One-room schoolhouses, like the red brick building across the street, once dotted the landscape. It was constructed with locally-made bricks in 1903, and was used as a school until 1917. The building was used as a school until 1917. The building . . . — — Map (db m234948) HM
Built in the late 1820s, this structure served at various times as a tavern, general store, and residence. The house acquired a colorful reputation among canal travelers, who sometimes called it “Hell's Half Acre.”
The house doubled in size in . . . — — Map (db m183613) HM
Beginning around 1000, American Indians in northeastern
Ohio developed a distinct culture known archeologically as
the Whittlesley Tradition. They started building walls around
their small villages. (See illustration below.) Their pottery . . . — — Map (db m140125) HM
Lock 38 is one of the few restored, working locks
along the historic Ohio & Erie Canal. Locks are like
elevators – they raise and lower boats between levels.
State engineers designed 44 locks to deal with a 395 foot
rise in elevation from . . . — — Map (db m140161) HM
Directly across the Cuyahoga River from this spot is the South Park Village. Here, archeologists uncovered the remains of a four-acre, Native American settlement populated by people of the Whittlesey Tradition. The people of South Park lived in . . . — — Map (db m140124) HM
Valley View Veterans Honor Roll
Valley View Village
World War I Clyde L. Hogue – Rudolph Zimmerman
World War II - Korea – Viet Nam – All Others
(314 additional names)
Gold Star
Honor Roll
With Gratitude . . . — — Map (db m140264) WM
Valley View Village
Town Hall
erected as an eight grade
school in 1907, A.E. Smith,
Principal. Became Village Hall
in 1941, since used for municipal
purpose. Incorporated 1919,
Burt C. Allen, Mayor
Valley View-Cuyahoga Valley
Historical . . . — — Map (db m140166) HM