History of Cleveland
http://dbpedia.org/resource/History_of_Cleveland an entity of type: Thing
Die Frühgeschichte Clevelands, also die Entwicklung der menschlichen Zivilisation vor der Ankunft der europäischen Siedler auf dem Gebiet der Stadt Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts, lässt sich bis etwa 10500 v. Chr. zurückverfolgen. Nomadische Kulturen der Paläo-Indianer und der Archaischen Periode sowie zunehmend sesshafte der Woodland-Periode ließen sich nachweisen. Innerhalb der Woodland-Periode sind ferner die Adena-, die Hopewell- sowie die zu unterscheiden. Die Geschichte der frühen Kulturen in der Region Cleveland steht dabei in engem Zusammenhang mit der Entwicklung im kulturell impulsgebenden Gebiet des Ohio und des Mississippi.
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The written history of Cleveland began with the city's founding by General Moses Cleaveland of the Connecticut Land Company on July 22, 1796. Its central location on the southern shore of Lake Erie and the mouth of the Cuyahoga River allowed it to become a major center for Great Lakes trade in northern Ohio in the early 19th century. An important Northern city during the American Civil War, Cleveland grew into a major industrial metropolis and a gateway for European and Middle Eastern immigrants, as well as African American migrants, seeking jobs and opportunity.
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History of Cleveland
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Frühgeschichte Clevelands
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Unemployed Clevelanders served fresh rolls and coffee by Mrs. Albert Schmidt , 1930
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Cleveland mayor Tom L. Johnson addressing an outdoor meeting, 1908
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Aerial footage of Cleveland in 1924
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Euclid Avenue in 1920
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Map of the Connecticut Western Reserve in 1826
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Unemployed Clevelanders seeking jobs at Cleveland City Hall, 1930
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The earliest known photograph of Cleveland's Public Square, 1857
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Belle Sherwin and Florence E. Allen at Woman suffrage headquarters, Upper Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, 1912
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vertical
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Downtown Cleveland, Ohio. Euclid Ave- Euclid Arcade - DPLA - 4d44c9aeef28c44966267b48a67b8544.jpg
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Aerial footage of Cleveland, Ohio from the Hagley Library.webm
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Cleveland in the Great Depression.jpg
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Cleveland-old-photo.jpg
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Tomljohnson.jpg
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Unemployed people gathering outside City Hall.jpg
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Western Reserve Including the Fire Lands 1826.jpg
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Woman suffrage headquarters Cleveland.jpg
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Die Frühgeschichte Clevelands, also die Entwicklung der menschlichen Zivilisation vor der Ankunft der europäischen Siedler auf dem Gebiet der Stadt Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts, lässt sich bis etwa 10500 v. Chr. zurückverfolgen. Nomadische Kulturen der Paläo-Indianer und der Archaischen Periode sowie zunehmend sesshafte der Woodland-Periode ließen sich nachweisen. Innerhalb der Woodland-Periode sind ferner die Adena-, die Hopewell- sowie die zu unterscheiden. Die Geschichte der frühen Kulturen in der Region Cleveland steht dabei in engem Zusammenhang mit der Entwicklung im kulturell impulsgebenden Gebiet des Ohio und des Mississippi.
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The written history of Cleveland began with the city's founding by General Moses Cleaveland of the Connecticut Land Company on July 22, 1796. Its central location on the southern shore of Lake Erie and the mouth of the Cuyahoga River allowed it to become a major center for Great Lakes trade in northern Ohio in the early 19th century. An important Northern city during the American Civil War, Cleveland grew into a major industrial metropolis and a gateway for European and Middle Eastern immigrants, as well as African American migrants, seeking jobs and opportunity. For most of the 20th century, Cleveland was one of America's largest cities, but after World War II, it suffered from post-war deindustrialization and suburbanization. The city has pursued a gradual recovery since the 1980s, becoming a major national center for healthcare and the arts by the early 21st century.
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