Search

Search using this query type:

Search only these record types:





Advanced Search (Items only)

Wooster Digital History Project

Browse Items (516 total)

straubgrave.jpg
Photograph of Theo Staub grave showing symbols for Knights of Pythias, Odd Fellows, and Eagles

AC_2014.06.23_Daily Record Building
Photograph of the Daily Record offices at 212 E. Liberty St.

AC_2014.06.23_StMarys
Photograph of St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception Church. Taken from Beall Ave.

IMG_6785.jpg
Otto Bardon served in the 102nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War. he was captured by the Confederates along with a large portion of his regiment and sent to a prison camp at Cahaba, Alabama. Upon his release he survived the Sultana…

IMG_6821.jpg
One of the College of Wooster’s prominent early professors who taught Latin and Greek from 1873 to 1928. After his death, his daughter, Lucy L. Notestein, compiled a book of his notes on the college, Wooster of the Middle West, published in 1972.

IMG_6794.jpg
William Given, who served as Wooster's judge, organized the recruitment efforts in the city when the Civil War broke out. He hosted meetings to encourage young men to join the Union Army, and later joined himself, serving as the colonel of the 102nd…

IMG_6802.jpg
Edmund Secrest: Known as “the father of forest conservation in Ohio,” this man was made director of the OARDC in 1937. The beautiful Secrest Arboretum on the OARDC campus is named after him.

IMG_6803.jpg
Howard Lowry: The College of Wooster president responsible for adding the requirement of Independent Study to the curriculum.

IMG_6796.jpg
Charles E. Thorne: This man was the first director of the OARDC.

IMG_6813.jpg
Herman Freedlander: This man was the proprietor of the immensely important Freedlander’s department store.

IMG_7047.jpg
After Prohibition, beer is once again brewed at the JAFB Wooster Brewery, opened in 2012. The brewery is located at 120 Beall Ave. in the building that used to house Gertsenslager's Co.

IMG_7031.JPG
Wooster’s Christmas Run Park has links to Prohibition. The city originally paid for the land on which the park is built with fines collected from violators of the prohibition laws.

beall-stibbs_house.jpg
The home of Emeline Stibbs on E. Bowman Street (now part of the Wayne County Historical Society) acted as a meeting place for women of the Soldiers Aid Society during the war.

IMG_6828.jpg
The mausoleum of Aquila Wiley, who served as a colonel with the 41st Ohio during the Civil War and lost his leg during the Battle of Missionary Ridge.

IMG_6826.jpg
The tombstone of Charles Follis, nicknamed "The Black Cyclone," who was the first professional African American football player.

IMG_6827.jpg
Tombstone of James Hill. He was born in Scotland and fought for the British Army in the Crimean War. After moving to America, he served in the Civil War and survived Custer's defeat at the Battle of Little Bighorn. (Paul Locher, "1st Sgt. James Hill…

IMG_6814.jpg
Elias Compton served as dean at the College of Wooster and had three sons, Karl, Arthur, and Wilson, who went on to gain distinction.

IMG_6813.jpg
Herman Freedlander was the proprietor of the immensely important Freedlander’s department store.

IMG_6819.jpg
The McDonald Masoleum was erected by Angus Burns McDonald (son of Angus McDonald, of McDonald Works in Wooster), and celebrates the legacy of the McDonald family.

IMG_6798.jpg
Relatives of Adelaide Critchfield are buried in Wooster Cemetery. She died tragically in a fire that destroyed her Wooster home in 1895.

The Tracks Today copy.JPG
A set of abandoned tracks once used by Industry in western Wooster. These are located just outside of the city dump.

StullHairClinic copy.JPG
Wooster’s Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Freight Station still exists in the form of Stull’s Hair Clinic, located off of the junction between Columbus Avenue and Vanover Street.

IMG_6823.jpg
Michael Nachtrieb was a well-known portrait painter in Wooster, who painted depictions of many of the city's important citizens. He also painted portraits of national celebrities, including Abraham Lincoln and Robert E. Lee.

The_Daily_Record_Article.jpg
The Daily Record interviewed Herman and he was honored but had wanted to keep it secret. The store and the college had a long standing relationship with many of the students and their parents shopping at Freedlander’s.

AdforRA.jpg
Poster for the Resettlement Administration Reading: "A mule and a plow—Resettlement Administration—Small loans give farmers a new start"

957150eac82b39fbc17f8d18455fb455.jpg
A tag from the Blough Bros in Orrville, Ohio. In the late Nineteenth century, potatoes were one of Wayne County's staple crops. many local farmers grow potatoes today as well.

HallOhioMotto.jpg
Ohio’s controversial motto “With God All Things Are Possible,” a quote from the New Testament, was established in 1959 and survived a federal constitutional challenge in 2001. It remains a symbol of the Christian Church’s influence on the Ohio…
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2