Everything about Mansfield Ohio totally explained
Mansfield is a city in the
U.S. state of
Ohio and the
county seat of
Richland County. The municipality is located in north-central Ohio in the western foothills of the
Allegheny Plateau, approximately 80 miles (129 km) southwest of
Cleveland and 66 miles (106 km) northeast of
Columbus.
It was founded in 1808 on a fork of the
Mohican River in a hilly region surrounded by fertile farmlands, and became a
manufacturing center owing to its location with numerous
railroad lines. After the decline of
heavy manufacturing, the city's industry has since diversified into
service economy, including
retailing,
education, and
healthcare sectors.
The population was 49,346 at the
2000 census. In 2006 Mansfield had an estimated population of 50,212. According to the US Census 2006 estimate, the Mansfield, OH
Metropolitan Statistical Area has a population of 127,010 residents, while the
Mansfield-Bucyrus, OH Combined Statistical Area has 172,057 residents.
Mansfield's official
nickname is "The Heart of Ohio". It is the largest city in the "Mid-Ohio" region of the state, the north-central region which is generally considered to extend from
Marion,
Delaware,
Knox,
Morrow,
Crawford,
Ashland and
Richland counties in the south, to the
Firelands area south of
Sandusky in the north. Mansfield is also known as the "Carousel Capital of Ohio" and "Racing Capital of Ohio".
History
Mansfield was first settled in 1808 and was named for
Jared Mansfield, the U.S.
Surveyor General who directed its planning. The area that's now
Richland County, so named for the descriptive of the fertile soil. During the
War of 1812, the first courthouse, jail, and church of Richland County was served in one of two blockhouses erected on the public square until 1816. The village of Mansfield was incorporated in 1828, and in 1857 Mansfield was chartered as a city. In 1908, the blockhouse became a symbol of Mansfield's heritage during its 100th birthday celebration, and in 1929, the blockhouse was relocated to its present location at South Park.
Geography
Topography
Mansfield is located at (40.754856, -82.522855), directly between
Columbus and
Cleveland, however, the city lies in the western foothills of the
Allegheny Plateau, and its elevation is among the highest of Ohio cities. The highest point in the city (1,492.66 feet or 454.96 meters above sea level) is at the Woodland reservoir in southwest Mansfield. The elevation of Central Park in downtown Mansfield is 1,242.66 feet (378.76 m) above sea level.
Mansfield is bordered by
Madison Township to the east, northwest and southwest,
Franklin Township to the north,
Weller Township to the northeast,
Washington Township to the south,
Troy Township to the southwest,
Springfield Township and the suburban city of
Ontario to the west.
According to the
United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 29.9 square miles (77.5 km²). All of it's land and, aside from the small lake in North Lake Park, none of the area is covered with water.
Climate
Mansfield has a
humid continental climate (
Koppen climate classification Dfa), typical of the
Midwestern United States.
Lake Erie is only 38 miles (61 km) north of Mansfield and has some influence on the climate in winter. Winters are usually cold and dry but with frequent thaws and temperatures rarely drop below 0°F (–17°C). Springs are short with rapid transition from hard winter to pleasant, sometimes humid and muggy summers. Summer temperatures exceed 90°F (32°C) seven times a year on average.
Fall usually is the dryest season with many clear warm days and cool nights. The highest recorded temperature was 105 °
F (40 °
C) on
July 21,
1934, while the lowest recorded temperature was –26°F (–32°C) on
January 15,
1929.
| Monthly Normal and Record High and Low Temperatures |
| °Fahrenheit |
|
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
| Record High | 69 |
71 |
82 |
87 |
95 |
101 |
105 |
103 |
97 |
90 |
78 |
73
|
| Normal High | 32 |
36 |
47 |
58 |
69 |
78 |
82 |
80 |
73 |
62 |
49 |
37
|
| Normal Low | 16 |
19 |
27 |
36 |
47 |
56 |
60 |
59 |
52 |
41 |
32 |
22
|
| Record Low | -26 |
-21 |
-20 |
8 |
20 |
32 |
40 |
32 |
22 |
17 |
-17 |
-20
|
| Rain (in) | 2.63 |
2.17 |
3.36 |
4.17 |
4.42 |
4.52 |
4.23 |
4.60 |
3.44 |
2.68 |
3.76 |
3.26
|
| Snow (in) | 13.1 |
9.9 |
6.8 |
2.1 |
T |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.6 |
2.8 |
9.7
|
Cityscape
Mansfield has several distinct neighborhoods. The Boulevards is an early 20th century residential neighborhood (now a historical preservation district). It has about 130 homes (some on double lots) located just south of Park Avenue West about a mile west of the city center. Glenwood and Parkwood Boulevards are main streets. Until 1937, the Boulevards was served by the Park Avenue West electric street car line.
