A fascinating and insightful look at a forgotten era in Columbus,
Ohio's history, today the state's largest city with a robust and
exciting past.
Columbus, Ohio, an odd amalgam of the planned and the spontaneous, was
founded on the banks of the Scioto River in 1812 as the new seat of this
young state's government. Located in the wilderness of central Ohio,
nearly equidistant to the real cities of Cincinnati, Cleveland, and
Toledo, Columbus experienced 100 years of unprecedented growth from
which it would emerge the state's capital in more than title alone.
Today, it is Ohio's largest city. Forgotten Columbus features many
people, places, and events that defined this burgeoning 19th and
early-20th century city. And above all, the places--from the Old Ohio
Penitentiary, to Fort Hayes, to the recently revitalized Brewery
District--which either no longer exist, or have changed so dramatically
over the years that they are barely recognizable. Residents and visitors
alike will find this a fascinating, insightful, and at times surprising
look back at a forgotten era in Columbus's history.