Ohio In Hindsight
by Conrade C. Hinds
by Conrade C. Hinds
These books cover a wide range of Ohio's historic contributions and extra ordinary events that forged America into a great country that was built by many ordinary nameless men and women of diverse cultures and talents over the past two centuries. Ohio geographically is regarded as the heart of America. It is often said that America didn't build Ohio. Instead, it was Ohio that built America.
Hollywood, California, the Tinseltown, has a unique heritage tied to Ohio. It could be said that Ohio and its ingenuity are the parents of Hollywood. The original settlement was founded as a reserved Christian community by a young lady from Ohio. This idea worked until the fledgling New York City movie industry relocated to California to find refuge from the inventive Ohioan Thomas Edison and his monopoly on motion picture production. Native Ohioans stepped into the early Hollywood spotlight of stardom. The movie industry advanced to a higher level when the Youngstown Warner Brothers introduced sound to films, making movies a significant form of entertainment worldwide. Hollywood in Ohio looks at the role Buckeyes continue to play in the motion picture industry and premieres in March 2026, so stay tuned.
The Columbus Experiment of 1908 was the moon landing of its day. It introduced new technology for treating drinking water and wastewater that eradicated a typhoid epidemic.
A devastating flood that covered a third of the country. This flood changed the way in which annual flooding was managed. It also resulted in the introduction of Water Conservancy Districts.
Sells Brothers, John Robinson, Walter L. Main and S.H. Barrett were big 19th century Ohio circus names that competed with Barnum and Bailey when the Ringling's were still a small tent show.
Some see Ohio as a rustbelt state, but its heritage of invention and manufacturing is merely in transition. It is proving this by making everything from bricks to high-tech microchips.