyseven, Mrs. Ridgway’s life work and witness continues at Isabelle Ridgway Care Center, as we embark upon 100 years of service. The administration, staff, professionals, and Board of Trustees of Isabelle Ridgway Care Center strive to provide “warm, compassionate, culturally appropriate, family-friendly care and services to the aging population of central Ohio,” which is conducive to improving their health and well-being. Perhaps, this information about the Isabelle Ridgway Care Center’s history will inform your mind, inspire your heart and soul; hence, empower you to serve. On March 12, 1912, in Savannah, Georgia, Juliette Gordon Low announced, “I’ve got something for the girls of Savannah and all of America, and all the world, and we’re going to start it tonight.” Founded on the belief that girls should be given the opportunity to develop physically, mentally, and spiritually, the Girl Scouts was formed. By 1916, troops were organized throughout Ohio. In 1950, the Girl Scouts of the USA was chartered by the U.S. Congress, and several councils existed in Ohio. Over time, these smaller councils joined together to form larger councils. In a 2009 national realignment, three councils—from Columbus, Mansfield and Zanesville— joined to form the Girl Scouts of Ohio’s Heartland Council, headquartered in Columbus. The council now serves more than 34,000 girls from kindergarten through grade twelve, and more than 9,000 adult members and volunteers. Its thirty county region includes: Adams, Ashland, Coshocton, Crawford, Delaware, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin, Gallia, Guernsey, Highland, Hocking, Holmes, Jackson, Knox, Licking, Madison, Marion, Morrow, Muskingum, Perry, Pickaway, Pike, Richland, Ross, Scioto, Union, Vinton, Wayne and Wyandot Counties. Celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2012, Girl Scouts of the USA now has a membership of more than 3.2 million girls and adults. In fact, more than 50 million women in the U.S. today are Girl Scout alumnae. The mission is: “Girl Scouting builds girls of courage, confidence, and character, who make the world a better place.” The organization’s guiding principles are the Girl Scout Promise and Law, which indicate the way Girl Scouts agree to act every day toward one another and other people. As the premier leadership development program for girls today, Girl Scouts provides activities in science and technology, business and economic literacy, outdoor and environmental awareness, the arts, and more. While providing girls with opportunities for fun and friendship, the focus is on the new Girl Scout GIRL SCOUTS OF OHIO’S HEARTLAND COUNCIL Leadership Experience—a model that engages girls in discovering themselves, connecting with others, and taking action to make the world a better place. Even selling Girl Scout cookies is a business literacy program where girls learn five key business skills—goalsetting, decision-making, money management, people skills and business ethics. Ohio’s Heartland Council also operates seven camps throughout its region, including day and residential camps and a horse ranch. Camping provides girls with a powerful experience in independence, friendship and social character, outdoor exploration and environmental awareness in a safe environment. Girl Scouts from grades four through twelve can work to earn Girl Scout Bronze, Silver and Gold Awards as well. The Girl Scout Gold Award, for girls in grades nine to twelve, is the ultimate and highest recognition a Girl Scout can achieve and symbolizes exceptional achievement in leadership development, career exploration and community. From its willingness to tackle important societal issues, to a commitment to diversity and inclusiveness—Girl Scouts is dedicated to preparing the leaders of tomorrow. QUALITY OF LIFE 141 COLUMBUS CLIPPERS A visit to beautiful Huntington Park immediately fills visitors with the great history of professional baseball in Columbus. Hundreds of photographs, memorabilia and artifacts of the great players, ballparks and lore that made our city famous are displayed here. Since the first game played in Columbus in 1866, fans have had the opportunity to cheer championship teams and future Hall of Famers from Pop Lloyd, Enos Slaughter and Willie Stargell to Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera. Columbus has always been on the cutting edge of sports promotions, from having baseball’s first concession stand and Ladies’ Day over a century ago to the Knot Hole Gang and night baseball in the 1930s to the Clippers’ Dime-A-Dog Nights and Victory Bells of today. Over 29 million fans have attended professional baseball games in Columbus’ state-of-the-art ballparks, including The Recy, Neil Park and Cooper Stadium—affectionately called “The Coop.” Huntington Park continues this grand tradition with its state-of-theart amenities. The picturesque park was named Ballpark of the Year in its inaugural season. The Clippers, who won the Triple-A National Championship the following season, continue to carry on Columbus’ rich and deep baseball heritage. COLUMBUS ZOO AND AQUARIUM Founded in 1927 the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium gained international recognition and stature with the 1956 birth of Colo, the world’s first zoo-born gorilla. Today, the Columbus Zoo is a nationally and internationally acclaimed conservation center, housing more than 700 species, including thirty-seven endangered and threatened species. Annually, the Zoo supports more than seventy wildlife conservation projects around the world through its Conservation Fund and Partners in Conservation. In addition to its role as a global conservation leader, the Zoo is a renowned year-round education and recreation facility for visitors of all ages, backgrounds, and experiences. Each year, the Zoo attracts and educates more than 2 million visitors and its mission is to enrich its community’s quality of life and to inspire a greater appreciation of wildlife for the advancement of conservation action. The Zoo resides on 580 acres, making it one of the fastest growing zoos in the world and the third largest municipally-affiliated zoo in North America. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 142 The Columbus Zoo and Aquarium is an Association of Zoo and Aquariums (AZA) accredited institution, which requires member organizations to adhere to high standards in animal care and demonstrate strong programs in conservation, research, and education. For hours of operation, current events or exhibits or to plan your next visit to the Columbus Zoo, visit www.columbuszoo.org. Columbus Metropolitan Library (CML) is made up of twenty-one library locations, 3 million materials, dozens of educational programs, and a website at www.columbuslibrary.org. CML began as a reading room established by Columbus City Council in 1872. In 1906 a $200,000 Andrew Carnegie Grant funded construction of the first permanent library building. With a 2011 budget of $60 million and a staff of 350 full time and 250 part time employees, CML serves an economically diverse metropolitan area population of over 1.7 million. Ranked as the number one science center for families by Parents Magazine, COSI is about inspiring interest in science and encouraging In 2010 over 43,000 customers used CML’s Job Help Centers to search for jobs, create and edit resumes and take advantage of staff and volunteers’ expertise. More than 53,000 kids used CML’s Homework Help Centers in 2010. HHCs offer computers, free printing, school supplies, textbooks, reference materials and trained staff and volunteers. CML was named 2010 National Library of the Year and received 5-Star ratings in 2008, 2009 and 2010 from Library Journal; and has been ranked the number one library in the country by Hennen’s American Public Library Rating Index three times in the last ten years. Over 8 million customers visit the library, 16 million items are circulated and 10 million people visit its website each year. people to want to learn more about their world. With all of its hands-on experiments and exhibits, COSI makes learning about science fun! Maneuver, a Rover in a Martian landscape in Space, behold Poseidon’s majesty and experiment with water in Ocean, or learn about watershed creatures in LilyPad. Take a walk back in time in Progress, intrigue your techie side with the Gadgets exhibit, learn about your body, mind and spirit in Life, or experience larger than life science in Big 0 Park. COSI always has something going on in the halls, whether it is the many hallway exhibits or Science Ala Carte carts with roaming experiments. And do not forget to catch shows featuring rats playing basketball and the electrostatic generator—it is guaranteed to be a hair-raising time! Plus be sure to add on a giant screen movie in Ohio’s largest digital screen theater! Additional information is available by contacting COSI at 614-228-2674 or 888-819-2674, or on the Internet at www.cosi.org. COLUMBUS METROPOLITAN LIBRARY CENTER OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY ✧ The number one science center for families! QUALITY OF LIFE 143 ✧ White Castle, a fast food hamburger restaurant chain. The company’s headquarters is in Columbus. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 144 THE MARKETPLACE C o l u m b u s ’s re t a i l a n d commercial establishments offer an impressive variety of choices N o r t h A m e r i c a n B ro a d c a s t i n g C o m p a n y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 4 6 Drury Hotels ............................................................................150 T h e F l a g L a d y ’s F l a g S t o re . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 5 2 Capital Wholesale Drug Company ................................................154 Nationwide ...............................................................................156 Renaissance Columbus Downtown Hotel .........................................158 P o r t e r Wr i g h t M o r r i s & A r t h u r L L P . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 6 0 T h e We s t i n C o l u m b u s H o t e l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 6 2 S c h o e d i n g e r F u n e r a l a n d C re m a t i o n S e r v i c e . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 6 4 U.S. Bank .................................................................................165 C o l u m b u s C h a m b e r o f C o m m e rc e . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 6 6 Experience Columbus .................................................................167 Conway Center for Family Business ..............................................168 S u g a rd a d d y ’s S u m p t u o u s S w e e t i e s ® . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 6 9 Columbus Sign Company .............................................................170 Limited Brands ..........................................................................171 Heidelberg Distributing Company .................................................172 G re a t e r C o l u m b u s C o n v e n t i o n C e n t e r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 7 3 C e n t e r C i t y I n t e r n a t i o n a l Tr u c k s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 7 4 SPECIAL THANKS TO Columbus Sign Company THE MARKETPLACE 145 NORTH AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANY ✧ Right: Groundbreaking, left to right: Robert Fergus, John Fergus, George McConnaughey, Jr., Mayor Sensenbrenner, Bill Mnich, George McConnaughey, Roger Doerr, and John Gardiner. Below: In studio Sign-on, left to right: Norma Mnich with son Bill, Governor O’Neill, Bill Mnich and daughter Louise, April 1958. When WMNI, the first North American Broadcasting Company radio station went on the air in April of 1958, the Platters had the HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 146 number one hit record with Twilight Time, Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo was playing at movie theaters, Gunsmoke was tops with television viewers, and everybody “liked Ike.” Broadcasting from the top floor of the Southern Hotel at the corner of Columbus’ Main and High Streets, the WMNI “sign-on” was preceded by several days of a countdown that included space age sound effects, and the launch of a satellite. William R. Mnich proclaimed the “…launch of a new sound around town, which you will hear for the rest of your life….” A message from Governor C. William O’Neill and some of the top hit songs of the day followed. Mnich was North American Broadcasting’s majority stockholder. Others, who owned twelve percent each, were John C. Fergus, Robert H. Fergus, John H. Gardiner, and Roger M. Doerr. Their construction permit was delayed by Purdue University’s objection that WMNI would interfere with the university’s station on the same frequency in Lafayette, Indiana. After hearings and a subsequent policy change, the FCC ruled in favor of WMNI. The rule change is notable because it essentially paved the way for the favorable decision. George C. McConnaughey, a Columbus lawyer and FCC chairman from 1954 to 1957, played a significant role in the process. Although his duties as chairman prohibited him from being involved on North American’s behalf, he ensured that the new company understood how to navigate the process. John W. Galbreath and his son, Dan M. purchased the interests of all the original minority shareholders in 1960, and in 1965, Mnich acquired the Galbreath interest to become the sole owner. The company signed WRKZ (originally WMNI-FM) on the air in 1962, broadcasting from the same site as WMNI, an antenna atop one of the existing towers. In 1974 the company built a new 500 foot tower dedicated to the FM, and it was the station’s primary facility until 1988, when it was relocated to the WBNS tower, where a number of FM and TV stations are located. WTDA (103.9 FM) went on the air under a time brokerage agreement in September of 1998. North American Broadcasting acquired the station in March 1999. The station’s broadcast studios and business offices were located in the penthouse of the Southern Hotel from WMNI’s inception until December of 1984, when they were moved to the current facility at 1458 Dublin Road. The company maintains several transmitter facilities. WMNI’s remains in its original location on the north side of Grove City. WRKZ broadcasts from a tower adjacent to the WBNS-TV studios on Twin Rivers Drive, along with several other Columbus radio and TV stations. WTDA’s antenna is on the WOSU-TV tower just north of Westerville, which is the station’s city of license. Mnich managed day-to-day operations until his sudden death in December of 1981. His widow, Norma Mnich, assumed ownership and operational control, and continues as board chair. Their son, Matt, who was an account executive at the time of his father’s death, is president and CEO. Other officers are Nick Reed, secretary; Gerald Mosko, vice president/treasurer; Hal Fish, vice president of programming and operations; and Frank Fraas, vice president of sales. Company ownership remains within the Mnich family, which is represented by a board of directors composed of Norma Mnich, Matt Mnich, George C. McConnaughey Jr., Arthur D. Herrmann and Lee Guzzo. Mnich, the son of Czechoslovakian immigrants, enlisted in the U.S. Navy at age seventeen and served during World War II aboard a sub-chaser in the South Pacific. A graduate of Ohio University, he was student manager of the school’s radio stations in 1949, when WOUB-FM became one of the first full-fledged education FM stations in the country. His commercial radio career included work at WBEX in Chillicothe as an announcer, news and sports reporter, sales, and ultimately as general manager. While there he had an ownership interest in WLMJ, Jackson. In 1954 Mnich married Norma Marchi of Columbus, who worked as a home economist for Philco in Chillicothe following graduation from the College of St. Mary of the Springs (Ohio Dominican College). A first generation Italian, her parents came to America from northern Italy. After the birth of their first ✧ Above: WMNI tower delivery. Left: WMNI production studio. Below: WMNI early 1960s promotion. THE MARKETPLACE 147 ✧ Above: The Southern Theatre featuring WMNI’s Country Cavalcade. Right: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Hal Fish, and Greg Moebius, WBZX, 1999. child, the family moved to Columbus where Mnich was a salesman for WCOL-AM. By the early 1970s, WMNI AM/FM were rooted in the Southern Hotel, where amenities were convenient for visiting guests, entertainers and even staff during weather emergencies. In addition, the Southern Theatre housed live performances, which the station could broadcast. The Mnichs bought the historical hotel and theater in 1974, and sold the hotel following Mnich’s death. Originally, WMNI aired top ’40s music, with some entertainers performing live in the studios, as well as a full complement of news, sports and community information, live play-by-play of Ohio State football and men’s basketball, the Indianapolis 500 and Columbus Jets baseball. In 1961, WMNI began playing big band music then became one of the first largemarket stations north of the Mason-Dixon Line to switch to country music. It soon became one of the most influential country music stations in the U.S., helping launch number one hits and the careers of top artists including Conway Twitty. As teenagers, Barbara Mandrell and her sisters traveled to Columbus in a station wagon driven by their father to perform shows promoted by WMNI. Nashville artists and producers knew that if a song was a hit in Columbus, it would be a hit nationwide. