Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Perrysburg, Ohio" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Perrysburg and was
The Town of Dayton was founded in 1835, formed from the Town of Perrysburg.
The Town of Otto was formed in 1823 from part of the Town of Perrysburg.
The Town of Persia was founded in 1835 from the Town of Perrysburg.
The size of Franklinville was reduced by the formation of new towns in the county: Perrysburg ( 1814 ), Ellicottville, Freedom and Yorkshire ( 1820 ), Farmersville ( 1821 ), and Lyndon ( 1829 ).
The " Town of Elkdale ," as it was originally called, was formed in 1818 from the " Town of Perry " ( now Perrysburg ).
The " Town of Ischua ," ( now Franklinville ) was established in 1812, part of Perrysburg was removed in 1814, Great Valley was formed in 1818, Hinsdale in 1820, and Portville, in 1837.
The Village of Perrysburg was incorporated in 1916.
By 1880, the population of the village of Perrysburg was about 400, with many more living in the surrounding town.
The Town of Perrysburg was formed in 1814 as the " Town of Perry " from the Towns of Ischua and Olean.
A corduroy road ( from modern-day Fremont to Perrysburg ) was constructed in 1825, see Maumee Road Lands, and paved with gravel in 1838, but travel in the wet season could still take days or even weeks.
) Fort Meigs in Perrysburg, Ohio was named in his honor during the War of 1812 by William Henry Harrison.
SR 163 was extended west into Wood County along a previously un-numbered from Genoa to its present western terminus at US 20 southeast of Perrysburg.
Until 1964, its route from Perrysburg to Toledo was superseded by U. S. Route 23.
It was routed approximately along its current alignment between U. S. Route 20 in Perrysburg and the former State Route 102 ( current State Route 51 ) near Millbury.

Perrysburg and surveyed
L ' Enfant surveyed and platted Perrysburg, Ohio on April 26, 1816.

Perrysburg and on
Interstate 475 is a loop that both begins and ends on I-75 in Perrysburg and West Toledo, respectively.
Acting as commander-in-chief of Ohio's militia, Governor Lucas, along with General John Bell and about 600 other fully armed militiamen, arrived in Perrysburg, Ohio, ten miles ( 16 km ) southwest of Toledo, on March 31, 1835.
The 1842 milestone on the Western Reserve and Maumee Turnpike marks a point 16 miles from Perrysburg and 15 miles from Lower Sandusky ( now Fremont ).
Lucas called out the Ohio militia to be on hand, if need be, when the three commissioners arrived at Perrysburg on April 1 — April Fool's Day.
Perrysburg joined Randolph, East Randolph and Limestone among Cattaraugus County villages that voted to dissolve within a six-month span, with all but Limestone having approved their dissolutions on March 16.
* Perrysburg – The census designated place and former Village of Perrysburg in the south-central part of the town, located on NY Route 39.
* West Perrysburg – The hamlet is located by the Cattaraugus Reservation on County Road 78 in the western part of the town.
East Randolph and Perrysburg approved their dissolution plans on the same day ; Limestone had done so in September 2009.
In early October 2008, First Solar, Inc. broke ground on an expansion of its Perrysburg, Ohio, facility that will add enough capacity to produce another 57 MW per year of solar modules at the facility, bringing its total capacity to roughly 192 MW per year.

Perrysburg and April
* April 2: Lucas and the Ohio line-runners arrive in Perrysburg.
* April 25: Lucas stationed forty armed men with the surveying party and gathered a force at Perrysburg.
* April 27: The line-runners arrived in Perrysburg.

Perrysburg and by
In addition to property taxes, Perrysburg Schools are supported by 0. 5 % income tax revenue within the school district.
On March 16, 2010, voters approved, by a 60-9 margin, a referendum to dissolve the village into the town of Perrysburg.
After this decisive victory for General Anthony Wayne, Native Americans ceded a twelve mile square tract around Perrysburg and Maumee to the United States by the Treaty of Greenville in 1795.
Construction of the fort started in February 1813 by soldiers under the command of General William Henry Harrison in present-day Perrysburg, Ohio, to provide a supply depot and staging point for operations in Canada that would also command the rapids of the Maumee River.

Perrysburg and .
Some of the suburbs in Ohio include: Bowling Green, Holland, Lake Township, Maumee, Millbury, Monclova Township, Northwood, Oregon, Ottawa Hills, Perrysburg, Rossford, Springfield Township, Sylvania, Walbridge, Waterville, Whitehouse, and Washington Township.
Formerly located at One SeaGate, O-I has recently relocated to suburban Perrysburg.
Toledo is home of Jeep headquarters and has 2 production facilities, one in the city and one in suburban Perrysburg.
On March 18, 2010, three other villages ( East Randolph, Randolph and Perrysburg ) followed suit and approved dissolution into their surrounding towns ( Town of Randolph for the first two, and Town of Perrysburg for the third ); these three villages dissolved at the beginning of 2012.
Dayton borders the Town of Perrysburg to the north and the Town of Persia to the east.
Otto returned territory to Perrysburg in 1823 and ceded land to Ashford in 1835.
* Dayton ; Perrysburg Image: West. svg
The east town line borders the Town of Perrysburg and the portion of the Cattaraugus Reservation in Cattaraugus County, New York.
The toll road connected Perrysburg with Lower Sandusky, which has since been renamed Fremont.
Several of the milestones are still in place along the stretch between present day Fremont and Perrysburg.
Perrysburg is a city in Wood County, Ohio, United States, along the Maumee River.
Perrysburg is home to Fort Meigs, the largest wooden walled fortification in North America.
The European-American history of Perrysburg begins with the construction of Fort Meigs.
Perrysburg is home to four elementary schools, one junior high school, one high school and one extracurricular academy.
Over 20 advanced placement and honors classes are offered at Perrysburg High School and the district's elementary schools have robust technology integration.
Perrysburg Junior High School is housed in the old Perrysburg High School building.

0.183 seconds.