Through historic images, explore how Malvern, Ohio grew from an isolated area to a desirable destination in the Sandy Valley.
The first pioneers, Moses Porter and Richard Vaughn, arrived in this isolated area, now known as Malvern, Ohio, in 1806. Later, Rev. William Hardesty had a vision of a community at this spot, laying out the village of Troy in 1834. This was followed by the creation of another small community nearby named Lodi in 1836. By 1840, Troy was renamed as Malvern, and it was later incorporated in 1869. It is the birthplace of telephone industry pioneer Theodore Vail and nationally known artist Clyde Singer and home to early major-league baseball pitcher Edward Poole. As commerce developed here, a total of five clay product industries were delivering materials across the United States at approximately 1,000 tons daily. Paving brick, building brick, hollow building tile, sewer pipe, and fire brick from Malvern, Ohio, was widely recognized and desired. The superiority of the product from this small village earned gold medals at world fairs.
Detalles del producto
Editorial : Arcadia Publishing (26 Agosto 2024)
Idioma : Inglés
Tapa blanda : 128 páginas
ISBN-10 : 1467161829
ISBN-13 : 978-1467161824
Dimensiones : 6.5 x 0.31 x 9.25 pulgadas
Clasificación en los más vendidos de Amazon: nº61,679 en Libros (Ver el Top 100 en Libros)
nº16 en Guías del Medio Oeste de Estados Unidos
nº519 en Historia de Estados Unidos Local y Estatal (Libros)