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 148 WMNI promoted sellout appearances by the biggest stars in the 1960s and early 1970s on the Shower of Stars Show or the WMNI pavilion at the Ohio State Fair. Governor Jim Rhodes, a country music fan, frequently visited the station’s shows at the Fair. Known as the “Home of the Country Gentleman,” WMNI hosted personalities including Carl Wendelken, Bill Andrick, Ron Barlow, Doc Lemon, Bill Weber, “Uncle Joe” Cunningham and Spook Beckman. A strong news team led by Martin Petree maintained the station’s commitment to news and information. WMNI was the first station to provide daily traffic coverage from its “Eye in the Sky” helicopter in the 1960s. In the mid to late 1970s, nationally known entertainers appeared before packed houses at the Southern Theater. The shows were broadcast on WMNI and distributed to hundreds of other radio stations over the Mutual Radio Network. WMNI music shifted in 1995 to “adult standards,” including top hits from Nat King Cole, Johnny Mathis, Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, and others. A similar music mix continues today. When WMNI-FM went on the air in 1962, few FM receivers were in use, and early shows were often a simulcast of WMNI programming. The station split away for specialized coverage of sporting or community events, and in the mid 1970s was the home of the Cincinnati Reds. Rebranded WRMZ-FM, it moved in 1978 from contemporary easy listening to Disco, then to a modern country sound as FM-100 by 1980, and became Magic 99.7 in 1986, with new call letters, WMGG. When a “New Music Revolution” began in 1992, WBZX 99.7 “The Blitz” led the way for listeners who wanted the “Grunge” sounds of Seattle, and harder-edged music from bands like Metallica AC/DC and Ozzy Osbourne. The Blitz quickly became the top-rated rock station in Columbus and was instrumental in developing today’s “Active Rock.” It filled amphitheaters annually through the 1990s with its Blitz Anniversary Bash featuring up-and-coming artists like Kid Rock, Creed, Staind and Disturbed. Local personalities Suzy Waud and Mark The Shark hosted mornings and Ronni Hunter and Blazor rose to popularity along with the station. In 1998, The Blitz added The Howard Stern Show to its lineup. The often controversial “shock jock” was the perfect complement to The Blitz and Stern was the number one morning show for men ages 18 to 49 until Stern’s departure for Satellite radio in 2006. In an effort to differentiate itself from the several other stations offering “Grunge” music, The Blitz became “New Rock 99.7 The Blitz,” playing music primarily from the 1990s with emphasis on current Active Rock hits. This was successful, but after the “9/11 attacks,” the radio broadcast industry faced financial challenges that were particularly daunting to a “New Rock” station whose target audience was men 18 to 34. To broaden its audience, WBZX, “The Blitz” became WRKZ “The Rock,” which featured a broad mix of rock music from the 1980s through the 2000s, targeted to a 25-54 year old audience. Audience ratings and revenue sagged, and in 2010, a Rock Town Hall Meeting was held live on the air at 99.7 FM to allow listeners to make suggestions. Their primary suggestion was: “Bring back The Blitz!” Voting via a website, BlitzorRock.com brought the rebirth of The Blitz, which has more than doubled the audience compared to The Rock’s final days. The Blitz, which retained the call letters WRKZ, quickly became one of the nation’s highest rated stations of its kind. WEGE went on the air in 1998 as “Eagle 103.9” FM. The Eagle’s mix of “Classic Rock ‘n’ Roll Hits” primarily from the 1970s featured artists like Fleetwood Mac, The Steve Miller Band and Boston. By the early 2000s, the Columbus market had become crowded with Classic Hits/ Classic Rock flavored stations. The Eagle shifted emphasis to “Rockin’ 80’s and 70’s” in 2002 then experimented with variations of “Classic Rock” for two years. In 2004, North American Broadcasting introduced WTDA “TED FM” with the slogan “We Play Everything,” which was a popular format in other markets. Although the addition of The Bob and Tom Show improved morning ratings, TED FM never lived up to expectations. In 2007, the company debuted Columbus’ first FM “talk radio” station with “103.9 WTDA, Talk FM,” featuring The Glenn Beck Show and The Bob and Tom Show. Two years later The Glen Beck Show exercised its option to leave, moving to a cross-town rival, and North American Broadcasting moved The Bob and Tom Show to WRKZ “The Rock.” Talk FM was unable to recover its audience loss, and “Classic Hits” came to 103.9 in 2010. This format features adult rock hits from the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s. The station added local personality Greg Moebius as host of The Classic Five at Five each weekday afternoon, and 103.9 again found a niche in the Columbus radio market. ✧ Above: Blitz first anniversary show. Below: WTDA 2008 advertisement. THE MARKETPLACE 149 DRURY HOTELS ✧ Above: Lambert Drury hard at work on a Drury construction project. Below: The Drury family built their first Columbus hotel in 2002. With three Drury Hotels in Columbus, it is clear that the Drury family loves this Ohio city. The same spirit of determination and hard work that have driven Columbus for the last 200 years have also driven the Drury family from a small farm in the boot heel of Missouri to a hotel company with 130 locations in 20 states. The Drury brand was not born in a boardroom or on a golf course, but in the small town of Kelso, Missouri, with a farmer and his family. Lambert Drury taught his children the value of hard work, resilience and family. When baseball-sized hail destroyed a season’s worth of crops, Lambert gathered ice from the fields and made ice cream for his children. The lesson of that day lasted long after the ice cream melted: face challenges head on and work hard to make the best of what you have been given. In the 1960s, Lambert and his sons started a local plastering and construction company. As their reputation for quality and fairness grew, so did their vision for serving the community. In 1962 the Drury family bought a 108 room Holiday Inn, making their first entry into the hotel industry. Over time, the Drury’s became increasingly aware of the need for a valuefocused alternative to overpriced luxury hotels and cheap, dingy motels. Filling this void became, and remains, the Drury’s main objective in growing their family business. In 1973, the first Drury Inn was built in Sikeston, Missouri. Just off of I-55, HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 150 the hotel marked the start of a fresh approach to the industry: build and operate hotels internally, cutting costs, and passing the savings on to their guests. Not satisfied to simply expand, the Drury family began innovating new ways to offer guests additional value. Twenty-five years ago, “free breakfast” raised eyebrows of those in the hospitality industry. “Free hot breakfast” blew their minds. In the 1990s, Drury became the first hotel in its segment to offer free hot breakfast seven days a week and, soon after, became the first to offer free long-distance calls and, eventually, free evening beverages. At Drury, The Extras Aren’t Extra® is not just a tagline, it is a business model. Drury became the first hotel to offer free high speed Internet in 2003. In 2010, Drury had another first, becoming the first hotel to offer free hot food in the evening. Now along with free alcoholic beverages and soft drinks, all Drury hotels serve free hot food from a rotating menu at their 5:30 Kickback®. As Drury Hotels’ list of free amenities continued to expand, so did their locations. Not just a Midwest hotel company anymore, Drury operates multiple hotels in San Antonio, Atlanta, Houston, and many other cities throughout the United States. In search for another hub that provided travelers with not only a convenient stop on the road, but was also a vacation destination, the Drury family began plans to move into Columbus, Ohio. By the turn of the century, the Drury’s had purchased land in Columbus and were ready for construction. The year 2002 marked the opening of the very first Drury Inn & Suites in Columbus and the beginning of a very special relationship. Soon after, two more hotels followed. Drury has actively promoted the Columbus community through its Vacation Savings coupon guide. Partnering with the Columbus Zoo & Aquarium, Franklin Park Conservatory, Easton Town Center, the Columbus Crew, Columbus Blue Jackets, COSI, and more, Drury offers its guests special deals for these Columbus attractions. Like the city of Columbus, Drury understands that friendliness is more important than any attraction or amenity. All Drury team members practice the hotel system’s special breed of service: “+1 Service.” This Drury brand of service has helped the system earn five consecutive J. D. Power & Associate awards for “Highest in guest satisfaction among mid-scale limited service hotel chains.” As guests continue to book rooms at Drury Hotels, the Drury family is grateful that America’s Greatest Cities, like Columbus, have let them be a part of their proud communities. Drury strives to provide an enjoyable stay for their guests and relies heavily on the team members at each location to bring customers back again and again. Thirty-eight years and 130 hotels after Lambert Drury opened the first Drury Inn, the Drury family is grateful for the opportunities afforded to the entire Drury family— now 4,000 team members strong. President and CEO Chuck Drury remembers the humble upbringings of the company. “We really didn’t start out to build a hotel system across the country,” says Drury. “What we really wanted to do was provide the customer with quality service and amenities each and every day, each and every stay.” The same spirit that inspired Lambert Drury to turn hail to ice cream still inspires the Drury brothers today. The Drury family remains driven to provide quality rooms at affordable rates, add new, free amenities, and strive for an enjoyable stay for its guests. ✧ Above: The Drury Inn & Suites in south Columbus. Below: Drury Hotels has been providing guests with clean, comfortable rooms since 1973. THE MARKETPLACE 151 THE FLAG LADY’S FLAG STORE ✧ Mary Haley Leavitt, with her son and daughter, Andy Leavitt and Lori Watson. Mary Haley Leavitt sells more than flags. She is an extraordinary vendor of patriotism and love of the United States. Her story is as tied to national allegiance as are the colors of Our Flag. And anyone who questions whether this devotion is merely a matter of good business— considering the business she is in—will discover from her life story that she is totally sincere. Mary’s commitment to the United States began in childhood. “Patriotism is in my blood,” she says. Her Irish father’s family served in the American Revolution, Battle of Tippecanoe, War of 1812, and her great-grandfather was a Captain in the Civil War. Grandma Haley always carried a hand-held U.S. flag in her purse. One day Mary asked, “Grandma Haley, why do you always carry that flag in your purse?” She replied, “Who knows, I may get a chance to wave it today.” Her mother had two rules in the Haley home: “Don’t let the flag touch the floor and don’t set anything on top of the Bible.” During WWII, when Mary was five, her brother (fifteen years older) was in the U.S. Navy serving in the south Pacific. Her mother displayed the flag, hung the blue service star banner in the window and dressed Mary in red, white and blue. Her father was an Air Raid Warden and, together, they gathered scrap metal for the war effort. They listened to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s fireside chats over the Philco radio and stood and faced the east with their hands over their hearts when the National Anthem was played. As a “Railroader’s Daughter,” Mary remembers taking train trips to Indianapolis to visit her grandparents almost every weekend. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 152 “White-haired ladies gave their seats to servicemen; buffets were set up in the train station for them to have one more hot meal before heading off to war; every Saturday we walked through the biggest park from one grandparent’s home to the other and saw trucks with red crosses, ambulances, bands marching with ‘Old Glory’ leading the parade. When Our Flag passed us, everybody put their hands over their hearts.” Time marched on. Mary married her high school sweetheart, Tom. When he was transferred from “Good Ole Hometown Columbus” to Chicago, the family, which included three children, Lori, Andy and Charlie, lived in Libertyville because Mary loved the name. After completing high school, their son, Andy, joined the U.S. Navy and the Iranian Crisis occurred. In 1979, Mary got caught up with a message from a D.J. urging his listeners to “Fly your flag, put a candle in the window and a yellow ribbon around the tree.” Mary could not find her flag, nor did any merchant have the U.S. Flag in stock because it was not “flag season.” She went to a flag company thirty-five miles away, but he only sold wholesale. Explaining about her son’s service, Mary talked him into selling her a U.S. flag. While walking out, she got an idea and asked him if she could have twelve flags to sell door-to-door in Libertyville. He said, “Who do you think I am, the Avon Lady of the flag world?” He gave her twelve flags and told her to have the flags or the money to him the next Saturday. She had the money there in four days and he gave her twelve more…and the beat went on. Mary got a new idea: Watch for tattered flags flying from company flagpoles and sell them a new one. Her first stop was at a bank, where a Libertyville News reporter heard her sales pitch and wrote a story headlined “Woman Sells U.S. Flag Door-to-Door.” A reporter from the Chicago Sun Times called Mary the next week for an interview for President’s Week. The story and her picture were on the front page of the Midweek Magazine, entitled “Meet The Flag Lady.” On that day, February 15, 1980, unbeknownst to her, she began her “Journey to the Flag Lady’s Flag Store.” In 1982, Tom was transferred back to Columbus and Mary resumed her career as a legal secretary at Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease, and continued selling flags downtown during her lunch break. Her fervor for the American flag impressed Bob Caldwell, a Columbus car dealer, when she asked him if he would donate a large U.S.A. and Ohio flag to display in the new addition of Veterans Memorial. He not only donated the flags, he encouraged her to sell flags full-time, and also offered to help jump-start her business. In 1985, as the business took over more rooms of their home, she followed Tom’s suggestion to open the first storefront on Indianola Avenue. The “1492” telephone number she requested was not available, but “1776” was—so 263-1776 became the store’s telephone number. In 1986 she started the custom flag and banner business in a warehouse space along the railroad tracks behind the storefront. Tom used to say, “If we don’t have it, we’ll find it; if we can’t find it, we’ll make it.” In 1989 she took over the entire warehouse building and combined the retail and custom departments. The Persian Gulf situation occurred. Customers packed into her store “and my customers told me I was on TV more than Tom Brokaw,” Mary says. “They nicknamed us ‘The Store with the Spirit.’” In 1992 the store moved to 4567 North High Street in Beechwold. She added a “Stars and Stripes” awning above the front and the two back entrances and it became known as “The Store with the Stars and Stripes Awning.” Mary heard someone mention she might have a hard time because the customers could not park in the front. She called a sign company to order a neon sign for her front window with “Park in the back.” The salesman said, “You mean, ‘Park in the rear?’” She said, “No, the opposite of ‘front’ is ‘back.’” The Flag Lady’s Flag Store is a drop-off point for her customers to “retire” their “Old Glory” which is no longer suitable for display and receive ten percent off their new one. “Our American flags are made in the U.S.A.” The business retail side has many other items, such as military flags and gifts; international, state, historical and church flags; bunting, grave markers, flagpoles, sports flags for schools, colleges and professional teams, and much more. The Flag Lady’s custom department has a resourceful graphic artist and skilled seamstresses, who will help our customers rally, motivate, celebrate and identify their idea with custom flags and banners, parade and podium banners, tradeshow exhibits, family crests and much more. Thousands of Ohio State University flags, sewn by The Flag Lady’s Flag Store, are sold each year and are another reason to visit the store. “For twenty years, Brutus Buckeye and the cheerleaders have entered on the football field with Buckeye flags made by The Flag Lady’s Flag Store. “We Flag the Team.” Mary says, “I can’t believe I started my journey to The Flag Lady’s Flag Store over thirty years ago.” She has been told she is one of the top five retail flag stores in the U.S.A. Tom, “the wind under my wings,” passed away in 2001. The Flag Lady’s Flag Store is entrenched in the business with passion, love and enthusiasm. “Our store is about our customers, veterans, communities, businesses, corporations, schools and churches. We believe in customer service, quality products and timely deliveries.” All her children and grandchildren have participated in the business. Her daughter, Lori Watson, is vice president, joined in 1993. Andy, “The Flag Man,” is director of Home and Business Services Door-to-Door. “We are blessed with loyal, dedicated employees. The Flag Lady’s Flag Store is proud to be “Small Business America—the backbone of the U.S.A.” Mary is a founder of Clintonville Chamber of Commerce and National Independent Flag Dealers Association (NIFDA), which is dedicated to preserving manufacturing of the U.S.A. flag in the U.S.A. She serves on the Leadership and Safe Trust Committee of National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB)—“The Voice of Small Business.” Lori served as president of NIFDA for two terms and is serving on the board of directors of Clintonville Chamber of Commerce. “Our Flag represents our forefathers, who sacrificed their lives, fortunes and sacred honor for ‘We the People.’ It has no other character than that which we give it from generation to generation. God is chairman of the board; ‘Old Glory’ goes before us and is the backbone of our company.” “You are the ‘U’ in the U.S.A. and God Bless America!” THE MARKETPLACE 153 CAPITAL WHOLESALE DRUG COMPANY ✧ Above: Historic building at 343 North Front Street. Right: Grand staircase of the historic building that went to the second floor with the Capital Wholesale Drug Company and a beautiful brass rail. Below: The photograph was taken during one of the firm’s board of directors’ meetings in 1978 and features (from left to right) Linda R. Richards, treasurer; Dr. Marvin Roszmann, board member; Dan Scarberry, secretary; H. B. Henry R.Ph., chairman; George D. Richards R.Ph., president; George K. Richards, vice president; and David L. Franklin, vice president. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 154 Capital Wholesale Drug Company is a family owned distribution company founded in 1950 by George D. Richards R.Ph., Edwin Hoffman R.Ph., and Richard Longenbaker. At that time, Capital served hospitals and hundreds of retail pharmacies in Ohio. It was a time when most retail pharmacies were independently owned. Since 1950, Capital Wholesale Drug Company has moved once. Capital’s two locations reflect not only the growth and change of the business but also represent the rapid growth of the Columbus region. In 1950, Capital was located at 343 North Front Street, Columbus, Ohio. The building was originally constructed by the “Moline Plow Company” and later converted to be used for distribution. This historic building is still standing in the redeveloped central city area called the “Arena District.” In 1984, Capital moved to its current location at 873 Williams Avenue in Grandview Heights, Ohio, and is once again surrounded by change. This warehouse district is being transformed into a multiple use area, “The Grandview Yard.” In the 1970s, when his partners retired, George D. was joined by his daughter Linda R. Richards and his son George K. Richards. A few years later, David L. Franklin joined the management team. The 1980s and 1990s were a period of consolidation at both the retail pharmacy and the drug wholesale level. The hundreds of independent retail pharmacies in the greater Columbus market dwindled to a handful as national chain retailers took their place. At the national level, the 200 drug wholesalers who were often family-owned also declined as the era of the national chain wholesalers evolved. It was a time when the local independent wholesaler had to search for new market opportunities. During this period Capital watched as the trade associations in which they maintained active membership also merged and Capital eventually became a member of Healthcare Distribution Management Association (HDMA), Washington D.C., which represents the collective interests of drug wholesalers with manufacturers and various government agencies. By the beginning of the new millennium, the number of authorized distributors of record (ADR) had declined to less than thirty drug wholesalers nationwide. Capital Wholesale Drug Company remains one of these top tier wholesalers and purchases directly from all major pharmaceutical manufacturers. The key to Capital’s success is daily focus on efficient operations and customer service. Capital has reinvented itself on multiple fronts, including information technology and expanding its geographic market area. The ever-increasing power of computers is a key component allowing Capital to be more efficient and to operate on smaller margins. The other factor that facilitates Capital’s success is its use of overnight delivery service provided by public carriers, which allows Capital to service pharmacies and hospitals in forty-eight states. Being in a single location is no longer an obstacle to participating in the national marketplace. Capital Wholesale Drug Company and the other drug wholesalers are an important link in the pharmaceutical supply chain: • Nearly eighty-six percent of prescription medicines sold in the United States are stored, managed and delivered by drug wholesalers on the way from manufacturers to pharmacy settings. • Wholesalers utilize cutting-edge technologies to further improve safety and security, streamline operations and inventory management, reduce errors and enhance patient health. • In emergencies, drug wholesalers leverage their logistics expertise to rapidly deliver medical supplies and disaster aid packages around the clock to affected communities. At ninety-one years young, George D. is chairman, and comes to work daily. The third generation of the Richards family has joined the company with the addition of his granddaughter Sarah Richards. At the end of the day, the company still flourishes because of the close-knit family and the sixty associates who identify with the concept of a “family business.” ✧ Current location at 873 Williams Avenue in Grandview Heights, Ohio. THE MARKETPLACE 155 NATIONWIDE ✧ Above: Early headquarters of Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, now Nationwide, included the Southern Hotel and this building on East Broad Street. Below: Murray Lincoln, long-time Nationwide president and one of the company’s founders, left, talks with farmers about doing business with Farm Bureau Mutual. Nationwide is one of the world’s largest insurance and financial service companies, with more than 15 million customers. It was founded on the idea that the company could help people do things together that they could not do alone. As a mutual company, it exists to serve the best interests of its customers. Leaders of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation (OFBF) were exploring insurance as a member benefit in 1925, when they were approached by the leader of another insurance company, who proposed a sponsorship agreement. The Ohio Department of Insurance nixed a deal with the out-of-state businessman, however, forcing OFBF, led by its executive secretary Murray Lincoln, to consider starting its own auto insurance company. