User:Kjmoran/Sandbox
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Located northeast of downtown Dayton, Old North Dayton sits between The Great Miami and Mad Rivers. German immigrants were the first to settle in the neighborhood, and then know as 'Texas' or 'Parma'. Around the turn of the century, Eastern European immigrants, predominately Poles, Hungarians, and Lithuanians, moved in as laborers and gave the neighborhoods its unique ethnic flavor represented by ethnic Roman Catholic churches, cultural festivals, social clubs, and an Eastern European specialty restaurant, the Amber Rose
Points of interest in the neighborhoods include the Amber Rose, St Adalbert’s Catholic Church (Polish), St. Stephen’s Catholic Church (Hungarian) , Holy Cross Catholic Church (Lithuanian), and the Kossuth Colony which has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1979.
Ohio State Routes 201 and 202 provide access to downtown Dayton, Riverside, and Huber Heights. Ohio State Route 4 provides quick access to Interstate 75 and Interstate 675.
Contents |
[edit] Historic District
In 1984, Dayton View was registered on the National Register of Historic Places, roughly bounded by Broadway, Harvard Blvd., Superior and Salem Aves., and Downtown Dayton (No. 84003787). [1]
[edit] Architecture
The architecture of Dayton View Historic District includes examples of.
[edit] References
- ^ OHIO - Montgomery County - Historic Districts. Retrieved on 28 August 2006.
[edit] External links
Historic Districts of Dayton, Ohio |
---|
Dayton View • East Third Street • Grafton Hill • Huffman • Kenilworth Avenue Old North Dayton (Kossuth Colony) • McPherson Town • Oregon • Paul Laurence Dunbar St. Anne's Hill • South Park • Webster Station • West Third Street • Wright Dunbar |