Written on the Hills: The Making of the Akron LandscapeIn warm and lively prose, Written on the Hills explores the natural and human history of Akron, Ohio. Drawing on geological studies, state and municipal records, local histories and personal reminiscences, Frances McGovern shows how the landscape has influenced the development of Akron, and how the layers of Akron's history are revealed in its modern landscape. This midsize city, shaped by its rugged environment of steep hills, ravines, rivers, and wetlands, began life in 1825 as a service settlement on the Ohio and Erie Canal, flanking a staircase of locks over the North-South Continental Divide. The early 1900s saw the spectacular rise of the rubber industry, giving Akron a sudden flood of workers, a hierarchy of millionaires, and a new national identity. From bedrock to corporate boardroom, Written on the Hills reads the evolution of Akron in its parks and street patterns, its houses and factory walls. Its raw edges refined by the ancient beauty of its setting, Akron has weathered many changes in its history, redirecting its economy and institutions to become the very livable city among the hills that it is today. |
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acres Akron and Environs Akron and Summit Akron Beacon Journal annexed Avenue Barberton blocks boom Bowery brick Buchtel building built campus Cascade Cascade locks Chuckery Church Cleveland Company Connecticut courthouse created Cuyahoga Falls Cuyahoga River Cuyahoga Valley downtown East Akron East Market Erie Canal Exchange Street factories Firestone Park Goodrich Goodyear Heights Gore Grismer Hall Harvey Firestone Hotel houses Howard Street Ibid Indians industry Kelley Knepper Lake Erie land landscape Little Cuyahoga located locks Main Street Maple MetroParks Metropolitan Park Middlebury miles Mill Street neighborhoods North Hill O'Neil's Ohio & Erie Ohio Canal Olin Perkins's Polsky's portage path quarry railroad route rubber Seiberling sewer Simon Perkins South Akron Springfield Township Stan Hywet stone streetcar Summit County Summit Lake survey Tallmadge town Township trees turn Tuscarawas River University of Akron West Hill West Market Street Western Reserve woods Wooster