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 156 OFBF believed that because Ohio farmers had fewer accidents than city folks did, they should pay less for auto insurance. Motivated by that belief, OFBF incorporated the Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile Insurance Company late in 1925. The Federation loaned the new company $10,000 to open a one-room office in downtown Columbus with three employees. Twenty part-time agents, who volunteered to sell auto insurance policies without commission, obtained 1,000 applications, and Farm Bureau Mutual officially started business April 10, 1926. Ezra Anstaett, the company’s first employee and general agent, used his experience working with county farm boards to develop new and unique sales methods. He created a direct mail campaign, illustrated sales kits, sales training, sales manuals, and a weekly sales bulletin to inform and motivate the agency force, which had a slogan of “Fair, Frank, Firm and Friendly.” The company’s first office was in the Southern Hotel in Columbus. The first company car, a temperamental, 1926 two-door Nash, was acquired from a policyholder who had crashed it, then refused to accept it after the company had it repaired. Although it offered just auto insurance, and only in Ohio, the company was so successful that rural drivers in other states soon sought coverage. In response, the company expanded to seven other states by 1928. It added residents of towns and small cities in 1931, and metropolitan area residents in 1934. Introduction of a fire insurance company in 1934 followed by the purchase of a struggling life insurance company the next year, brought total personal protection to customers. Farm Bureau Mutual agents were first in the country to offer both property/casualty and life insurance to consumers. When World War II interrupted expansion, Farm Bureau Mutual operated in twelve states and the District of Columbia. Territorial growth resumed in 1951 and accelerated in 1956. Farm Bureau Mutual started a 5,000-watt, daytime-only radio station from a hotel in Worthington, Ohio in 1947, to promote its insurance products and Farm Bureau services. Its communications holdings grew to nineteenth in the nation. In 1955 the Ohio Department of Insurance forced a split of the insurance business from the OFBF. Under the new name of Nationwide, with Murray Lincoln as president, the company continued to innovate. It grew through multiline selling, pioneering the sale of life insurance and mutual funds by its agents. Although both the insurance and securities industries vigorously opposed this bold move, many leading insurance companies eventually followed Nationwide’s lead into mutual funds. Over the years, Nationwide expanded its businesses, either creating or acquiring other companies. Columbus has been home to Nationwide since its beginning, and the company has always given back to the community. In 1974, CEO Dean Jeffers’ commitment to urban renewal led to construction of the company’s new headquarters in downtown Columbus. This sparked development, leading to a new convention center, hotels, restaurants and other businesses. CEO Dimon McFerson directed Nationwide to build a civic arena to provide a home for the Columbus Blue Jackets of the National Hockey League in 1997. That led to creation of the Arena District, adding dining, businesses and urban housing. Located immediately northwest of Nationwide’s Home Office complex, the Arena District is developed, managed and marketed by Nationwide Realty Investors, its real estate development affiliate. The company’s long-standing support of Nationwide Children’s Hospital, highly successful United Way campaigns, blood donations and food drives cement Nationwide as the leading corporate citizen in Central Ohio. Today, more than 10,000 of Nationwide’s associates are located in central Ohio. The company’s full range of insurance products includes vehicles, homeowners, agribusiness, commercial and pet insurance. Its financial services include life insurance, annuities, mutual funds, retirement plans, and banking. Nationwide is committed to helping people protect the most important things in their lives—their families, property and financial futures. The company’s success has helped it protect and serve the communities where Nationwiders live and work and make a positive difference in the lives of others. Nationwide is proud of its history of community involvement, truly reflecting its On Your Side® brand promise. ✧ Left: In 1926, Ezra Anstaett, Farm Bureau Mutual’s first employee and general agent, signs the first policy issued by the company as Murray Lincoln and Ohio Farm Bureau President Lee Palmer look on. Today, Nationwide has more than 15 million policies in force. Right: Former Nationwide CEO Dean Jeffers displays the model for Nationwide’s current headquarters, which sparked the 1970s revitalization of the northern part of downtown Columbus. THE MARKETPLACE 157 RENAISSANCE COLUMBUS DOWNTOWN HOTEL When did you last discover a hotel that married purpose with panache so seamlessly? From where it sits on the corner of a fabulous downtown location, the Renaissance Columbus Downtown Hotel corners the market on bringing great minds together and ideas to life—in a most unconventional center. But the Renaissance Columbus Downtown Hotel is part of a bigger story: the Marriott story. The history of the Marriott hotel chain began with a nine-seat root beer stand, coined “the Hot Shoppes” opened in 1927 by J. W. Marriott and his wife, Alice Sheets-Marriott, in Washington, D.C. Despite the challenges of the Great Depression, hard work and intuitive business ingenuity enabled the Marriotts to thrive and build a chain of restaurants that would become the foundation of their business empire. In 1957, after beginning the company as a concept restaurant/café, they directed their endeavors to the lodging industry with the opening of the 500-room Crystal City Marriott in Arlington, Virginia. Widely known in the power circles of Washington, D.C., the Marriotts built lasting personal and business relationships with many renowned personages of the day. A biography of J. W. Marriott Sr., has been shown several times on the History Channel and on MSNBC. One of the remarkable stories from his youth occurred while he was still herding sheep for his family. At the time of the incident he was too young to be permitted to ride the train alone when a large flock of sheep was transported from Utah to Texas. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 158 Marriott rode his horse to meet the train when it made its final destination in Texas. Without human supervision during the trip, many of the Marriott family’s sheep and those of others got mixed, but when owners were called upon to separate them, Marriott did so without apparent difficulty. When his father asked later how he was able to do this, Marriott replied, “I just selected all the biggest sheep,” an indication of the keen business insight that would serve him well throughout his career. This insight, along with his defining principle of the hotel business: “Take care of your associates and they will take care of the guests” stands at the forefront of Marriott business successes almost a century later. Marriott now has 143 Renaissance Hotels across twenty-eight countries. Renaissance believes that travel (either on a jet stream in the clouds or across the fiber optic universe) is always a chance to find something wonderfully new and different. We created Renaissance for travelers. Those who seek new adventures and discoveries. With its enviable Capitol Square foothold among the city’s most dynamic business, entertainment and cultural hot spots, the Renaissance Columbus is the perfect location to explore and discover something new. Leave it up to our onsite Navigators to give you the local lowdown. They will lead the way to wonderfully new experiences with up-to-date recommendations on the best, most authentic and undiscovered things that Columbus has to offer. But there is plenty to discover without even leaving the hotel. It is usually the subtlest touches that make the biggest impressions. Our 376 guest rooms are sophisticated retreats, where comfort and technology peacefully coexist. Custom duvets and an abundance of plump pillows deliver the promise of a great night’s sleep. High-speed Internet access allows for an instant connection—to work, home or a favorite blog. And our suites? A whole new level of luxury defines our most spacious accommodations. Or, take a moment to enjoy the rarefied air of relaxation on our rooftop poolside patio. Some of Columbus’ best musicians entertain Renaissance guests here on seasonally warm evenings. But helping our guests discover Columbus is not the only way we are connected to the neighborhood. Always heavily invested in giving back to the community throughout its history, the Marriott family is involved in a wide variety of community and charitable activities. From education foundations to charitable organizations, awards for community service and accolades from many distinguished entities have lauded the Marriott family of businesses for their commitment to give back—best encapsulated in the second part of the company’s mission statement: Spirit to serve our Associates, Spirit to serve our Guests and Spirit to serve our Communities. Three of the prominent charities for which the Renaissance Columbus Downtown Hotel raises funds each year are Children’s Miracle Network, United Way, and the Ronald McDonald House, along with many other local organizations. Specific corporate awards—the Alice Marriott Award for Community Service and the J. W. Marriott Award of Excellence—are given annually to selected hotels. In 2010 the Renaissance Columbus Downtown Hotel was awarded the prestigious AAA Four Diamond Award. Only five percent of all hotels ever achieve a rating above three diamonds. The dramatic $16 million renovation, with its stylish and innovative indoor and outdoor event facilities, provides the perfect backdrop for business meetings and social gatherings. It was also selected from among fifty-four venues as a 2010 winner in The Knot Best of Weddings for its wedding reception venue. This distinction was given by local brides in an independent survey by The Knot and Wedding Channel. At this stylish downtown hotel, which is located near many local attractions including Nationwide Arena, COSI, the Convention Center, and popular museums and theaters, guests are eligible for package deals, some of which include admission to these destinations. So are you ready? Ready to escape and try something new? Soak in the local flavor of Columbus. There really is so much to see and do, and we will navigate the local experiences just for you. Find our special deals and packages so you can take it all in on the Internet at www.renaissancecolumbus.com. THE MARKETPLACE 159 PORTER WRIGHT MORRIS & ARTHUR LLP As a twenty-first century law firm, Porter Wright has proven to be a nimble, thoughtful partner evolving to meet the needs of its clients, from new entities to those it has represented for over a century. The diverse professional backgrounds of Porter Wright’s attorneys allow the Firm to provide advice that works in an everchanging business environment. The Firm has developed a portfolio of attorney experience focused on meeting both the business and legal goals of its clients, including former software engineers, former in-house counsel in various industries and experts in the fields of health care, nanotechnology and bioscience. It is this first-hand experience that gives Porter Wright attorneys a big-picture perspective. The Firm has the highest percentage of The Best Lawyers in America® 2011 of all large Ohio firms and has been recognized as a leading law firm by BTI Client Service Leader, Chambers USA 2011 and US News–Best Lawyers Best Law firms 2011®. Tracing its roots to 1846, Porter Wright has represented some of the most successful businesses in Ohio and across the nation. The Firm has provided service to its clients for more than a century and a half and is enduringly linked to the history of law in Ohio. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 160 The Firm’s founder, Richard Harrison, set up shop at a small desk in the London, Ohio, Courthouse 165 years ago. He traveled to surrounding small towns, assisting clients in resolving disputes and addressing legal issues. Harrison also served Madison County in the House of Representatives and later was a member of the Ohio Senate. As a Congressman during the Civil War, Harrison participated in deliberations that helped shape the country’s future. After retiring from public office, Harrison moved his practice to Columbus, Ohio, where it began to thrive. Harrison was named president of the Ohio State Bar Association, and the Firm played a key role in the Boesel railroad cases, which challenged the constitutionality of municipal use of taxpayer funds to develop railroad lines for future sale to railroad companies. Harrison quickly gained a reputation as one of the best lawyers in the state. As the nation expanded, the Firm’s representation of the railroad industry grew to include The Pennsylvania Railroad Co. and American Railway Express Co. By the turn of the century, the Firm had become counsel to P. W. Huntington & Co. Bankers, Columbus Iron and Steel Co., and Columbus Gas Light and Heating Co. The Firm also represented utility industry pioneers including Ohio Bell Telephone Co., The Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co., and Postal Telegraph Co. By the 1950s, the Firm’s clientele had grown to include The Klingbeil Company, The Columbus Museum of Art, Max & Erma’s and White Castle. The Firm gained national exposure through “The Harding Papers” case in the mid-1960s. Earl Morris, a Porter Wright partner who later served as Ohio’s first American Bar Association President, was deeply involved in the highprofile matter concerning the love letters of former President Warren G. Harding. At the time, the case brought together some of the most preeminent legal minds in the state. As the Firm’s statewide and national reputation grew, it undertook some of the most challenging issues of the times. In the late 1970s, partner Sam Porter defended the Columbus Board of Education in litigation related to desegregation of the Columbus Public Schools. When the Harvard Defense Fund and the NAACP filed suit against the Columbus Board of Education, the Board turned to Porter to lead the defense team. Porter recalls, “During the civil strife of the 1960s and 1970s, the school system became one of the battlegrounds.” Although considerable unrest surrounded these suits elsewhere, “...there was never any violence. All parties and lawyers maintained civility and decorum and the local media was very careful to report the issue objectively.” In 1977, the Firm achieved a significant milestone—merging to form Porter, Wright, Morris and Arthur. At the time, it was the largest merger of two law firms in Ohio and one of the earliest of such mergers nationally. It was a successful combination that has stood the test of time. In the years following, the Firm added offices in Washington, D.C.; Cincinnati, Dayton and Cleveland, Ohio; and Naples, Florida. In the early 1980s, Porter Wright had more offices in Ohio than any other law firm. The Firm’s strength proved critical in 1985 when The State of Ohio retained Porter Wright following the collapse of Home State Savings Bank, then the largest bank crisis since the Great Depression. The Firm’s work resulted in significant new legislation and recovery of over $200 million needed to protect Home State’s depositors. The year also marked the date the Firm moved into its current Columbus offices in the Huntington Center at 41 South High Street. Since that time, Porter Wright has served clients in many important cases, including the representation of the Columbus-America Discovery Group in its efforts to win rights to the treasure discovered aboard the sunken ship, SS Central America, in the 1980s and 1990s. Porter Wright has also helped entrepreneurial and technology companies to grow and expand their businesses, including Checkfree Corporation (now Fiserve), which grew to become a Fortune 500 financial services company. The Firm recently led the successful defense of a coal mining permit to mine under a National Natural Landmark forest, recovering $4.7 million from the State of Ohio for a regulatory taking of coal property. The Ohio underground mining industry views this as the seminal precedent protecting private property rights against regulation that effectively prevents mining. Managing Partner Robert “Buzz” Trafford notes: “For more than 150 years, our attorneys have worked to preserve the integrity and professionalism that was the hallmark of our founder—Richard Harrison. Through several wars, the Great Depression, recessions and years of social unrest, our firm has weathered change in the nation, state and the legal profession itself with resilience and growth. We recognize that the Firm’s success is due to our commitment to clients and community and to our adherence to the highest standards of the legal profession.” THE MARKETPLACE 161 THE WESTIN COLUMBUS HOTEL A historic landmark elegantly styled for the twenty-first century traveler, The Westin Columbus offers today’s guests the utmost in gracious service and luxurious surroundings, as it has since the hotel’s grand opening in 1897. This AAA Four Diamond hotel for HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 162 fourteen consecutive years is ideally situated in the heart of the downtown Columbus business district, within walking distance of the convention center, sporting and cultural venues, and some of the city’s finest shopping and attractions, including the State Capital, Arena District, Brewery District, German Village, Ohio Center of Science & Industry, Columbus Commons, the Scioto Mile, and the Short North Area. Originally known as the Great Southern Fireproof Hotel and Opera House, the building fulfilled a promise by city leaders to build the “showcase of the Midwest.” The decade before the hotel’s opening had been a tragic one for Ohio’s capital, with fires having claimed three other hotels, the Seneca, the Deshler, and the Vendome. This grand new hotel had been financed on the dreams of 400 men who invested $100 each toward its construction. Visitors at the building’s opening toured the gem of all lobbies, the café or supper room, lavatory, travelers’ exchange (containing railroad, ticket, telegraph, transfer company and telephone offices), check rooms and bar, billiard, reading and writing rooms, barber shop and five stores. Many had never seen such an outstanding example of French Renaissance architecture. They marveled at the open-air feeling as they strolled in the promenade on the second floor, which was reached either by the grand stairway or elevators. The promenade connected with spacious parlors offering views of High Street, as well as leading directly to the main dining room, maids’ dining room, ordinary (breakfast) room, private dining room and guest chamber corridor. As J. M. Lee, the general manager, welcomed the visitors, they marveled at the lobby’s extreme size. Its 46 by 90-foot expanse rose to the height of the second and third floors. A decorative arch screened and