East Liverpool Historical Society

1890. Fifth Street east from Washington. Odd Fellows Building on left. Brunt home in center. Birkett Glass slides.

The Brunt home.

This is where the Post Office, now Museum of Ceramics, would be built.

Corner of Washington, Broadway and 6th Street in the 1890s.

The D. E. McNicol Pottery Co. 1892-1954.E

Broadway & Washington St.

1900s

Probably very early 1900s.

Foot of Broadway 1907 flood

January 1943 from the collection of Inger Lloyd.

1970s From the collection of Inger Lloyd.

Thompson Hotel, probably early 1900s.

1970s from the colleciton of Inger Lloyd.

This picture is probably around the same time period, 1900 or so. It shows the Southwest corner of Broadway and E 4th.

The new High School, former location of the Dedrick's home. The High School was built in 1914.

Looking north at the intersection of E 4th and Broadway in the late 50s or early 60s. Changing classes at ELHS.

The white house on the upper right of the picture was the home of Basil Citizen Simms. His daughter Sarah Simms Ostermann continued to live there until her death. It was torn down around 1970 by Kent State who created a paved parking lot for the school. Not certain when it was built --- guess late 1880'-90's. Information complimewnts of Joan Witt and Tim Brookes.

Broadway 3

 

This site is the property of the East Liverpool Historical Society.
 
Regular linking, i.e. providing the URL of the East Liverpool Historical Society web site for viewers to click on and be taken to the East Liverpool Historical Society entry portal or to any specific article on the website is legally permitted.
 
Hyperlinking, or as it is also called framing, without permission is not permitted.
 
Legally speaking framing is still in a murky area of the law though there have been court cases in which framing has been seen as violation of copyright law. Many cases that were taken to court ended up settling out-of-court with the one doing the framing agreeing to cease framing and to just use a regular link to the other site.
 
The East Liverpool Historical Society pays fees to keep their site online. A person framing the Society site is effectively presenting the entire East Liverpool Historical Society web site as his own site and doing it at no cost to himself, i.e. stealing the site.
 
The East Liverpool Historical Society reserves the right to charge such an individual a fee for the use of the Society’s material.