Woodland, in the southwestern part of the city, is the largest residential neighborhood. Laid out as Woodland Farms in 1920 by its developer, James M. Dickson, it began to develop just before the
Great Depression.
Westinghouse opened its appliance demonstration model, the Home of Tomorrow, on Andover Road in February 1934. Dickson Park, adjacent to Woodland Elementary School on Davis Road, honors the developer. The Woodland reservoir (1928), at the southwestern edge of the neighborhood, is on Mansfield's highest elevation. The
Mansfield Art Center, founded in 1945, is at the northwest edge of the neighborhood.
Demographics
Population 1960-2000.
}}
As of the
census of 2000, there were 49,346 people, 20,182 households, and 12,028 families residing in the city. The
population density was 1,649.8 people per square mile (637.0/km²). There were 22,267 housing units at an average density of 744.6/sq mi (287.4/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 76.77%
White, 19.65%
African American, 0.28%
Native American, 0.63%
Asian, 0.04%
Pacific Islander, 0.56% from
other races, and 2.07% from two or more races.
Hispanic or
Latino of any race were 1.23% of the population. Culliver was elected mayor in November 2007 by a margin of 4,862 votes. He is the city's first
African-American mayor to be elected.
Mansfield city council is a eight-member legislative group that serve four-year terms. Six of the members represent specific wards; two are elected city-wide as at-large council members. Democrat Phillip Scott has been Mansfield's council president since November 2007.
While Mansfield and Richland County have historically supported the
Republican Party for decades, other parts of Ohio like
Cleveland and parts of
Northeast Ohio have historically supported the
Democratic Party. During the
2004 Presidential election,
George W. Bush carried both Ohio and Richland County.
Regional Representatives
Mansfield is currently represented in the
U.S. House of Representatives by
Jim Jordan (
R) and in the
U.S. Senate by
George V. Voinovich (
R) and
Sherrod Brown (
D), in the
state senate by
Bill Harris (
R), and in the
state house by
Jay Goyal (
D). As of January 2007, Mansfield and the rest of the State of Ohio, are served by
Ted Strickland (
D) as governor, who replaced two term-limited Governor
Bob Taft (
R).
Industry and business
Mansfield's greatest period of industrial development led by the city's
stove manufacturing industries, including
Westinghouse and the
Tappan Company. By the late 1920s, Westinghouse had become the city's largest employer, specializing in electric lighting, industrial heating and engineering, and home
appliances.
However, like many cities in the
rust belt region of the
Midwest, Mansfield saw a large decline in its
manufacturing and
retail sectors. Beginning with the steel Recession of the 1970s, the loss of jobs to overseas manufacturing, prolonged labor disputes, and deteriorating factory facilities all contributed to heavy industry leaving the area. Westinghouse, Tappan, Ohio Brass Company and many other manufacturing plants were either bought-out, relocated or closed, leaving only the
AK Steel Plant in Mansfield and the
General Motors Fisher Body Stamping Plant in neighboring
Ontario as the last two remaining heavy industry employers. The AK Steel Mansfield Works production facility, formerly Armco Steel, was the location of a violent 3-year United Steelworkers Union lock-out and strike from 1999 to 2002.
With the loss of the jobs, locally owned businesses in downtown Mansfield closed, as did much of the retail built in the 1960s along Park Avenue West (formerly known as "The Miracle Mile") and Lexington Avenue. New
big-box retail and franchise restaurants have been built in the adjacent
suburb of Ontario, which is on track to replace Mansfield as the major economic and retail center for Richland County and north-central Ohio.
The city has a sought to diversify its economy to become less dependent on its struggling
manufacturing sector. Remaining manufactures in Mansfield include steel manufacturer
AK Steel,
Honda Supplier
Newman Technology, Inc, generator manufacturer
Hyundal Ideal Electric Company, thermostats manufacturer
Therm-O-Disc, pumps manufacturer The
Gorman-Rupp Company and plumbing manufacturer
Crane Plumbing.