secluded the musicians’ gallery. With six fluted pilasters on each side and dome capitals surmounted by an ornate entendres, the dining room’s appearance was second to none in the country. Parlors were finished in white enamel and gold with unique designs. More than a few of the ladies present retired to the comfort of the seating arrangements there to escape from the men’s cigar smoke. At the time it opened, the Great Southern housed 222 guest rooms, with 2 club rooms, 56 private bathrooms and 8 public baths. Guest chambers on the second, third, and fourth floors were finished in plain oak, with yellow pine completing the rest. The structure was far ahead of its time, housing the latest equipment for electric work, call bells, heating, ventilating and plumbing. The basement held huge coal-fired boilers in addition to the building’s water supply, provided by three separate wells. Then, as now, the hotel offered guests the utmost in gracious service and luxurious surroundings. The historic Westin Columbus is elegantly styled for the twenty-first century traveler. Its exquisite architecture includes original stained-glass windows and crystal chandeliers, with special touches reminding today’s guests that history provided the inspiration for this stately hostelry. With over 12,000 square feet of meeting space, The Westin Columbus can accommodate virtually any meeting or event imaginable. In addition to the grandeur and elegance of the stunning Grand Ballroom—the city’s premier event site—the hotel provides smaller meeting and breakfast rooms, as well as an exclusive boardroom for intimate meetings. Guests can enjoy a complimentary state-ofthe-art fitness center that is open twenty-four hours a day, as well as convenient access to multiple jogging paths, several unique golf courses, tennis courts and swimming facilities. Hotel services include twenty-four hour room service, running maps by Runner’s World, highspeed Internet access in the business center and free high-speed Internet access in public areas, air conditioned and handicap accessible facilities, dry cleaning and wake-up service availability, smoke detectors, safe deposit boxes, luggage storage, valet service, pay selfparking facilities, and much more. With 188 luxurious guest rooms, including twenty-one spacious suites, The Westin Columbus provides everything from rooms that are perfect for the solo traveler to the most spacious and luxurious suites and other accommodations available anywhere. Amenities include smoke-free rooms, windows that open, coffee and tea maker, mini bar and refreshment center, beds for babies, older children and pets, a restaurant and lounge, coffee bar, and many other luxurious features are also available. As a member of the Starwood family of hotels, The Westin Columbus offers Starwood Preferred Guest and Starwood Preferred Planner points. You may refer to The Westin Columbus website at www.westincolumbus.com or the Starwood website at www.starwoodhotels.com for special promotional offers for individual or group travel. The Westin Columbus is the hotel of choice for individuals or families, business or pleasure travelers. THE MARKETPLACE 163 SCHOEDINGER FUNERAL AND CREMATION SERVICE In 1855, German immigrant Philip Schoedinger transitioned his cabinet making business into one making caskets. After Philip’s sons, George J. and J. Albert, joined the business a few years later, it saw such innovations as addition of the first automobile hearse, and at 229 East State Street, the first chapel built expressly for funeral service and one of the earliest in America of such magnitude. The bell tower there is a city landmark. Schoedinger was among the first companies offering an air-conditioned building, the first motor hearse in Central Ohio, and the first offering guaranteed advance funeral arrangements. Fifth and sixth generation family members, along with forty licensed funeral directors, now operate fourteen neighborhood chapels and four crematories under the Schoedinger name. Schoedinger designed the MourningStar funeral arrangement process that creates healing experiences. Through a unique life exploration process, families share about a life lived, and then work together to create opportunities to share memories, express emotions, and find comforting support. Whether you choose burial or cremation, the need for acknowledgement of the loss with family and friends is ever present. Together, they develop meaningful ceremonies to express a person’s individuality and find healthy ways to honor their life. For families who consider their pets to be family members, Schoedinger offers full pet HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 164 cremation and memorialization services at three crematories used only for pets. Each family receives their pet’s cremated remains in a wood-stained ornamental urn, a paw print, fur clipping, and grief-support materials. Schoedinger pioneered advanced planning in the 1970s, being the first to offer guaranteed preneed plans. Pre-funding reduces assets and can help if a family needs to apply for Medicaid. The company is also Central Ohio’s only funeral home providing a fulltime, professionally trained bereavement specialist to help families deal with loss. This specialist often goes into schools to help children who have faced loss, frequently offering a H.U.G.S. program to teach children and their families how to talk about and deal with loss. Schoedinger holds Selected Independent Funeral Homes membership, available by invitation to only one funeral service in each community; has been recognized as one of the top three family-owned businesses in the country; was the inaugural recipient of the 1999 Family Business of the Year Award given by the Family Business Center of Central Ohio; and won the 2000 Better Business Bureau of Central Ohio’s Integrity Award and CEO Magazine’s “Best Places to Work” Award. U.S. Bank operates under the secondoldest continuous banking charter in our nation. It was originally signed July 13, 1863 by Hugh McCullough, the Comptroller of the Currency under Abraham Lincoln for the First National Bank of Cincinnati, National Charter #24. The bank entered Central Ohio on July 1, 1985 with the acquisition of the Ohio State Bank/Columbus, first established in December 1950. Deposits were approximately $240 million with eighteen offices throughout the Columbus area. In 1988 all subsidiary banks of First National Cincinnati Corporation began to operate under the shared name Star Bank. On July 14, 1995, Star Bank acquired Household Bank/Columbus. This acquisition gave Star Bank/Columbus thirty-five fullservice banking locations. In 1995, Richard K. Davis, then executive vice president of Star Banc Corporation's consumer banking division, and now president and CEO of U.S. Bancorp, the parent company of U.S. Bank, said the acquisition served to reaffirm the company’s commitment to expand its banking presence and underscored its desire to be a more important part of Central Ohio. By early 1999, all Star Bank branches in Central Ohio were renamed Firstar Bank, following Star Banc Corporation’s $8 billion acquisition of Milwaukee’s Firstar Corporation. These branches became U.S. Bank in 2001 as a result of Firstar Corporation acquiring Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp. In December 2007 the Columbus headquarters was moved from 175 South Third Street to the northwest corner of Broad and High Street, and proudly placed U.S. Bank’s name atop the One Columbus Building, a key downtown landmark. It also made headlines in 2010 when it donated more than $1 million dollars to The Ohio State University with the unveiling of a new U.S. Bank branch inside of the new Ohio Union. The U.S. Bank Conference Theater inside the Ohio Union can accommodate up to three hundred individuals for OSU lectures and community events. U.S. Bank, both locally and nationally, has undergone explosive growth over the past decade, and is now the fifth largest commercial bank in the nation. As of January 2011, U.S. Bank in Columbus has deposits of approximately $1.1 billion, operates 44 traditional and in-store/on-site branch locations and has 400 U.S. Bank associates. U.S. Bank operates 331 branches throughout Ohio. The following bank leaders have supported the Columbus community over the years in their role as market president: James Gatton, Linda Page, Tom Green, Bob McLaughlin, John Christy, Tom Lakin, Doug Wyatt, as well as Dave Sceva. Current U.S. Bank/Columbus advisory board members who also encourage a dialogue between the bank and its diverse community partners include: Jane Abell, John Cadwallader, Mike Crane, Pete Davies, Stephanie Hightower, Doug Mayr, Chuck Murlin, Larry Ruben, and Jim Wyland. U.S. BANK ✧ Top, left: U.S. Bank regional headquarters in Columbus. Above: U.S. Bank operates today under the original First National Bank of Cincinnati National Charter #24, which is now the second-oldest continuous charter in the nation. It was signed on July 13, 1863 by Hugh McCullough, the Comptroller of the Currency under Abraham Lincoln. Below: Dave Sceva, former U.S. Bank Columbus market president (left), Dr. Gordon Gee, OSU president (center), and Kyle Grusczynski, U.S. Bank OSU branch manager (right). THE MARKETPLACE 165 COLUMBUS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ✧ North Bank Park and the Columbus skyline. COURTESY OF RANDALL LEE SCHIEBER. A guiding force for more than 126 years, the Columbus Chamber continues to help grow the Columbus Region economy, one business at a time. From our establishment as the Columbus Board of Trade in 1884 and into the twentyfirst century, this organization has been the voice of business in Columbus—advocating for, leading and supporting the progress of business in this region, which is now home to 2 million people and 60,000 businesses. Together with government and our partners, we have cultivated a diverse and sustainable economy. Indeed, Columbus is one of the fastest growing major metropolitan areas in the Midwest. Now, as we celebrate the city’s bicentennial and stand on the verge of the region’s boldest and most aggressive economic development strategy, Columbus2020, the Chamber is poised to play an even greater role. Within Columbus2020, we are singularly focused on helping businesses operating in the Columbus area prosper. The Chamber represents more than 2,000 member businesses, and our team of more than 20 business specialists and topical experts is driven to accelerate member success. That is because the Columbus Chamber has one purpose—to help businesses thrive. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 166 The team provides the resources, services and intelligence businesses need to overcome obstacles, take advantage of opportunities, or simply make a connection to get the job done. Each day, the Chamber serves its businesses through one-on-one counsel or small group discussions. Our staff helps make connections to people and information; deliver educational programming; find solutions to business issues; research and analyze business intelligence; alert the business community of important news and policy issues; advocate on behalf of businesses at the local, state and federal levels and more. Ultimately, we assist businesses by delivering programs and services that enable them to flourish in the new, dynamic world economy. The Columbus Chamber believes in Columbus, and our staff knows business. It is that simple. The Chamber team has the curiosity to learn about business, the smarts to analyze situations, the connections to critical resources, and the passion to deliver the best solution for each business and this community. We invite you to call on the Chamber as your business partner. The Columbus Chamber is located at 150 South Front Street, Suite 200 and online at www.columbus.org. Columbus’ reputation as a convention capital began in 1840, with the great Whig Party convention. Columbus, then a city of just 6,000 residents, was unprepared for the 23,000 visitors who, exuberant about Ohioan William Henry Harrison’s presidential nomination a few months earlier, came to nominate Thomas (Wagon Boy) Corwin for governor. Conventioneers stayed in hotels, private homes, hallways, tents, and on seven boats docked on a branch of the Ohio Canal near downtown. Ohio’s central location along the Midwestern rail network and its small town atmosphere promoted Columbus’ popularity as a convention site. Other early conventions included the 1886 organization of the American Federation of Labor; 1890 organization of the United Mineworkers of America; and the Grand Encampment of the Union veterans’ group, Grand Army of the Republic, in 1888. For the latter event the city built four huge campgrounds and hosted an exposition of agriculture and industry celebrating the Northwest Territory’s centennial. An aggressive campaign for convention business began in 1910, and by 1915 larger hotels began to help fund the work. After operating under the Chamber of Commerce for two decades beginning in 1920, the Columbus Convention Bureau was incorporated in 1941 as a private, not-for-profit organization designed to promote Columbus as a convention destination. The Columbus Convention Bureau continued to operate on membership fees and contributions until the Hotel/Motel Bed Tax was enacted in 1969. When regular Bed Tax investment began in 1971, the word “Visitors” was added to the organization’s title. The Greater Columbus Convention Center was built downtown in 1993 and expanded in 1999. The Greater Columbus Sports Commission (GCSC) was formed in June 2002 to focus on attracting regional, national and international sporting events. In 2003 the Greater Columbus Convention & Visitors Bureau started doing business as Experience Columbus. Today the travel and tourism industry in Columbus and Franklin County is an important contributor to the community’s economy and quality of life, generating an estimated $7.3 billion in sales annually. Leisure tourists enjoy the city’s vibrant arts scene, a renowned zoo, top-ranked science center, exciting sports, lively urban entertainment districts and excellent dining and shopping. The Columbus convention package now includes nearly 24,000 hotel rooms citywide, a state-of-the-art convention center with 410,000 square feet of exhibition space and a convenient location within 550 miles of the nation’s population. The Hilton Columbus Downtown, a 532room hotel across from the Greater Columbus Convention Center, will open in fall 2012 during the city’s Bicentennial celebration. Experience Columbus generates revenue for the community by selling and marketing the area to attract conventions, meetings, trade shows and leisure travelers. Visitor spending helps support jobs, businesses and quality of life for a growing community of 1.7 million people. Experience Columbus’ headquarters is at 227 West Nationwide Boulevard. For more information, please visit www.ExperienceColumbus.com or call 866-354-2657. EXPERIENCE COLUMBUS ✧ Left: Columbus skyline. Below: The Greater Columbus Convention Center was built in 1993 and expanded in 1999. On the left, the Cap at Union State is modeled after the city’s 1899 railroad station designed by famed American architect Daniel Burnham. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF RANDALL L. SCHIEBER. THE MARKETPLACE 167 CONWAY CENTER FOR FAMILY BUSINESS ✧ Above: CCFB co-founder Dick Emens greets participants at the Annual Family Business Awards Program. Below: Monthly educational programs provide timely information for Central Ohio’s family business leaders. The Conway Center for Family Business was founded in 1998 to provide education, networking and recognition to the more than 6,000 family-owned businesses in Central Ohio. Family businesses are widely recognized as a powerful economic driver, generating more than fifty percent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product and sixty percent of its jobs. Attorneys J. Richard “Dick” Emens and Beatrice “Bea” Wolper, together with family business owners, recognized the unique challenges family business leaders have in growing their businesses and transitioning them to the next generation. They established the not-for-profit organization to provide educational programs, peer group meetings, networking opportunities, and the region’s only annual awards program celebrating family-owned businesses and the benefits they bring to the Central Ohio economy. The Conway Center offers membership opportunities for family businesses and those with special expertise regarding familyowned businesses and is led by an advisory board comprised of family business owners and service providers. The Conway Center’s members range in size from firms with five employees to large corporations employing thousands. A generous $1 million grant in 2007 by James R. Conway, the former owner of Marion Steel, and continuing support from the Conway family have helped the Center grow and expand programs and services. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 168 The Conway Center is the region’s go-to resource for challenges and issues specific to family businesses, and is recognized nationally in business and trade publications. Its educational programs include topics such as succession and planning, case studies, and other business issues addressed from a family business perspective. The Conway Center also partners with Ohio Dominican University, which has hosted the Center since 2000, to offer an undergraduate course on family business management. The Annual Family Business Awards Program celebrates the success of small, medium and large Central Ohio family businesses. Achievements in succession planning, communication, community engagement, reinvention, and milestones are recognized. In addition, peer group opportunities allow family business leaders with common interests to share their experiences in small group settings and receive guidance from experts in family business practices. Peer groups are available for next-generation leaders, women in family business, CEOs, CFOs, and those interested in growth/development and marketing/sales. Networking opportunities include the Annual Family Business Tour and Networking Event hosted by a different Central Ohio family business each year; this event gives members an opportunity to get a behind-thescenes look at their peers’ operations. More information can be found at www.FamilyBusinessCenter.com. Sugardaddy’s Sumptuous Sweeties® is a business-meets-opportunity story with a twist. Sugardaddy’s was founded and initially developed as an online business in 2005 at www.sugardaddys.com by Columbus residents’ Tom Finney and Mark Ballard to be the nation’s premier online brownie and blondie gifting and dessert company. Finney worked as a sales and marketing professional and loved to bake as a hobby. Ballard worked as an online retail executive and often traveled for work. After one trip to New York City, he told Finney, “Your brownies are better than many of the desserts I’ve enjoyed in New York City.” They wondered, “Could we put a new spin on brownies?” “Could they create a unique, upscale online gifting company with brownies as the star attraction?” Joining forces they channeled their respective passions and entrepreneurial spirit into something special—brownie and blondie desserts and gifts. Finney and Ballard found their niche in what they call “luxury” desserts. They settled on the round shape of their brownies and blondies to make every bite of the customer experience uniformly moist and delicious. While at the same time, their brownies earned the name “edgeless brownies.” Ingeniously, they use the “scraps” or cut-aways, as Ballard likes them to be called, to make other dessert items such as Brownie Trifles, Brownie Truffles, and Brownie Biscotti. Today, Sugardaddy’s is known not only for the best brownie and blondies a “round” but for being brownie innovators with such extended brownie products as Brownie Ice Creams, Brownie Bark, and Brownie Cheesecakes and with such brownie and blondie flavors as chocolate-chipotle, chai-spiced, and chocolate-bacon-toffee. Sugardaddy’s boasts twenty signature brownie and blondie flavors—made from natural, premium ingredients. All Sugardaddy’s brownie products are made in small batches, baked fresh each day, and only sold fresh. Sugardaddy’s ships nationwide “Oven to door in 24.”