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  1. Contents. hide. (Top) Prehistory. 18th and 19th centuries. Survey and establishment, 1796–1820. Village to city, 1820–1860. Civil War, 1861–1865. Industrial growth, 1865–1899. 20th century. The Progressive Era, 1900–1919. The Roaring Twenties, 1920–1929. The Great Depression, 1929–1939. World War II and postwar, 1940–1962. Turbulent era, 1962–1979.

  2. 1870: Cleveland population--92,829 (15th largest city in nation). Cuyahoga County population--132,010. Standard Oil Co. created 10 January. Sherwin-Williams Co. created 3 February. Northern Ohio Fair Association established. 1871: Board of Park Commissioners created. Cleveland Sunday Times, first successful Sunday paper, published 15 October. 1872

  3. En 1870, John D. Rockefeller fundó Standard Oil en Cleveland. En 1885, trasladó su sede a Nueva York, que se había convertido en un centro de finanzas y negocios. [26] Euclid Avenue y East 9th Street con el edificio Hickox en 1918. A fines del siglo XIX, Cleveland se había convertido en un importante centro de fabricación estadounidense.

  4. 1870 - John D. Rockefeller funda la Standard Oil en Cleveland; 1885 - La Standard Oil se traslada a Nueva York; Siglo XIX - A finales de Cleveland la ciudad se se convierte en un importante centro industrial, atrayendo la llegada de inmigrantes nacionales y extranjeros, principalmente europeos

  5. The CIVIL WAR transformed Cleveland from a commercial village to a city dependent on manufacturing. Migrating Connecticut settlers, one historian holds, transplanted their religious, political, and social ideals to the WESTERN RESERVE, including the abhorrence of slavery.

  6. 18th century. 1796 – Moses Cleaveland and survey party arrive at the location that would later become Cleveland. [1] 1797 – Lorenzo Carter, a prominent early settler, arrives. 19th century. 1800 – Trumbull County created, encompassing Cleveland. 1803 – Ohio becomes the 17th State admitted to the Union.

  7. 24 de ene. de 2016 · The Cleveland into which Solon (1834) was born was small (a population of 1075 in 1830 and 6,071 in 1840), rather homogeneous, and primarily mercantile. His wife, Emily, had been born in Kinsman, Ohio, and had come to Cleveland in the 1850s.