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Ohio City Glass

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Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Ohio City Glass
Phone:
+1 216-331-2620

Hours:
Sunday10am - 6pm
Monday10am - 6pm
TuesdayClosed
WednesdayClosed
Thursday10am - 6pm
Friday10am - 6pm
Saturday10am - 6pm


The history of Ohio includes many thousands of years of human activity. What is currently Ohio was probably first settled in by Paleo-Indian people who lived in the area as early as 13,000 B.C. A fossil which dated between 11,727 and 11,424 B.C. indicated that Paleo-Indians hunted large animals, including Jefferson's ground sloth, using stone tools. Later ancestors of Native Americans were known as the Archaic peoples. Sophisticated successive cultures consisting of precolonial people , such as the Adena, Hopewell and Fort Ancient, built monumental earthworks such as massive monuments where they used to bury their dead; some of which have survived to the present.By the mid-18th century, a few American and French fur traders engaged historic Native American tribes in present-day Ohio in the fur trade. American settlement in the Ohio territory came after the American Revolutionary War. The Congress prohibited slavery in the Ohio Territory. Ohio's population increased rapidly, chiefly by migrants from New England, New York and Pennsylvania. Southerners settled along the southern part of the territory, as they traveled mostly by the Ohio River. Yankees, especially in the Western reserve , supported modernization, public education and anti-slavery policies. The state supported the Union in the American Civil War, although antiwar Copperhead sentiment was strong in Southern settlements. After the Civil War, Ohio became a major industrial state. The Great Lakes brought in iron ore and provided a route for exports, as did railroads. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the fast-growing industries created jobs that attracted hundreds of thousands immigrants from Europe. In World War I Europe was closed off and whites came from Appalachia, while African Americans came from the states to the South. The cultures of its major cities became much more diverse with the traditions, cultures, foods and music of the new arrivals. Ohio's industries were integral to American industrial power in the 20th century. Economic restructuring in steel and other manufacturing cost the state many jobs in the later 20th century as heavy industry declined. The economy in the 21st century has seen the loss of many manufacturing jobs, and a switch to service industries such as medicine and education.
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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