® Sugardaddy’s validation came when Sugardaddy’s was selected as Green Room amenities for The Ellen DeGeneres Show (2006-2008); named “Best of the Best” SUGARDADDY’S SUMPTUOUS SWEETIES® Brownies & Blondies by Food Network (2007); and crowned winners of Throwdown with Bobby Flay (2007). Since that time, Sugardaddy’s has been named “Editor’s Pick” by The Nibble.com (three times), Desserts Magazine, Chocolatier, Food 411, ChocolateGrail.com, Instyle, Midwest Living, Woman’s Day, Instinct, and the Washington Post. And, “Best Gift” by Today Show (twice), Instyle (twice), Instyle Weddings, Modern Bride, and Brides.com. Today, Sugardaddy’s operates as a multichannel business with three company-owned retail stores, its online store at www.sugardaddys.com, and a toll free number at 1.888.4 i want 1. Additionally, Sugardaddy’s sells and ships brownie and blondies “Oven to door in 24”® through partnerships with NeimanMarcus.com, Saks.com, Foodzie.com, and GoldenEdibles.com. Plans are underway for a Sugardaddy’s franchise model to be launched in 2012. THE MARKETPLACE 169 COLUMBUS SIGN COMPANY Rapid growth of the Columbus area in the early twentieth century created the need for identification through signage, leading to the founding of the Columbus Sign Company in 1911. Now the oldest operating sign company in Central Ohio, CSC continues to serve locally and beyond as an active community member. Founded by local businessmen Fred Schenck and Austin Wood, Columbus Sign included employees and friends, Herb Moesner and Art Hoy, who later took over ownership and control of the company. Each decade has brought challenges and opportunities, from the early days of hand painted show cards and window signs to the many changes in signage dictated by electricity, neon and the advent of automobiles of the 1920s. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the company often worked two-day work weeks to prevent laying off employees. A steady, but grim work source during that time was painting “Going Out of Business” signs. Throughout the years, Columbus Sign served as a “melting pot” for many individuals and small companies that eventually created several of the area’s other sign companies. It was during this time in the mid 1940s when Bill Hoy, Sr., and his brother, Bob, both of HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 170 whom served in World War II, began to work in the sign industry. Bill remembers almost daily work at the AIU Building (Leveque Tower) of hand painting twenty-three karat gold leaf on doors and windows. Bill, the oldest, went to work for Columbus Sign. Bob (two years younger) worked in a separate sign shop that was located in the back area of the Columbus Sign building. Bob later founded Vacuform Corporation, one of the largest sign companies in Ohio during the 1970s. Columbus Sign has evolved through the decades and remained current with new technologies. Advanced technologies have changed the sign production methods drastically. Today, the use of computers, combined with custom hand-fabrication talents, is intertwined to achieve unique products. Columbus Sign is continuing this next century with the fourth generation of leadership. The family tradition started with the early years of Art Hoy, to the second generation of Bill Hoy, Sr., to the third generation of Bill and Mike Hoy, and now the fourth generation of David and Eric Hoy. The family business prides itself with the thousands of quality signs and displays that have been provided throughout these first one hundred years of business. In 1963 the term specialty retail was just beginning to permeate the fashion and retail world. It was also the year that a young entrepreneur from Columbus took a risk on this idea based on knowledge of his family’s retail business. It was a watershed moment that would forever change Les Wexner’s life. Armed with a bank loan and a $5,000 loan from an aunt, the OSU graduate became a shopkeeper by launching the aptly named “Limited” in Kingsdale Shopping Center. His vision for specialty retail would eventually pay dividends and ultimately redefine an industry. To understand Limited Brands’ success is to acknowledge the entrepreneurial spirit of its founder. Wexner’s vision has always been about defining what is next, taking calculated risks and being a source of good. That mindset led him to take his company public with six Limited stores so that others could share in the company’s success. The desire for next has been balanced by discipline, which is best exemplified by the company’s $1 billion international business before opening or acquiring a single store outside of the United States. This pursuit of excellence is what attracts retail’s best talent from around the world to Limited Brands, which today includes Victoria’s Secret, Victoria’s Secret PINK, Bath & Body Works, La Senza and Henri Bendel. Today the company boasts nearly 3,000 stores nationwide, a 1,000 worldwide and nearly 100,000 associates who provide today’s woman with lingerie and personal care products that fit her inspirational lifestyle. Through every stage of the business, success has been led by a shared set of common values to improve the lives of our customers, associates, partners, shareholders and communities in which we live and work. Themes within the company’s values speak to the importance of passion, integrity, inclusion and loyalty—the latter reflecting Limited Brands’ dedication to Columbus for nearly fifty years and the commitment to give back to the community. LIMITED BRANDS Limited Brands is an entrepreneurial success story of remarkable scale. But this visionary story is still being written and international growth is positioned as the next exciting chapter. After all, it is what’s next. THE MARKETPLACE 171 HEIDELBERG DISTRIBUTING COMPANY ✧ Above: This 1921 photograph was taken in Cincinnati during Prohibition. Mozart’s tavern owner Albert Vontz (behind the bar), who later founded Heidelberg Distributing, stayed afloat by selling near-beer and root beer. His three-year-old son Al, Jr., sits on the bar near the cash register helping out. Below: Delivery trucks filled with wine and beer line the parking lot of the Heidelberg Columbus facility in 2007. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF TERRY WILSON. Heidelberg is a family-owned distributing company in the business of marketing and delivering the highest-quality beer, wine, spirits and other beverages throughout the states of Ohio and Kentucky. Our Columbus operation, centered in the middle of Heidelberg’s eight locations, is located on a sprawling piece of property on the west side of town off I-70. The company entered the Columbus market in 1989, leasing a 55,000 square foot building near downtown. At that time, we represented thirty suppliers and about 500 products. By 1999, Heidelberg Columbus had grown so quickly that the company built a 100,000 square foot warehouse-office facility to accommodate thousands of items. Expansion is scheduled again in 2012. Heidelberg was founded in 1938 by Albert W. Vontz, who had arrived in Cincinnati in HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 172 1907 as a twenty-two year-old immigrant from Hanover, Germany. A trained brewer, he immediately invested in two local taverns, but Prohibition in 1919 and the Great Depression forced them to close. When Prohibition ended in 1933 Albert helped open Cincinnati’s Vienna Brewery, which he sold to his brother-in-law five years later. In 1938, he invested in a Dayton delivery branch for the Heidelberg Brewery located in Covington, Kentucky, popular for its Student Prince and Heirloom beers. He named the company Heidelberg Distributing and quickly added wine products to deliver to Dayton bars, restaurants and grocery stores. Albert’s only child, Albert W. Vontz, Jr., became active in the business in 1947 when he returned from World War II. With a graduate degree in economics, Al looked for every opportunity to expand. During the 1950s, wine products represented a large part of Dayton Heidelberg sales. In 1959, Al was able to purchase the Anheuser-Busch delivery branch in Cincinnati; in 1961, he purchased the Budweiser distributorship in Dayton. The firm has been growing ever since through aggressive product expansion and acquisitions. Third and fourth-generation family members continue to lead Heidelberg and are actively engaged in the day-to-day business, operating facilities in Columbus, Cleveland, Lorain, Toledo, Dayton, Cincinnati, Evendale and Covington, Kentucky. You will see Heidelberg Associates and products at numerous Columbus events and venues as we work alongside other Columbus partners to build a strong and vibrant community. Sales representatives and delivery associates call on every retailer with an Ohio liquor license in a thirty county area in central and southeast Ohio. A premier convention destination managed by SMG, the world leader in entertainment and conference venue management, marketing and development, the Greater Columbus Convention Center is owned and developed by the Franklin County Convention Facilities Authority. The center’s history dates to 1974, when Battelle Memorial Institute contributed $36.5 million to develop a convention facility in downtown Columbus. The Ohio Center and its premier venue, Battelle Hall, opened in 1980, and Battelle Hall quickly became a versatile venue embracing family shows, rock and pop music concerts, theatrical productions and sporting events. Battelle Hall later became the preferred place for large public assemblies, trade shows, cheerleading events and other athletic competitions. The long-planned Greater Columbus Convention Center, built on the site of a former train station, was designed to emphasize the city’s information age relevance. Railroad tracks, highways and cables converge as contemporary symbols inspiring the building’s design by architect Peter Eisenman, which is composed of long fingers twisting their way between the truck docks at the back and the abstract streetscape with front doors along High Street. Just five years after it opened in 1993, a major expansion and renovation project was approved to meet the overwhelming demand for this facility. Upon its completion in 2001, the Convention Center grew to nearly 1.7 million square feet. Through continued reinvestment, Battelle Hall was rejuvenated in 2010 by a $40 million transformation into Battelle Grand, Ohio’s largest multipurpose ballroom, the crown jewel of the Greater Columbus Convention Center and beyond. The ballroom is equipped with spectacular LED lighting in the ceiling, capable of projecting thousands of color combinations and effects. A dedicated and flexible staff of 240 full and part-time employees and associates remains ready to host a variety of events, regardless of the challenges involved. In 2008, the building even reopened for business the morning after a sixteen inch water main break flooded its entire north part. The Center’s client list includes major national and state trade associations, some of the nation’s Top 200 trade shows, groups with international visitors, a bicycle motocross race in which a dirt track is sculpted within the exhibit halls, dozens of athletic competitions, and events ranging from small meetings to the Arnold Sports Festival attracting over 175,000 attendees in one weekend. U.S. presidents and presidential candidates have appeared there. ARAMARK, the facility’s exclusive caterer, prepares and donates thousands of individually packaged Thanksgiving meals and banquet food to charitable organizations. The staff and the facility also provide assistance to many other school, civic and charity groups. Greater Columbus Convention Center is located at 400 North High Street in Columbus and at www.columbusconventions.com. GREATER COLUMBUS CONVENTION CENTER ✧ Top: The Greater Columbus Convention Center. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF D. G. OLSHAVSKY. Above: Battelle Grand is the largest multipurpose ballroom in Ohio. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ELLEN DALLAGER/ DALLAGER PHOTOGRAPHY. THE MARKETPLACE 173 CENTER CITY INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS Founded on October 16, 1982, Center City International Trucks, Inc. (CCI) has always been committed to providing Central Ohio with a complete line of new and used trucks and services. CCI sells light, medium and heavy-duty International trucks, Isuzu trucks, IC BUS school buses, Continental Mixers and Workhorse utility trucks. Its leading parts and service department has over $1 million in inventory, and provides twentythree service bays for customers’ convenience. In the early 1980s, Branch Manager Jerome J. Wahoff bought International Harvester’s Columbus operations at 4200 Currency Drive. Ken Maykowski became secretary/ treasurer; Dan Shepherd, service manager; Bob Glancy, parts manager; and John Maxson, leasing manager. With a poor economy during its earliest days, the dealership sold just one truck in its first quarter, maintaining operations by building a strong parts and service business that continues to be an essential part of their business today. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 174 Wahoff had acquired thirty-three percent ownership by 1990, hired John Colston as secretary/treasurer to develop a plan to purchase the remaining stock over ten years. Business boomed in the 1990s, and in 1993, seven years early, Wahoff completed his purchase of the business. Dick Epp became sales manager in 1990. The Isuzu line of trucks was added and grew rapidly. Center City became Isuzu’s second largest annual sales leader in the country, winning the J. D. Power Award of Excellence. The dealership also began distributing Ward School Bus, which later became IC BUS. Under the leadership of Jim Stickel and Epp, this division was named 2009 IC Bus North American Dealer of the Year. On January 23, 2006, Wahoff sold the business to Timothy E. Reilly of Miami Valley International, making it part of the MVI Group. The group’s other Ohio locations include Dayton, Cincinnati, Lima, Findlay, Pataskala, Cleveland and Akron. The dealership employs over 100 personnel in Central Ohio, and has over $80 million in annual sales. Center City’s civic and community participation includes the Columbus Chamber of Commerce, Ohio Truck Dealers’ Association and Ohio Clean Fuels. CCI also works hand-in-hand with Eastland Career Center to develop training programs for their students. It also aids other truck-related organizations such as fairs in Franklin and Fairfield counties, food banks, fire-fighting groups, youth groups, and Toys for Tots. ❖ The Huntington Center. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. THE MARKETPLACE 175 ✧ Marie Radar puts rolled steel on a 30 inch slitter for cutting at Worthington Industries, 1996. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH PHOTO ARCHIVES. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 176 BUILDING A STRONG COLUMBUS C o l u m b u s ’s re a l e s t a t e d e v e l o p e r s , construction companies, heavy industries, and manufacturers provide the economic foundation of the county and fuel for the state The Cellar Lumber Company .......................................................178 Smoot Construction ....................................................................182 O h i o C AT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 8 4 John Eramo & Sons, Inc..............................................................186 American Electric Power .............................................................188 Capital Resin Corporation...........................................................190 K i r k W i l l i a m s C o m p a n y, I n c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 9 2 H a m i l t o n Ta n k s , L L C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 9 4 F r i t z - R u m e r- C o o k e C o . , I n c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 9 5 Buckeye Shapeform ....................................................................196 Central Aluminum Company ........................................................197 A u t o m a t i o n a n d C o n t ro l Te c h n o l o g y, I n c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 9 8 BUILDING A STRONG COLUMBUS 177 THE CELLAR LUMBER COMPANY ✧ Rachel Jones Miller painted this forty-foot mural depicting the history of Cellar Lumber Company in1978. The mural is located on three walls of the conference room of the company’s offices in Westerville. Any company that operates successfully for over a century is bound to be doing a great many things right. Certainly, that is the case with The Cellar Lumber Company, which has furnished lumber and building materials in Westerville, Ohio, a suburb of Columbus, since October of 1908. At that time Wilson F. Cellar and eleven investors pooled $5,400 to open the company. The property at College Avenue and Summit Street was purchased due to its border with the railroad, providing convenient access to inbound material. Cellar opened the doors less than thirty days after his marriage to Carrie Saunders. Frank Bookman was named as president, with Jos. J. Knox as vice president and Wilson Cellar as secretary-treasurer and general manager. Knox had formerly lived in Westerville. He owned and operated a large lumberyard on Columbus’ Cleveland Avenue, across from Fort Hayes. Cellar, who had left Otterbein College Department of Business in 1902 to take an office position with the Hocking Valley Railroad, left there about a year later, when he became associated with D. H. Bard in the sawmill and lumber business at a site east of the Lincoln Street Cemetery in Westerville. After Bard’s death, Cellar formed a new company in 1908 at its current location. J. C. McLeod was Cellar Lumber’s first customer, with others among the earliest including the Westerville Creamery Co., Otterbein College, the Methodist and Presbyterian churches, the Village of Westerville, HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 178 H. L. Bennett & Co., F. C. Arn, and the Culver Art & Frame Co. Westerville was just getting out of the mud. College Avenue had been paved only a short time. Dr. W. M. Gantz, a jovial dentist, was mayor. Mrs. Cellar, a bride of only thirty days when she became a director of the new company, recalled that her first dinner guest in her new home was a business associate her husband brought in without warning. She remembered that he was particularly fond of hot spiced cling peaches and attempted to get them off the seed by putting the whole peach in his mouth. Receipted bills in the company’s early records show that it sponsored space for advertising at the rate of 10 cents per inch. Other bills show the purchases of a curry comb for 10 cents and a bucket of axle grease from Bale and Walker Hardware Store for 25 cents. A blacksmith charged 20 cents to refit old shoes and $1.20 for four new ones. Corn and hay for the horse were other early items of expense. The first stocks of lumber were pine from Arkansas and hemlock from West Virginia and Michigan. Then, as now, red cedar shingles came from the Northwest. Redwood was just being introduced locally as a building material. Good carpenters earned 30 to 35 cents per hour, and good laborers from $9 to $12 per week. Stephen Rizer, one of the finest characters Westerville has ever known, was the first yard man and “pilot” for the horse and wagon. A devout Methodist and a faithful employee, he never talked politics on the job but was always ready to discuss religion and a better way of living. A fire in January of 1912 destroyed the office and largest shed and their contents. It was a very cold winter, and Westerville’s volunteer fire department responded promptly, only to find the hydrant adjacent to the lumberyard frozen solid. They did what they could, forming a bucket line from a nearby cistern. Cellar admitted to being a bit excited when he fell while jumping through an office window in trying to save books and records. This fire was a major disaster. Had it not been for the prompt adjustment by the insurance company, Cellar Lumber would have been unable to rebuild. Wilson’s brother, George B. Cellar, became associated with the company in 1914, and served for many years as manager. Early directors of the company included Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Cellar, George B. Cellar, Don P. Miller, H.O. Reece, manager of the Sunbury branch; J.B. Miller and Frank C. Arn. In 1919, Wilson began an expansion program, moving with his family to Circleville shortly after the purchase of stores in Chillicothe and Circleville, followed by the purchase of a store in Sunbury in 1923 and