The Buckeye Road neighborhood of Cleveland has a long and storied
multicultural history of immigrants from Hungary, and its residents who
created a rich and enduring history in Ohio.
Although it has been called Little Hungary or Little Budapest,
Cleveland's Buckeye Road neighborhood exceeds that description. A more
apt moniker might be Little Danube. Like the Danube, Buckeye's history
has flowed through a multicultural immigrant community and into a modern
urban neighborhood striving to make its mark. Fueled by the industry of
its first settlers in the 1880s, the district spread from what is now
Buckeye Road and Woodland Avenue to the border of Shaker Square. Shops,
restaurants, taverns, and other businesses too numerous to count
flourished. The Buckeye neighborhood became a commercial center to serve
immigrants and their families who worked at the factories that dotted
Buckeye's west end. Community life was refueled over the years by waves
of immigrants--mainly from Hungary--fleeing various tides of oppression
in Europe. As the 1970s approached, Buckeye, like many Cleveland areas,
became a victim of urban flight. Today residents and businesses, along
with the Buckeye Area Development Corporation, are working to create and
sustain another resurgence in this grand neighborhood.