Mansfield's healthcare industry includes
MedCentral Health System, the city's largest employer and the largest in Richland County. The hospital is the city's primary provider of health care and serves as the major regional
trauma center for north-central Ohio.
Mansfield is also home of three well-known food companies.
Isaly Dairy Company (AKA
Isaly's) was a chain of family-owned dairies and restaurants started by William Isaly in the early 1900s until the 1970s, famous for creating the
Klondike Bar ice cream treat, popularized by the
slogan "What would you do for a Klondike Bar?".
Stewart's Drive-In is a chain of root beer stands started by Frank Stewart in 1924, famous for their
Stewart's Fountain Classics line of premium beverages now sold world-wide. The Jones Potato Chip Company, started by Frederick W. Jones in 1945 and famous for their Jones Marcelled Potato Chips, is headquartered in Mansfield.
Film industry
From the 1950s through the 1970s, Mansfield was the home of the infamous Highway Safety Foundation, the organization that created the controversial driver's education scare films that featured gruesome film photography taken at fatal automobile accidents in the Mansfield area. The films include
Signal 30 (1959),
Mechanized Death (1961),
Wheels of Tragedy (1963), and
Highways of Agony (1969). In addition, the Highway Safety Foundation produced other controversial education films including
The Child Molester and
Camera Surveillance (both 1964).
Mansfield has also been used as a location for several big-budget Hollywood movies; among the most notable of these were
The Shawshank Redemption,
Air Force One
, and
Tango & Cash, all of which featured the
Ohio State Reformatory as a backdrop in pivotal scenes.
Culture
Annual events and fairs
The Mansfield/Mehock Relays, an annual two-day invitational track and field meet for high school boys and girls, held in April since 1927 (except for Second World War years), began on the initiative of Harry Mehock, track coach at host
Mansfield Senior High School.
The
Miss Ohio Pageant (Miss America preliminary), hosted by Mansfield since 1975, is staged annually at
The Renaissance.
The Richland County Fair is also held in Mansfield, at the Richland County Fairgrounds. The fair is held in the beginning of August. The fair started on
October 26,
1889. In the late 1800s, Mansfield also held the
Ohio State Fair. At the fair there are several rides, and much livestock, that will be judged.
Historical structures and museums
Mansfield is home to the old
Ohio State Reformatory, constructed between 1886 and 1910 by architect Levi T. Scofield from
Cleveland to resemble a German castle, is located north of downtown Mansfield on
Ohio 545, and has been the location for many major
films, including
The Shawshank Redemption,
Harry and Walter Go to New York,
Air Force One and
Tango & Cash. Most of the prison yard has now been demolished to make room for expansion of the adjacent
Mansfield Correctional Institution and
Richland Correctional Institution, but the Reformatory's Gothic-style Administration Building remains standing and due to its prominent use in films, has become a tourist attraction. The building is used during the
Halloween season each year as a haunted attraction known as the "Haunted Reformatory," people from all over visit Mansfield to take part in the haunted tour, some from as far as Michigan and Indiana.
The
Oak Hill Cottage and Museum, a
Gothic Revival brick house, built in 1847, is one of the most perfect
Carpenter Gothic houses in the United States and is operated by the Richland County Historical Society. Located in the Woodland neighborhood is the
Mansfield Art Center, opened in 1945, is a visual arts organization. The Living Bible Museum (aka "Bible Walk") opened in 1987, is Ohio's only life-size wax museum. Located in the heart of downtown is the
Mansfield Memorial Museum, built in 1887, and opened to the public in 1889, is a museum of many different
exhibits.
Parks and outdoor attractions
Located in downtown Mansfield's Historic Carrousel District is the Richland Carrousel Park, opened in 1991 to tourist, is the first hand-carved indoor wooden
carousel to be built and operated in the United States since the early 1930s built by Carousel Works inc.
Kingwood Center, a 47 acre estate and gardens, former home of Ohio Brass industrialist Charles Kelly King. The
Mansfield Motorsports Park (formerly Mansfield Motorsports Speedway), a half-mile automobile race track, which hosts the
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series once a year and features a regular weekly series of modified and
stock car racing. Also located southwest of Mansfield near
Lexington is the
Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, a road course auto racing facility that hosts major racing events.