stores in Johnstown and Groveport in 1926. Later, yards were purchased in Frankfort and Canal Winchester, and one was started in Marengo. The Circleville yard was sold in 1927. With the exception of a few hard years, growth and expansion have continued, accomplished largely by plowing profits back into the business. ✧ In 1932, Cellar hired his nephew, Don Miller, a part-time student at Otterbein College. Miller soon began going to school for six months and working at the Chillicothe store for six months. In 1936 he returned to the Westerville store and was named its manager in 1938. He became secretary-treasurer of the entire company in 1938, and general manager five years later. Cellar began spending winters in Florida as he phased in his retirement. When the Cellars made Florida their permanent home, they donated their house to Otterbein College. Miller served as general manager through the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s and was named president in 1970. During that period the stores were modernized with the introduction of forklift trucks and the addition of hydraulic dump beds on the delivery trucks. This modernization was accomplished with the immense help of Dick Longhenry. Miller and his wife Rachel had three sons, Bill, John, and Tom, and a daughter, Jean. All three of their sons have been involved with the company in various capacities over the years. BUILDING Above: Setting the corner stone at the Women’s Christian Temperance Movement, c. 1908. This photograph features Cellar Lumber’s first delivery vehicle and its “pilot,” Stephen Rizer. A STRONG COLUMBUS 179 ✧ Above: Wilson Cellar, Ernest McElwee, and Isaac Williams at the company’s Westerville office in 1915. John Miller came on the scene at Cellar Lumber in the 1950s, playing in the boxcars and hanging out in the sheds. His first paying job with the company was painting its numerous white picket fences. In 1961 he worked as a driver’s helper, assistant driver, and loaded and unloaded rock lath. After completing high school in 1962 he served in the U.S. Army, returning to work at Cellar during the summers until he graduated from Miami University in April of 1967. He then worked for five years at Armco Steel in Middletown, Ohio, during which time he met and married Melinda (Mindy) Scott. In 1972, John was again hired at Cellar and returned to Westerville, where Don Miller planned to spend five years training him in management and knowledge of the business. Unfortunately, Don died during the first year of John’s apprenticeship. With the help of the employees and Scott Neely, an important supplier from Lima, Ohio, the company HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 180 continued. John was named general manager in 1972, president in 1976, and CEO and chairman in June 2008. In 1948, as Cellar was writing the company history for the Public Opinion, he attributed Cellar Lumber’s success to its loyal and faithful employees. More than sixty years later, that has not changed. Two of those on hand representing Cellar Lumber at the Westerville Chamber of Commerce in honor of the company’s hundredth anniversary in 2008 had also been on the payroll when Cellar made the statement in 1948. Dick Longhenry worked forty-eight years as yard foreman and manager of inventory control and safety and was a company director. Of most significance was his influence convincing John Miller to return to Westerville in 1972 to work for the company. Doyle Spangler worked in Westerville from 1948 to 1963, and was instrumental in opening a new store in Circleville in 1963. He managed it until 1991, making it the top store in the company for many of those years. Upon retirement from management, he went into outside sales from 1991 until 2005. He still serves on Cellar’s board of directors. Key employees today include Tom Kramp, who joined the company in 1987. He was store manager in Westerville (1988-91 and 1999-2010), and Circleville (1991-99); was named operations manager (2001), general manager (2003) and company president (2008). John and Mindy’s two sons are the thirdgeneration Millers and fourth-generation family members actively involved in the business. Both received their initial training with the company reporting to Pat Farington, who has been with Cellar since 1986 and is currently office and credit manager. Drew Miller began working part time with the company in 1992 and full time after graduation from Muskingum College. He managed the Sunbury store (2003-2006) and returned to Westerville to assist in the switchover from custom homes to consumer remodeling as the Sunbury store was retrofitted for roofing contractors. He has spent over half of his life working for Cellar Lumber Company and has been a director since 2006. Brian Miller began working part-time with the company in 1995. After attending Miami University he worked for McCabe Lumber in Cincinnati from 2005-2010, when he was hired back by Cellar and returned to Westerville. Currently manager of the Westerville store, Brian has been a director since 2006 and was named company vice president in 2010. Bryan Moehring came on board in 2011 as operations manager and to use his thirty-plus years of experience in the building materials supply industry to help expand current operations in the areas of commercial and installed sales, and help further expand into the remodeling supply arena. The ability to adapt to continuing changes in the industry has been instrumental in the longevity and continued success of the ✧ company. In addition to modernizing equipment in the yards and office procedures, the company has consolidated several stores and added new product lines over the years, reinventing itself to better serve a changing customer base. For many years Cellar Lumber catered primarily to home owners, farmers, and “mom and pop” contractors. By the 1970s to 1980s the main focus had gradually shifted towards custom homebuilders. With the rapid decline in demand for new homes following the recent housing bubble, the focus of Cellar Lumber has been adjusted yet again to better serve professional home remodelers, with plans to become more involved with commercial, industrial and installed sales. Looking back, the motto Carrie Cellar coined over one hundred years ago still holds true today: “Honest, Courteous Service Builds our Business.” A second motto has since been added: “Doing What’s Right Since 1908.” We believe that staying true to our core values of customer service and having a willingness to adapt to the continuously changing needs of the building industry will keep the company going strong the next hundred years. BUILDING Above: The Cellar Lumberyard, 1948. A STRONG COLUMBUS 181 SMOOT CONSTRUCTION ✧ Above: Ohio Union at The Ohio State University. Below: Statehouse. When a company has operated successfully for more than sixty-five years, you know it is doing a good job. That is the case with Smoot Construction, which offers a comprehensive range of general contracting, design/build and construction management services to public and private clients. With offices in Columbus, Ohio; Indianapolis, Indiana and Washington D.C., the company has amassed a portfolio that represents an extensive range of expertise in the construction of aviation, civic/government, commercial/ corporate, cultural, healthcare, higher education, hospitality/resort, industrial, justice, K-12, parking, research, residential, retail, and sports projects. Combining successful project experience, with a profound sense of integrity, the firm HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 182 applies a broad understanding of construction to develop and implement innovative and highly-effective approaches and techniques to bring greater reliability and economy to each client’s project. A profound spirit of teamwork in every department and at every level results in the hallmark quality of each Smoot project. Pride in workmanship is the rule within the Smoot organization resulting in pride of ownership for those who employ the company’s services. Smoot utilizes its professional construction staff as an extension of the client’s organization from the initial design coordination through bid packaging and management of contractors and subcontractors. Smoot’s proven management systems ensure the project is delivered on time and within the client’s budget. “It’s not the way we’ve built buildings that distinguishes our company; it’s the manner in which we’ve constructed our business,” said Lewis R. Smoot Sr., chairman and CEO of the company founded by his father, Sherman, in 1946. He emphasized that the business has been formed “not by the characteristics of our projects, but by the character of our people.” The company’s guiding principles, summed up by the acronym, CHIPP, are Character, Humility, Integrity, Pride and Performance, Smoot explained. “These principles help us identify, hire and retain only the best people. They motivate us to maintain our record for never failing to deliver a project. They commit us to accountability, which fosters repeat business. And they give us the strength to reach out and actively support the communities in which we work and live.” He noted that a successful building is not born in the field, and that success is not always ensured through careful planning. Instead, success evolves from the shared goals and vision of every person within our organization. 2010 marked significant milestones in the firm’s evolution. It was at this time the reins of leadership were handed off to the family’s third generation. Lewis R. Smoot, Sr., who has led the firm since 1984, and who continues to serve in the dual capacities of chairman and CEO, handed over the title of president to his nephew, Mark Cain. Mark worked for the company in various capacities and tenures since the early 1980s and since 2005 has served as CEO of Smoot Construction of Washington D.C. Mark noted that the company has grown and flourished because of the high standards of the entire Smoot team. These values extend through all phases of construction and include knowledgeable needs assessment, thorough on-site supervision, responsible and effective office management, and successful project completion. “Combining uncommon skills in construction engineering with our ability to solve problems, we meet project construction requirements with quality results—on time, within budget and according to specifications.” he added. The leadership transition also included expanding the administrative and business development roles of Lewis’ eldest son, Lewis R. Smoot, Jr., with his promotion to senior vice president. These three key individuals are joined by a cousin, Dana Smoot, who is an associate vice president and the firm’s Corporate Counsel. United with a corporate family, the firm’s new leadership structure combines the sound business acumen of a seasoned construction ✧ executive with the youthful energy of the family’s next generation and other corporate executives with many years of construction experience. Thank you for reading an abbreviated history of Smoot Construction. For more information, we would be pleased to have you visit our website: www.smootconstruction.com. BUILDING Above: The control tower at Port Columbus International Airport. Below: Jessie Owens Stadium at The Ohio State University. A STRONG COLUMBUS 183 OHIO CAT ✧ Above: Innovative Caterpillar D7E Track Type Tractor powered by an Advanced Electric Drive Power Train. Below: Caterpillar C175 Standby Electric Power Generators at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus. As the exclusive, authorized distributor for Caterpillar Inc. in Ohio, Northern Kentucky and Southeastern Indiana, Ohio CAT provides sales, rentals, parts and service for Caterpillar equipment, engines and related products, conducting its operations through eighteen locations and three divisions, Equipment, Power Systems and Agri Business. Ohio CAT also operates CAT Rental Stores at eight of its locations, remanufactures and repairs all makes of hydraulic components at its Hydraulics Division in Bolivar, remanufactures and repairs fuel pumps, fuel injectors, turbochargers and water pumps for all makes of diesel engines at its two International Fuel Systems locations, and provides leasing solutions through its wholly owned subsidiary, OMCO Leasing Corp. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 184 Ohio CAT, originally and still legally named Ohio Machinery Co., was organized in Columbus in 1945 as a partnership among three individuals who had ventured to Ohio from Iowa. The company was incorporated the following year, and the headquarters was moved to the city of Independence in the Greater Cleveland area. In 1961 the founders retired, and Caterpillar changed the company’s territory to twenty-five counties in Eastern Ohio. At that time, Tom Taylor, Sr., who was involved in sales operations and management, and his son, Tom Taylor, Jr., bought the company, anticipating that Northeast Ohio, for the foreseeable future, would be the portion of Ohio with the most population and economic activity. In the 1950s, Ohio Machinery Co. was a pioneer in providing the major Great Lakes shipping companies with diesel generators for both the required electricity and the bow thrusters on commercial vessels transporting iron ore, limestone and other products across the Great Lakes region. Many of these generators remain in service today, and they continue to be serviced by Ohio CAT. In concert with post-WWII economic growth and infrastructure development, Ohio Machinery Co. grew rapidly and added numerous employees and locations in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. A leased facility opened in Zanesville in 1962, and three years later a new facility was built and occupied there. In 1971 a sizeable new store was built and opened in Cadiz, where operations had previously been conducted in a shop with no electricity and only a dirt floor. The new facility significantly raised the company’s capabilities in selling and supporting Caterpillar’s larger equipment utilized in Eastern Ohio’s surface coal mining operations. Also in 1971, Ohio Machinery Co. moved its headquarters to its present facility in Broadview Heights, which boasts 91,000 square feet of office space, warehouse space and service bays. A second facility was built in Broadview Heights in 1980 to accommodate Caterpillar’s increasing involvement in the commercial engine and truck engine markets. Ohio Engine Power was then formed in 1988 as a separate division, focusing on the sales and service of Caterpillar engines and related products. This division is now referred to as Ohio CAT’s Power Systems Division. Continued growth and expansion marked events during the next two decades, with Ohio Machinery Co. opening new facilities in Canton and Youngstown as well as Complete Hydraulic Service in Bolivar; acquiring Miller Tool Rental Inc. and a new rental services headquarters in Oakwood Village; opening a Painesville location; acquiring the International Fuel Systems (IFS) business from Caterpillar; and moving the Bolivar Hydraulics Division to a much larger, 53,000 square foot facility in an industrial park in Bolivar. Economic recession brought the closing of two Ohio CAT locations in 2009, Lucasville and Painesville. However, that same year the company’s first, dedicated Ag location opened in Upper Sandusky and a new CAT Rental Store opened in North Canton. Then, eighteen months later, a second dedicated Ag location opened in Washington Court House in early 2011. Tom, Sr., who is fondly remembered for his sales abilities, had worked with Northwest Engineering before joining the predecessor company to Ohio Machinery Co. to sell Caterpillar equipment in 1938. He was involved with the Caterpillar Dealer until his death in 1980 at age eighty-two. Tom, Jr. joined the company in 1959, after earning his MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. He became the company’s president in 1969 and presided over three decades of organizational growth and facility expansion throughout Eastern Ohio. He is best known for his financial acumen, organizational skills and keen sense of humor. Ken Taylor became the third generation of his family to own and run the business after the untimely death of Tom, Jr. in 1994. Ken had worked at the company since 1988 in a number of capacities including parts and service, sales finance, machine sales, and product support management. Under his leadership, Ohio Machinery Co. acquired the Western Ohio Caterpillar territory in 2003, creating Ohio CAT, which was probably the single most important event in company history. With this acquisition the company’s territory expanded to 80 counties in Ohio, 3 in Northern Kentucky, and 6 in Southeastern Indiana such that, today, Ohio CAT is considered a top ten Caterpillar dealer in terms of North American industry opportunity. BUILDING ✧ Above: Complete Hydraulic Service machine shop in Bolivar, Ohio. Below: Challenger 865C belted tractor pulling a Sunflower Disc Chisel. A STRONG COLUMBUS 185 JOHN ERAMO & SONS, INC. ✧ Clockwise, starting from the top: Founders Giovanni “John”, Rocco “Rocky”, and Cesidio “Joe” Eramo, 1992. Left to right: Tony Eramo, Bill Ditty, operator, Joe Eramo in the ditch, Warren Skiver and Ron Walker, 1977. John Eramo watching Joe Eramo in the ditch, 1968. Giovanni “John” Eramo’s original passport picture to the United States in 1932. A site development contractor specializing in installing underground utilities, earth moving, environmental projects, and general contracting, John Eramo & Sons, Inc. provides these services for residential and commercial developers, general contractors and municipalities. In keeping with the company’s motto: “Do It Right the First Time,” its goal is to provide its customers with quality service and product in a timely, cost-effective manner. The company was founded in November of 1966 by Giovanni “John” Eramo and his two sons, Cesidio “Joe” Eramo and Rocco “Rocky” Eramo. Although he spoke no English, John emigrated from Alvito, Italy in the 1920s, in order to find work. He knew how to use a pick and a shovel and learned how to install sewer pipe, obtaining a sewer tapper’s license. Columbus grew rapidly after WWII. By 1948, John had saved enough money to become a partner in Southeast Excavating Co., which installed sewer and water mains throughout the city. After the owners decided to part ways in 1966, dissolving Southeast Excavating, John decided to form his own company, John Eramo HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 186 & Sons, Inc. His new company’s first job was to install a twelve inch water main on Brice Road south of Livingston Avenue for the city of Columbus at a contract price of $19,000. Throughout the 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s, John, Joe and Rocky operated with twenty to twenty-five employees, installing sewer and water mains throughout Columbus for developments, including Forest Park, The Limited, Wedgewood Country Club, and Victoria’s Secret. The Eramo company was known for its innovation in the industry during this period. It was one of the first companies to install PVC sewer pipe in Central Ohio, at Broadview Farms, and one of the first to use laser beams for sewer installation, increasing production by twenty-five percent over their competition. Joe revolutionized the industry when he became the first contractor to use quick couplers to change backhoe buckets in order to increase production and save material. In 1978, at age sixty-five, John retired, leaving Joe as president and Rocky as vice president/treasurer. Joe’s oldest son, Tony, joined the team in 1981 and ran two subsidiaries—Ohio Leak Locators from 19811984 and American Lawn Sprinkler Systems from 1985-1988. Both were successful, but in 1988, Joe decided to close American Lawn Sprinkler Systems so Tony could begin managing field operations for Eramo’s. He trained Tony in all aspects of field operations before being diagnosed with lung cancer in 1991. He passed away the next September. After graduating from Ohio State, Rocky’s oldest son, Chris, joined Tony and Rocky in the operation, for which Rocky was president, managing office operations, Tony was executive vice president managing field operations. As vice president/secretary, Chris learned the operation’s business side through punch-out work, estimating, and customer relations. In June 1993, Tony’s brother, John, retired from teaching to join the operation, helping Tony manage utility operations. Throughout