Results for F
Zanesfield
[South side of marker]: Zanesfield
Once a Wyandot vi...
Death of Pretty Boy Floyd
(front)
In these fields, formerly the site of the El...
Matthew Fontaine Maury
In this house
Matthew Fontaine Maury
L.L.D...
Frankenmuth Bavarian Inn
Side A:
The village of Frankenmuth ...
This tablet mark's the Site of Doolittle's Tavern
This tablet mark's the Site of Doolittle's Tavern, Headqua...
Appomattox County Eternal Flame
War Memorial
(East Side):World War I
James R. ...
Licking Furnace/Iron Made in Kentucky
Built three blocks east in 1859 by Swift's Iron and Steel ...
Refugee Towns
This part of the Allegheny was allotted to Munsee and othe...
Fort William Henry Harrison
1811 - - 1822
Built by Gov. Harrison, Oct., 1811, en...
Palace Office Building
The Palace Hotel Building was built in 1879 as part...
Results for F
Zanesfield
[South side of marker]: Zanesfield
Once a Wyandot village and home of Chief Tarhe, whose daughter, Myeerah, Isaac Zane married here about 1776, and thus established the home of the first white man in Logan County.
[North side of marker]: Zanesfield
Site of ...
Death of Pretty Boy Floyd
(front)
In these fields, formerly the site of the Ellen Conkle farm, notorious Depression-Era desperado Charles Arthur "Pretty Boy" Floyd met his death at the hands of federal agents and members of the East Liverpool Police Department on October 22, 1934.
Floyd's ...
Matthew Fontaine Maury
In this house
Matthew Fontaine Maury
L.L.D.-U.S.N.-C.S.N.
invented the
Submarine Electrical Torpedo
1861-1862
This stone is placed by the
Confederate Memorial Literary Society
A.D. 1910.
Marker is at the intersection of East Clay Street and North 11th Street, on the ...
Frankenmuth Bavarian Inn
Side A:
The village of Frankenmuth began as a German community in 1845. Its first settlers were among the German immigrants who left their homeland because of poor farming conditions and political unrest. Frankenmuth also attracted people who wanted ...
This tablet mark's the Site of Doolittle's Tavern
This tablet mark's the Site of Doolittle's Tavern, Headquarters of Gov. Meigs during the quartering of Gen. Hull's Army at Urbana in the War of 1812.
Marker is at the intersection of North Main Street (U.S. 68) and Miami Street (U.S. ...
Appomattox County Eternal Flame
War Memorial
(East Side):World War I
James R. Beasley
Jerry S. Beasley
James T. Cyrus
Edward B. Gunter
Robert F. Irving
Sam J. Harvey
Herman L. Lee
Thomas A. Owen
Phillip B. Swan
Campbell W. Teeter
Melvin M. Watkins
Melvin Watson
John L. Deaner
(North Side):World War II
George D. Akers • James D. Lee
Dewey C. ...
Licking Furnace/Iron Made in Kentucky
Built three blocks east in 1859 by Swift's Iron and Steel Works. As rebuilt in 1869, it was 65 feet high, with a maximum diameter inside of 16 feet. Its annual capacity was 17,000 tons of iron, using Connellsville coke ...
Refugee Towns
This part of the Allegheny was allotted to Munsee and other displaced Indians by the Seneca before 1750. In 1767-70 Zeisberger worked among these refugee groups, then occupying three towns along the river here.
Marker is on President Road (U.S. 62) ...
Fort William Henry Harrison
1811 - - 1822
Built by Gov. Harrison, Oct., 1811, enroute to Tippecanoe to disperse the Indians at Prophet's Town.
Capt. Zachary Taylor defended the Fort against a savage Indian attack, Sept., 1812.
De-activated in 1822.
Marker is at the intersection of U.S. 41 ...
Palace Office Building
The Palace Hotel Building was built in 1879 as part of the rebuilding of Butler after it was burned during the Civil War. It is a good example of high style Italianate architecture with elaborate bracketed cornice. It originally had ...