Search

Search using this query type:

Search only these record types:





Advanced Search (Items only)

Wooster Digital History Project

Browse Items (516 total)

Founders. 100th Anniversary Book. Pg. 5.JPG
The original Vine Street building where Second Baptist was located from its establishment in 1894 until 1955

2013-06-13 17.45.23.jpg
Second Baptist Church's current building on Grant Street

WDR Feb. 24, 1975.jpg
A 1975 Daily Record photo of Second Baptist's groundbreaking ceremony for the new church, featuring Rev. Leroy Adams and Rufus Thompson

IMG_6802.jpg
Edmund Secrest: Known as “the father of forest conservation in Ohio,” this man was made director of the OARDC in 1937. The beautiful Secrest Arboretum on the OARDC campus is named after him.

cemetery2-1.jpg
Jacob Frick: The Frick family did much to help Wooster in the late 19th century. Jacob Frick, a longtime resident of Wooster, built the War monument currently in the Wooster Town Square. His nephew, the famous industrialist and art collector, Henry…

cemetery3-1.jpg
Charles Frost: This man served as the first Mayor of Wooster, starting when it was incorporated as a City in 1808.

cemetery14-1.jpg
Annie B. Irish: This woman served as the University of Wooster’s first female professor, starting in 1882.

cemetery4-1.jpg
Col. John B. Sloane: This man held many important roles in the local, state, and federal government levels. Throughout his life, he served as an Ohio State Representative, a Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County, the Secretary of State…

cemetery5-1.jpg
Ephraim Quinby, Jr: This man contributed greatly to the Wooster Community in the late 19th century. Not only was he an important businessman who collected profitable pieces of real estate, he also donated large sums to many different charitable…

stibbs.jpg
- Reasin Beall: This prominent Wooster businessman served for many years as a member of the US Congress, and later as the Register of the Land Office for the Wooster Land District. Today, he is probably most well known for the street that bears his…

cemetery6-1.jpg
Leander Firestone, MD: This local Wooster doctor also served as one of the University of Wooster’s first professors and the first local professor. He began as a lecturer in anatomy and physiology, but was later promoted to a full time staff member in…

cemetery7-1.jpg
Richard L. Morrison, Sr: One of Wooster’s first african american residents, Morrison made a name for himself in the community as a respected barber at the Morrison Barber Shop and as a leader at second Baptist Church. (“Dick Morrison, Color Man Who…

cemetery13-1.jpg
Adam Foss: This man was the founder of Wooster Brush Works, now known as Wooster Brush Company. (Notestein book, 11)

cemetery12.jpg
Richard Reddick: This man built the first three miles of the Pennsylvania Railroad track, before Wooster even had paved roads in 1851, which greatly impacted Wooster’s reach to outside markets.

cemetery11.jpg
Levi Cox: This man was the first owner-publisher of the “Ohio Spectator,” the predecessor of the Wooster Republican and Wayne County Democrat, first printed in 1817.

cemetery10-2.jpg
William Henry: This man was one of Wooster’s surveyors along with the Larwill brothers and John Bever. While he did not stay in Wooster after the fact, as the Larwills did, he still made his mark on Wooster as one of the men responsible for laying…

cemetery9-1.jpg
Gen. Cyrus Spink: This man served as the Deputy County Surveyor for many years under Joseph Larwill. He is most well known, however, as the person who organized the first fire company in Wooster in 1827, which was located at Every Woman's House on…

j. larwill.jpg
Joseph Larwill: It is curious that Joseph Larwill was not buried in the Mausoleum with his two brothers, as he too was one of Wooster’s first residents and part of the initial surveying party. However, according to letters found at the Ohio…

7fd6df7589600f90312506f924611229.jpg
A program, partially in German, from the 1913 dedication anniversary of the Evangelical Christ Church. The congregation was part of the Evangelical Lutheran Church.

2013-07-03 16.58.54.jpg
View of Severance Hall (chemistry), constructed in 1902, from the academic quad of the College of Wooster

1.jpg
This sketch from Caldwell's Atlas of 1873 features a mower from Excelsior Mower and Reaper Works of Cline, Seiberling and Co., in Doylestown, Ohio. The piece of innovative farm technology was sold in the mid-Nineteenth century to cut lodged and…

DSC00850.JPG
The sign for the Main Street Wooster and Chamber of Commerce building on West Liberty Street

layingdownroots8.jpg
Photo of the Simon Rice Home, now the headquarters of the police at OARDC.

DSC00848.JPG
This is a photo of South Market Bistro, a Wooster restaurant serving local, seasonal ingredients.

2013-07-03 17.11.20.jpg
A photo of South Market Street, near the Square, in 2013.

Publications_19011902_Wooster_Voice__19011214_Special_Edition_Fire_Pg1-2.jpg
The Special Edition describes the story of the fire and how the college responded. A lengthy section was devoted to listing how many people and organizations had donated and how people could continue to help.

Downtown_Springfield_Ohio_CAPAAE0068-1.jpg
Photo of statue in Springfield, OH paying tribute to pioneer women of Ohio

Springville_Mill_Ad.jpg
This advertisement for a local mill showcases the common services that mills such as the Stibbs Mill in Wooster would have offered, such as providing families with flour to make bread.
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2