the 1990s the company grew slowly and steadily, as did the economy. Three to four utility crews operated during this period, and sales increased from $3.5 million in 1992 to $7 million by 1999. The bulk of the work during this time was installing underground utilities for major residential land developers in Central Ohio. Although the growth had been positive and profitable, it became tougher for John Eramo & Sons to get certain jobs because they did not construct the “earthwork” portion of the development. In 2000 the company set up an “Earthworks” division. Chris took the lead in this part of the business. Rocky’s youngest sons, Michael and Bryan, joined the management team in 1999 and 2001, to the utility and earthwork divisions, respectively. Both started as crew foremen to get hands-on experience, and now manage multiple projects. From 2000 to 2005 sales increased from $8 million to $14 million, primarily due to the housing boom and addition of the earthwork operation. With a significant slowdown in the housing market in 2006, the company adjusted, seeking more public works and commercial jobs. Thanks to the bonding capacity Eramo built up over the years, the company has been able to retool and seek other niche opportunities as competition increased. The economy hit rock bottom in October 2008, the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression. By this time Eramo’s had adjusted to the public works market, continuing to fight through economic conditions that sent many competitors into bankruptcy. The Eramos remain true to their craft, continuing to seek innovative ways to install their products. They look for new opportunities, while continuing to provide their customers with quality service and product in a timely, cost-effective manner to “Do It Right the First Time.” BUILDING ✧ Top, right: Stream before restoration, 1920s. Top, left: Stream after restoration. Below: The third generation, left to right: John T., Bryan, Chris, Rocco, Tony, Michael and Steve Eramo, 2010. A STRONG COLUMBUS 187 AMERICAN ELECTRIC POWER ✧ Right: Former Columbus Southern Power general office building located on North Front Street in downtown Columbus. CSP today is known as AEP Ohio, a unit of American Electric Power. Below: American Electric Power headquarters building in downtown Columbus. Founded in 1906, American Electric Power has been at the forefront of the electric utility industry since its inception. Throughout its history, AEP has pioneered a myriad of innovations and advancements in power generation and the transmission of electric energy. One of the nation’s largest electric utilities, AEP delivers electricity to more than 5.3 million customers across an 11-state service territory that measures 200,000 square miles and extends from the Rio Grande River to Lake Michigan. AEP’s size has fostered the economies of scale and the efficiencies of diversity, flexibility and advanced technology that, in turn, have led to pocketbook savings for its customers: residential, commercial, industrial and neighboring utilities. Headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, AEP ranks among the nation’s largest producers of HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 188 electricity with approximately 39,000-megawatts of generating capacity. Coal fuels 65 percent of that generating capacity, and AEP is an industry leader in pursuing technologies to burn it more cleanly. Natural gas provides 23 percent of the company’s generating capacity, while hydro, wind and solar contribute 7 percent and nuclear energy the remaining 5 percent. In 2009, AEP completed the world’s first fully integrated project to capture and store carbon dioxide (CO2) from a coal-fired power plant. The project uses a patented chilled ammonia CO 2 capture technology from Alstom of France on a 20-megawatt portion of the 1,300-megawatt Mountaineer Plant in West Virginia. The captured CO 2 is compressed and pumped into deep saline formations, roughly 1.5 miles below the Earth’s surface. By investing billions of dollars in environmental technologies—scrubbers and selective catalytic reduction systems—AEP has been able to reduce its emissions of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides from its coal-fired power plants by eighty percent compared with 1980 levels. AEP has also taken an active role in developing renewable sources of electricity, such as wind and solar. The company currently has 1,504-megawatts of wind and solar capacity online or under contract, not including a proposed 49.9-megawatt solar project in southeastern Ohio that has not yet received regulatory approval. To move the electricity to locations where it is needed, AEP operates the nation’s largest transmission system, encompassing 39,000 miles of transmission lines. The company has been a leader in transmission technology since its earliest days, when they completed the first long-distance transmission line, connecting a mine-mouth power plant near Wheeling, West Virginia, with customers in Canton, Ohio. AEP was the first company in the U.S. to research, build and operate 765,000-volt transmission lines and today the company has more than 2,000 miles of these lines in operation—more than all of the other utility companies in the nation combined. The company distributes power and provides customer service through its utility operating units: AEP Ohio, AEP Texas, Appalachian Power (in Virginia and West Virginia), AEP Appalachian Power (in Tennessee), Indiana Michigan Power, Kentucky Power, Public Service Company of Oklahoma and Southwestern Electric Power Company (in Louisiana, Arkansas and east Texas). AEP Ohio provides electric service to nearly 1.5 million customers in the Buckeye State and the northern panhandle of West Virginia, serving cities such as Columbus, Canton, Chillicothe, Lima, Marietta, Portsmouth, Zanesville and Wheeling. To give customers greater control over their energy usage, increase the efficiency of the electric grid and improve overall service, AEP launched its gridSMART initiative in 2007. From a technology standpoint, gridSMART incorporates a two-way communications system between the company and its customers that facilitates a more efficient use of electricity. For example, gridSMART may allow AEP to send price signals to customers so they can decide when to run home appliances. Toward this end, some 110,000 SMART meters have already been installed in Ohio. AEP and its operating units have a significant impact on the economies of local communities. AEP has nearly 19,000 employees across its service area, of which more than 6,200 are located in Ohio alone. The company pays $1.8 billion in annual wages. In addition, the company pays approximately $1.2 billion in taxes, including $850 million in state and local taxes. The company is committed to playing an active, positive role in the communities it serves. In 2010 alone, AEP, its operating units and the AEP Foundation contributed $23.7 million to nonprofit organizations. Financially, AEP celebrated a milestone in 2010 when the company marked 100 years of paying consecutive quarterly dividends to its shareholders. Today, more than ever, American society is powered by electricity. And AEP is committed to providing clean, affordable and reliable electric energy to the homes, schools, businesses and industries in the many communities that it serves. BUILDING ✧ Above: American Electric Power’s Dolan Technology Center, Groveport, Ohio, just outside Columbus where AEP’s gridSMART technologies have been tested. Below: High-voltage line mechanic apprentices train at the AEP Groveport Line Training Center just outside Columbus. AP PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF COLUMBUS DISPATCH, JEFF HINCKLEY. A STRONG COLUMBUS 189 CAPITAL RESIN CORPORATION A family run manufacturer of liquid polymers based upon a variety of chemistries, Capital Resin Corporation is a custom and toll manufacturer of specialty chemicals for a wide variety of larger industrial companies. It applies its manufacturing skill set and core competencies to the manufacture of developmental/prototypical chemicals or processes to evaluate commercial probability for a number of Fortune 100 chemical partners. With eighty employees and slightly HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 190 over $30 million annual revenue in 2010, CRC services industries as diverse as building products, paints and coatings, adhesives, electronics, agricultural intermediates, rubber additives, personal care intermediates, chemical process industry, metal processing, textiles, and the horticultural market. Growth has been greater than ten percent per annum over the past decade. CRC’s founder, James R. (Jim) Hansen, initially moved to central Ohio as a sales representative for Delta Resins and Refractories, a privately owned company based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Delta, owned by the Hansen cousins, serviced the foundry industry, including prospects and ongoing customers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Indiana, and the Southeastern United States. After establishing a well performing territory and warehousing operation in Columbus, Jim’s “entrepreneurial fires” were ignited by a number of challenges associated with his employer. He quickly ascertained the benefits of starting his own company, founding Capital Resin Corporation at 1250 Refugee Lane, Columbus, Ohio in July of 1976. Growing at a healthy rate, CRC required greater infrastructure by December of 1979, when it was relocated to the old A. E. Staley Starch facility located on six acres in south central Columbus. The former starch factory, a fixture in Columbus for seven decades, then stood vacant. Shortly after moving, the company made its first major capital investment, a 2,000 gallon gas-fired reactor, referred to in the industry as a “kettle.” During the 1980s CRC’s business saw tremendous growth and evolution, with expansion of its manufacturing capabilities through the installation of additional resin reactors, and glass-lined production vessels to manufacture a variety of sulfonic acids. These were ancillary products used in conjunction with the liquid resins being produced. The eighties also saw commercial expansion beyond the foundry industry, as CRC became a toll manufacturer of various resin intermediates, going into the building industry via initial relation with a Cincinnati company, Formica Corporation. In the late 1980s Jim Hansen integrated vertically into the supply chain by investing in a small platform formaldehyde production site, installing a 100,000,000 pound per year (production rated on a thirty-seven percent concentration basis) mixed metal oxide catalyst plant. This was the first continuous process operation installed at CRC, and the first step toward evolving into an operation with a bit more “girth.” After Hansen’s death at age fifty-one in 1990, his widow, Judithe Hansen Jordan Wensinger became CEO and chairman of the board. During this decade of change and evolution, many of CRC’s initial customers had gone out of business. Under Wensinger’s guidance, the company evolved from a commodity resin and formaldehyde supplier to one focused on its core manufacturing capabilities in solution polymers, while expanding beyond the foundry industry. In this decade, CRC’s interests and investments of time and effort were galvanized. It gained ISO certification on its quality program, and joined SOCMA to invest and improve upon the organization’s environmental integrity. One of the “catalysts” to these evolutionary investments was the over pressurization of one of its main production reactors in August 1994. Although offsite impact was nothing more volatile than might be expected from “brake dust” on the front wheels of a car, this incident resulted in a tremendous improvement in safety methodology employed in manufacturing polymers in CRC’s product line. Tremendous investment in safeguards, personnel, and advancements in its manufacturing control systems ensued. “In the early 2000s CRC divested the remaining business within the foundry industry, and initiated our move toward project planning and custom and toll manufacturing for various projects leading to our current business model. The CRC team has very effectively evolved this business into a performance based mentality, and has constructed an extremely effective model to assist in scale-up developmental projects to ongoing manufacturing of new and interesting technologies that fit within our structure and build insight and confidence in CRC’s manufacturing techniques. We achieved a company best performance in 2008, and believe that 2010 will be yet another step beyond our previous best results,” said Dan Yinger, company president. Capital Resin Corporation’s current headquarters and single production site is located at 324 Dering Avenue in Columbus, Ohio and on the Internet at www.capitalresin.com. BUILDING A STRONG COLUMBUS 191 KIRK WILLIAMS COMPANY, INC. ✧ Right: Founders James K. Williams Jr., James “Kirk” Williams, and John Ubbing at Kirk Williams Company’s original Chestnut Street location. Below: Kirk Williams utilized multiple cranes to place the large custom fabricated duct work high in the Ohio State University’s Jerome Schottenstein Arena. A full-service mechanical contractor and specialty fabricator, the Kirk Williams Company, Inc. offers everything from piping, plumbing, and sheet metal fabrication and installation to HVAC, refrigeration, and plumbing services. Having performed work for almost every major business, past and present, in Central Ohio, the company is committed to ensuring that each job and project is part of its overall interaction with customers, suppliers and employees. Involvement in community and charitable activities, which has been extensive throughout the company’s more than sixty year history continues today, as fourth generation family members assume a place in the organization. Kirk Williams Company, Inc. is active in such community organizations as the Columbus Chamber of Commerce, Builders Exchange of Central Ohio, Safety Council of Greater Columbus, Mechanical Contractors Association of Central Ohio, Sheet Metal Contractors of Central Ohio, and Better Business Bureau. In addition the company contributes to numerous charities, including the Columbus Foundation; Columbus Public Schools; United Way; Grant HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 192 Medical Center Foundation (OhioHealth); Riverside Methodist Hospital (OhioHealth); Mount Carmel Foundation; UNICEF; YMCA of Central Ohio; Columbus Public Schools; Alvis House; Heinzerling Foundation; Big Brothers Big Sisters; Ohio Foundation of Independent Colleges; The Alcohol, Drug, and Mental Health Board of Franklin County; The Homeless Families Foundation; Cystic Fibrosis Foundation; and The Littlest Heroes. The company’s leaders and its many employees work daily to fulfill their long-term policy of ensuring that each project they undertake reflects the high quality and consistency for which Kirk Williams is known, and continuing to operate with the strong values that ensured the organization’s success from its inception. Founded in 1949 by J. K. “Kirk” Williams Sr., the company began as a specialty sheet metal fabricator, manufacturing such items as electric boxes, troughs, and machinery and belt guards from a small shop in downtown Columbus, Ohio. In time specialty fabrication gave rise to ductwork and hoods with commercial and industrial applications. Through the years, successive generations of the family have joined the company. Kirk’s son, James K. “Jim” Williams Jr., who started as a laborer in the fabrication shop, left for two years to serve in the U.S. Army during the Korean Conflict. During Jim’s absence, Kirk’s son-in-law, John Ubbing, joined the company, and in 1954, after Jim’s return, the company was incorporated, with Kirk, Jim, and John responsible for fostering its growth. Jim’s son, James K. Williams III, began working as a laborer in the fabrication department in summers from 1971 until joining the firm full time after his graduation from Xavier University. New company facilities include a 40,000 square foot facility built on six acres at Home Road and I 270 in 1974, are indicative of the company’s growth through the years. This facility houses the sheet metal, piping and specialty fabrication divisions. In the 1990s the company made a conscious effort to grow in automotive and industrial projects as a diversification and risk-mitigation strategy to reduce reliance on the cyclical plan and spec market. Since that time Kirk Williams has serviced many domestic and international leaders in automotive and industrial manufacturing and takes great pride in having these clients as repeat customers. In order to become less reliant on subcontractors and to gain increased control to provide better service to its clients, the company became a full-service mechanical contractor in the 1990s and started providing mechanical services in the early 2000s. Licensed to perform mechanical contracting in a six-state area, Kirk Williams’ specialty ✧ metal fabrications have been installed throughout the hemisphere. Now presided over by Jim Williams, who is approaching sixty years of service, the company’s day-to-day operations are overseen by J. K. Williams, secretary-treasurer, representing the third generation of family leadership with almost forty years of company experience. In addition to its work for Central Ohio’s major businesses, the company has had as clients many hospitals, laboratories, government entities—on local, state, and federal levels—and educational facilities from elementary schools to universities. Kirk Williams Company, Inc. is located at 2734 Home Road in Grove City, Ohio and on the Internet at www.kirkwilliamsco.com. BUILDING Above: An aerial view shows the magnitude of the 688,000 square foot Wright Patterson Air Force Base’s Human Performance Wing, on which Kirk Williams Company completed a $35.5 million Design Assist HVAC and Plumbing contract Below: Before construction, Kirk Williams Company ensured successful coordination with other trades by creating a 3-dimensional model of the Ohio State University’s South Campus Central Chiller plant, which serves the Cancer Care Tower, Rhodes Hall, Doan Hall, Cramblett Hall, and other medical facilities on campus. A STRONG COLUMBUS 193 HAMILTON TANKS, LLC ✧ Hamilton Tanks manufacturing technologies include UL, API, ASME, and custom tank designs ranging in size from 150 to 50,000 gallons. Hamilton Tanks, LLC was originally founded in 1916 as Hamilton Welding & Manufacturing Company in Hamilton, Ohio by Robert H. Kemp and initially produced smoke stacks and repaired boilers. When Robert went to fight in WWI, his son C. Eugene Kemp took over the company. During that period, Hamilton Welding was awarded a contract to produce skid tanks for the war effort. And from that original contract, the future of the business had been established. In the late 1940s, Hamilton Welding received its UL permit and began manufacturing 275-gallon home heating oil tanks, which are still manufactured today. A second tank manufacturing facility for the company was formed in Columbus, Ohio in 1955. The business operated both facilities until 1983 when the operation was consolidated to conduct business exclusively from 2200 Refugee Road in the city of Columbus. Thomas A. Kemp, son of Eugene Kemp, joined Hamilton Welding after graduating from The Ohio State University in 1958 and eventually became president and a fifty percent shareholder in the business. Thomas sadly passed HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 194 away in 2004 and as the last family member active in the operation, the shareholders explored selling the business. In March of 2006, Hamilton Welding was sold to brothers R. Jeffrey and Stephen G. Meeker, and Hamilton Tanks, LLC was formed. The transition of ownership was smooth, as Meeker Equipment Company, Jeffrey and Stephen’s other business, was already a large customer to Hamilton Welding. Today, Stephen is president of Hamilton Tanks, LLC while Jeffrey remains president of Meeker Equipment Company. In 2008, Donald W. Garrett and James R. Hurlburt, Jr., P.E. gained a minority ownership in both businesses. The primary business of Hamilton Tanks, LLC is manufacturing carbon and stainless steel storage tanks for commercial and industrial users serving the petroleum, chemical, asphalt, oil-field and other industries. As a licensed member of the