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The Hubbard House in northeast Ohio鈥檚 Ashtabula County was an important stop on the Underground Railroad. After surviving a demolition threat, it has a unique strategy to ensure its future.
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鈥楤ig Muskie鈥, once the world鈥檚 largest walking dragline excavator, is being honored with a new historical marker.
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County engineers in north central Ohio are re-surveying the line created by the Treaty of Greenville. It divided what鈥檚 now the state of Ohio in two: claiming the south for westward-bound American settlers and the north for a dozen indigenous nations.
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The Ohio History Connection is mapping patriots鈥 gravesites, in hope of better preserving them across the state.
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The Urbana Black Heritage Festival will give west-central Ohioans the chance to celebrate the powerful legacy and lasting contributions of past Black residents.
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The Women Religious Archive Collaborative is focusing on documenting the contributions of Catholic sisters across the country.
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Ohio has more sites in the National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom program than any other state, and a new initiative in southern Ohio is playing a key role in adding even more.
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A group of Hillsboro mothers and their children marched for two years to desegregate their community鈥檚 schools.
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Community members in Braceville opened a new museum to document the rural area鈥檚 rich Black history.
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A new book is celebrating the life of one of Ohio鈥檚 earliest and most active conductors along the Underground Railroad: Reverend John Rankin.