Malabar Farm State Park, located southeast of the city is a country home and farm of Mansfield native and Pulitzer Prize winning author
Louis Bromfield, and location of
Humphrey Bogart's wedding to
Lauren Bacall. Snow Trails Ski Resort is Ohio's oldest ski resort, opened in 1961, and highest at, with 16 runs, and is one of the few
skiing locations in Ohio.
The Richland B & O Bike Trail opened in 1995 and is operated by the Richland County Park District, is a paved hiking and bicycle trail laid out on the abandoned Baltimore & Ohio rail branch line north and east from Butler via
Bellville and Lexington to North Lake Park in Mansfield.
Performing arts
Mansfield is home to
The Renaissance, a historic 1,600 seat movie palace theatre located in downtown Mansfield hosts a range of performances, builted in 1927 and opened in 1928 as the Ohio Theatre. The downtown area is the home of the
Mansfield Playhouse, Ohio's second oldest, and one of its most successful community theatres.
Media
Mansfield is served in print by the
Mansfield News Journal, the city's only daily
newspaper.
Mansfield's first AM-radio station (1926) was WLGV (later
WJW, now in
Cleveland). Its studio and transmitter were on the ninth floor of the Richland Trust Building. WJW moved to
Akron in 1932. Among Mansfield's notable radio stations are
WOSV (91.7FM) NPR News and classical music station,
WVMC (90.7FM) Mansfield Christian music station,
WYHT (105.3FM) pop/rock (clear channel), WMAN (1400AM) news/talk (clear channel), and
WVNO (106.1FM), Mansfield's light-rock station.
Mansfield's only local television station is
WMFD-TV-digital television in Northern Ohio (most Mansfield residents watch or stations for network programming).
Education
Mansfield Public Schools enroll 4,855 students in public
primary and
secondary schools. The district administers 10 public schools including four elementary schools, three intermediate schools, one middle school, one high school, and one alternative school. Other than public schools, the city is home to one private catholic school,
St. Peter's High School and two christian schools,
Mansfield Christian School and Temple Christian School. The
Madison Local School District serves eastern parts of Mansfield, neighboring
Madison, and
Mifflin townships.
Mansfield is home to three institutions of higher learning. The
Ohio State University has a regional campus at Mansfield,
North Central State College, a community college that shares the Mansfield Campus with OSU, and MedCentral College of Nursing, a private institution that offers programs of study in
nursing.
Libraries
The Mansfield/Richland County Public Library has been serving residents of north-central Ohio since 1887. The system has nine branches throughout Richland County from its main branch in downtown Mansfield and branches in
Bellville,
Butler,
Crestview,
Lexington,
Lucas,
Madison Township,
Ontario, and
Plymouth.
Transportation
Rail
Three railroads eventually served Mansfield, and two serve it today. The
Mansfield and Sandusky Railroad opened in 1846 and became part of
the Washington-Chicago main line of the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B & O) and then later part of a B & O branch line from
Newark to
Sandusky. In 1849 the
Pittsburgh and Fort Wayne Railroad (later
Pennsylvania Railroad mainline) reached Mansfield, and in 1863 the
Atlantic and Great Western Railroad (later
Erie Railroad mainline) reached Mansfield. After the B & O branch line was abandoned, the section from
Butler to North Lake Park in Mansfield was opened in 1995 as the recreational
Richland B & O Bike Trail. The former B & O track from Mansfield to
Willard combined with a piece of the abandoned Erie Railroad east of Mansfield to
West Salem to form the L-shaped
Ashland Railway (1986). A spur of the abandoned Erie Railroad leads west five miles (8 km) to
Ontario to serve the General Motors metal stamping plant there.
Highways
Mansfield is located on a major east-west highway corridor that was originally known in the early 1900s as "Ohio Market Route 3". This route was chosen in 1913 to become part of the historic
Lincoln Highway which was the first road across
America, connecting
New York City to
San Francisco. The arrival of the Lincoln Highway to Mansfield was a major influence on the development of the city. Upon the advent of the federal numbered highway system in 1928, the Lincoln Highway through Mansfield on Park Avenue East and Park Avenue West became
U.S. Route 30.
On
September 1,
1928, the Lincoln Highway was marked coast-to-coast with approximately 3000 concrete posts set by the
Boy Scouts of America. Each post featured a medallion of
Abraham Lincoln's profile. One of these concrete markers was erected at curbside in front of Central Methodist Episcopal Church, 378 Park Avenue West. Today, a replica marker stands in downtown's Central Park, on Park Avenue's center divider.