Steel Tank Institute, it is one of the largest and most respected manufacturers of aboveground and underground steel storage tanks in the Midwest. Hamilton Tanks’ manufacturing technologies include UL, API, ASME, and custom tank designs ranging in size from 150 to 50,000 gallons. Hamilton Tanks’ breadth of products, reputation and service to industry has sustained its history and will continue to support its success moving forward. For more information on Hamilton Tanks, LLC, visit www.hamiltontanks.com. Established in 1879 by Henry C. Cooke and Adam G. Grant to build road and bridge structures in Franklin County, Fritz-RumerCooke Co., Inc., was founded on principles of honest business dealing to safely provide quality finished products. Those principles hold true today. Company officials say that FRC, (Fritz-Rumer-Cooke) also stands for Fair, Reliable, and Consistent. During more than 130 consecutive years in business, FRC has completed every contract it started. Fifth generation family member C. Clem Cooke, III is company president and treasurer, and his wife, Karen Cooke is vice president and secretary. After Clem’s great-grandfather, Albert C. Cooke, joined the company in 1889, its work expanded to include structures for railroad companies and private industries. W. A. and J. F. Fritz merged their construction business with the company in 1905, and in 1911 it was incorporated as The Fritz-Rumer-CookeGrant Co. Albert’s son, Carl C. Cooke, Sr., joined FRC soon after competing in the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm, Sweden, and his sons, Carl C., Jr., and Grant W., began work here in the 1940s. Grant started an independent engineering and consulting firm in 1959, specializing in railroad and structural engineering, and FRC’s focus gradually shifted to railroad track construction. Clem, who joined the company in 1972, points out that railroads are one of the keys to economical, efficient, clean transportation in the U.S. Recent FRC projects include constructing over ten miles of new railroad track for a major auto manufacturer; track inspection and preventive maintenance protecting safety and reliability of nearly 100 track owners around the U.S.; rehabilitating a narrow gauge tourist railroad track; rehabilitating existing track and constructing new track for a prominent steel producer and for a leading metals recycling company; new track construction for consumer products manufacturing distribution facilities in multiple U.S. locations; and maintenance and rehabilitation work in multiple locations for a major intermodal company. Workplace safety is of prime importance at FRC, which recently won the highest safety award presented by the National Railroad & Maintenance Association for its diligent awareness and safe work performance of all team members. “Karen and I are blessed to be surrounded by a wonderfully capable and talented group of people who work together to provide a necessary service to clients. The people at FRC make this company who we are and are the reason FRC is so trusted and relied upon,” Clem says. “FRC intends to continue providing its service to those who rely on railroads to transport goods and those who will again rely on railroads for transportation in the future.” BUILDING FRITZ-RUMERCOOKE CO., INC. A STRONG COLUMBUS 195 BUCKEYE SHAPEFORM ✧ Below: Rendering is c. 1912. Bottom: Buckeye Shapeform in 2011. A supplier partner to small volume end users of electronic enclosures, precisiondrawn metal structures, metal stampings, molded plastic parts and value-added services, Buckeye Shapeform began by manufacturing cans in 1892. Purchased in 1902 by E. C. Derby and renamed The Buckeye Stamping Company, it manufactured parts transferred by wagon to the Federal Glass Company, its largest customer. Parts were produced in its new building in 1912. At the beginning of World War II, Bell Sound founder Floyd Bell invented and patented a navigational device still used by Boeing today. Bell Sound grew from seven or eight to about 350 employees to produce these items for the military, leading Bell and other investors to purchase Buckeye for its manufacturing capabilities. The company’s products shipped to the military included Bell’s new inventions, small candles manufactured from Buckeye cans, and tow lines imbedded with intercom wires to enable communication between glider pilots and their tow planes. With war’s end and the HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 196 resulting decline in military business, Bell sold Bell Sound to TRW. About 1960, Bell founded F. W. Bell Inc. within the walls of Buckeye Stamping to manufacture gravity measuring equipment and voltage testing instruments and sensors. In 1970, F. W. Bell was sold to the Arnold Magnetics Division of Allegany Industries. Buckeye Stamping utilized its machinery and employees to manufacture instrument knobs and electronic enclosures designed by Ira W. (Bill) Simons. These were sold to other electronic OEMs. Within the walls of Buckeye Stamping, Bell founded Floyd Bell Associates in 1971 to manufacture audio alarm devices including replacement telephone ringers. This company still exists in Grandview, Ohio, under direction of Bell’s youngest son, Jamie, while Bell’s oldest son, Dave, became president of Buckeye Stamping in 1971. In 1995, Buckeye was acquired by D&H Holdings, Ltd. The next year Buckeye Stamping acquired Shapeform, Inc., a manufacturer of precision deep drawn cylindrical aluminum products used in missile and flare housing for the military; oxygen tanks for firemen and SCUBA divers; air cleaner housings for the Hummer; sonobuoy housing for electronic tracking used by the U.S. Navy; and many other tubular devices. To retain Shapeform’s name recognition, the company began doing business as Buckeye Shapeform. Now in its third century, the company has operated since 2000 under direction of Ken Tumblison, president. Visit Buckeye Shapeform on the Internet at www.buckeyeshapeform.com. CENTRAL ALUMINUM COMPANY A custom producer of high quality aluminum extrusions, the Central Aluminum Company of Columbus, Ohio, has been in business since 1963, serving Midwest industrial and manufacturing communities. Located in the heart of the Buckeye State, Central Aluminum serves such industries as window and door, home improvement, automotive, truck, marine, aircraft, recreational vehicle, agricultural, sign and billboard, awning and canopy, electronics, display and showcase, structural and tubular extrusions for construction, and many others. The company takes great pride in providing excellent customer service, from initial contact to delivery. Knowledgeable and technologically skilled staff members look forward to helping customers solve their extrusion problems, from drawing board to delivery. Thanks to its location, the company’s trucks are within twenty-four hours from eighty-five percent of its customers. Gale Roshon, who received his mechanical engineering degree from Ohio State University and worked soon after graduation for an aluminum extrusion business in Cincinnati, founded Central Aluminum, which operated profitably from the Grandview area during its first nine years. In 1972, Roshon exchanged property in Obetz with the Columbus Auto Auction to acquire a site on Broehm Road that included a ninety-seven thousand square foot building that would allow for expansion. Roshon added a second aluminum extrusion press, and during the next decade upgraded and installed other new equipment, including an aluminum caster to convert scrap generated by his business back into aluminum billets. At one time, Central was among the country’s most modern extrusion facilities. Roshon was also closely associated with B&T Extrusion Company; the first “independent” aluminum extruder in the United States. B&T extruded the first uranium rod used to build the first “FAT BOY” atomic bomb. Roshon held several offices with the Aluminum Extruders Council. After his death, the business was purchased by GDIC Group, a small private equity firm in Cleveland by Steven White with partners George Anthony and Edward Heil. White, who had a significant background in metal forming, felt comfortable with the extrusion process and was intrigued with Central’s long legacy of success. Shortly after acquiring Central, GDIC began to vertically integrate the portfolio with additional acquisitions that utilized extrusions in their products. Patio Enclosures in Macedonia, Ohio, is among the more famous companies. Central Aluminum now serves over two hundred customers in the central Ohio region. For more information, please visit www.centralaluminum.com. BUILDING A STRONG COLUMBUS 197 AUTOMATION AND CONTROL TECHNOLOGY, INC. The objective of Automation and Control Technology, Inc.—better known by its acronym and motto: “ACT in the interest of the customer”—is to supply highly appropriate, results-oriented solutions for data acquisition and management and process management, leading its customers to better decision making and a higher return on investment. ACT was awarded the State of Ohio’s Governor’s Export Award in 2009, and is recognized as one of Ohio’s top companies actively selling products and services internationally. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 198 The company’s wide range of proven measurement, control and decision support technology is an essential tool for industries including metals, plastics, non-woven, rubber, coating and converting, and tobacco. Since the 1950s, the company has been noted for its successful response to its customers’ needs. Beginning as Industrial Nucleonic, which received the original technology patents for measurement and control used in the tobacco industry, the company delivered products and services to multiple industries using a common electronics platform. Several changes in name and ownership occurred in the 1980s and 1990s, prior to the purchase in 1999 by ACT management and employees of the assets and historical identity associated with the tobacco industry interests of Asea Brown Boveri. ACT purchased and integrated software to provide electronic operation and tracking of financial, management, planning, project status, R&D, engineering requirements, and other details of each project. Beginning with three process measurement sensors, ACT has since developed, licensed or acquired more than fifteen sensors. Patents have been applied for two of these, with one already approved. Acquisitions in the past few years have allowed ACT to bypass expensive development costs and gain immediate access to targeted market segments. As its customer base increased, the company moved in 2005 into a new leased facility at 6141 Avery Road in Dublin, Ohio, with twenty thousand square feet evenly divided between manufacturing and office space. The company’s leadership team has many years of management experience in small, medium, and large corporate environments. The company’s outstanding combination of people, technologies, and think tank capabilities has delivered unique solutions, not available from other vendors, to its customers. For additional information, please visit www.autocontroltech.com. SPONSORS American Electric Power ...................................................................................................................................................................188 Automation and Control Technology, Inc. .........................................................................................................................................198 Buckeye Shapeform...........................................................................................................................................................................196 Capital Resin Corporation .................................................................................................................................................................190 Capital Wholesale Drug Company.....................................................................................................................................................154 Cardinal Health, Inc..........................................................................................................................................................................136 Center City International Trucks .......................................................................................................................................................174 Center of Science and Industry .........................................................................................................................................................143 Central Aluminum Company ............................................................................................................................................................197 City of Dublin ...................................................................................................................................................................................130 Columbus Academy ..........................................................................................................................................................................138 Columbus Blue Jackets......................................................................................................................................................................126 Columbus Chamber of Commerce ....................................................................................................................................................166 Columbus Clippers ...........................................................................................................................................................................142 Columbus Metropolitan Library ........................................................................................................................................................143 Columbus Police Reserve ..................................................................................................................................................................134 Columbus Sign Company..........................................................................................................................................................145, 170 Columbus Zoo and Aquarium ...........................................................................................................................................................142 Conway Center for Family Business ..................................................................................................................................................168 Drury Hotels .....................................................................................................................................................................................150 Experience Columbus .......................................................................................................................................................................167 Fritz-Rumer-Cooke Co., Inc. .............................................................................................................................................................195 Girl Scouts of Ohio’s Heartland Council ............................................................................................................................................141 Greater Columbus Convention Center...............................................................................................................................................173 Hamilton Tanks, LLC ........................................................................................................................................................................194 Heidelberg Distributing Company .....................................................................................................................................................172 Isabelle Ridgway Care Center ............................................................................................................................................................140 John Eramo & Sons, Inc. ..................................................................................................................................................................186 Kirk Williams Company, Inc. ............................................................................................................................................................192 Limited Brands..................................................................................................................................................................................171 Metro Parks.......................................................................................................................................................................................124 Nationwide .......................................................................................................................................................................................156 Nationwide Children’s Hospital .........................................................................................................................................................120 North American Broadcasting Company............................................................................................................................................146 Ohio CAT .........................................................................................................................................................................................184 Ohio Education Association ..............................................................................................................................................................128 OhioHealth .......................................................................................................................................................................................132 Porter Wright Morris & Arthur LLP ..................................................................................................................................................160 Renaissance Columbus Downtown Hotel ..........................................................................................................................................158 Schoedinger Funeral and Cremation Service......................................................................................................................................164 Smoot Construction ..........................................................................................................................................................................182 Sugardaddy’s Sumptuous Sweeties®..................................................................................................................................................169 The Cellar Lumber Company ............................................................................................................................................................178 The Flag Lady’s Flag Store .................................................................................................................................................................152 The Westin Columbus Hotel .............................................................................................................................................................162 U.S. Bank..........................................................................................................................................................................................165 SPONSORS 199 ABOUT THE AUTHOR ED LENTZ Ed Lentz has been teaching, writing and exploring the history of Central Ohio for the past forty years or so. When not doing that sort of thing, he teaches history in general and Ohio history in particular at various local colleges and universities. He has been known to write for local newspapers, consult in history and historic preservation and keep company with his wife, three cats and occasionally resident two children. If the best life is a busy one he has no reason to complain. Mr. Lentz holds degrees in history from Princeton University and The Ohio State University. He is the author of several books about Ohio and its capital city. HISTORIC COLUMBUS: A Bicentennial History 200 LEADERSHIP SPONSORS ISBN 9781935377597