Mansfield is well connected to the
Interstate Highway System. Three highway exits from
Interstate 71 connect travelers to Mansfield from
Louisville, Kentucky,
Cincinnati, Ohio,
Columbus, Ohio and points southwest, and from
Cleveland, Ohio and points northeast.
Two limited-access highways serve Mansfield.
U.S. Route 30, which carries the Martin Luther King Jr. Freeway along its length through the city has several local highway exits from U.S. Route 30 that connect travelers to Mansfield from
Portland, Oregon,
Cedar Rapids, Iowa,
Fort Wayne, Indiana and points west, and from
Atlantic City, New Jersey,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
Canton, Ohio and points east.
Ohio 309, which connects travelers from the major shopping area of the suburban city of
Ontario and points west, and continues east into Mansfield before it merges into U.S. Route 30.
The city has several
arterial roads.
U.S. Route 42 (Ashland Road and Lexington Avenue),
Ohio 13 (North Main Street and South Main Street),
Ohio 39 (Springmill Street, Mulberry Street, 5th Street, Park Avenue East and Lucas Road),
Ohio 430 (Park Avenue East and Park Avenue West), and
Ohio 545 (Wayne Street and Olivesburg Road).
Public Transportation
The Richland County Transit (RCT) operates local and regional bus service six days a week, except for Sundays. The RCT bus line also operates in downtown Mansfield and the suburban city of
Ontario. There is also a Mansfield Taxi Service that runs six days a week.
Air
Mansfield Lahm Regional Airport (
IATA: MFD,
IACO: KMFD,
FAA LID: MFD), a city-owned and operated, joint usage facility with global ties, located 3 miles (5
km) north of downtown Mansfield.
Notable natives
- Lee Adams, stage lyricist
- John Bishop, playwright and film writer
- Louis Bromfield, Pulitzer Prize-winning author
- Sherrod Brown, United States Senator, D-Ohio
- Lester Cowan (b. April 1, 1906) Producer: (film) My Little Chickadee (with Mae West and W. C. Fields), You Can't Cheat an Honest Man, Main Street to Broadway; Past Executive Director of the Motion Picture Academy
- Matthias W. Day, US Army Medal of Honor recipient
- Stephanne Dennis (b. May 20, 1974) Literary Agent for Donna D'Errico, Robert W. Morgan, Marty Tuley, Erik Seedhouse
- Amy Douglas (b. December 21, 1902) Actress: (film) The Unsinkable Molly Brown, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Please Don't Eat the Daisies; (television) Marcus Welby MD, Ben Casey, 77 Sunset Strip, Alfred Hitchcock Presents
- Hugh Douglas, Philadelphia Eagles defensive end
- Michael L. Gernhardt, astronaut
- Rebecca Gernhardt Cox (b. circa 1955), Assistant Secretary of Transportation, Public Liaison Director for President Reagan, Senior Vice President Continental Airlines.
- Paul Gilger, playwright, architect, set designer
- Jay Goyal, Ohio State Representative, D-Mansfield
- Frank Purdy Lahm, first Army aviator
- James Lapine, playwright and director
- Martha Mansfield, stage actress
- Sylvia McNair, operatic soprano
- Ricky Minard, professional basketball player
- Christopher Moore, author
- Ohio Express, Rock Group-Doug Grassel (rhythm guitar), Dale Powers (lead guitar), Dean Kastran (bass), Jim Pfahler (keyboards), and Tim Corwin (drums).
- Paul Parmalee, zooarchaeologist
- Luke Perry, television actor
- Daniel Roemer, film director, screenwriter
- Robert F. Simon (b. December 2, 1908) Actor: (film) Seven Angry Men, Foxfire, The Benny Goodman Story, Operation Petticoat, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
- Phoebe Wise (b. 184?) Relative of Pulitzer-prize winning author Louis Bromfield, she was the historical basis for many of Bromfield's short stories
Special interest
Johnny Appleseed, American pioneer & conservationist
The Shawshank Redemption, which was filmed in and around Mansfield
Elektro, eight robots built by the Westinghouse Corporation in Mansfield.
From the Native American uprising during the war of 1812.
Copus Massacre and Zimmer Massacre
Sister cities
Mansfield has two sister cities:
- Mansfield, England
- Tamura, Fukushima, JapanFurther Information
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