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Euclid Avenue



 
 
Euclid Avenue is a name applied to streets in many American cities. Cleveland, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio

Cleveland is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Cuyahoga County, Ohio, the most populous county in the state. The municipality is located in northeastern Ohio on the southern shore of Lake Erie, approximately 60 miles west of the Pennsylvania border....
's Euclid Avenue received nationwide attention from the 1860s to the 1920s for its beauty and wealth. A large reconstruction project, which brought a bus rapid transit
Bus rapid transit

Bus rapid transit is a broad term given to a variety of transportation systems that, through improvements to infrastructure, vehicles and scheduling, attempt to use buses to provide a service that is of a higher quality than an ordinary bus line....
 line to the street, was completed in 2008.

Euclid Avenue runs from Cleveland to the suburb of Willoughby
Willoughby, Ohio

Willoughby is a city in Lake County, Ohio, Ohio, United States. It is a suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. The population was 22,621 at the United States Census 2000....
.






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Euclidavehannahome
Euclid Avenue is a name applied to streets in many American cities. Cleveland, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio

Cleveland is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Cuyahoga County, Ohio, the most populous county in the state. The municipality is located in northeastern Ohio on the southern shore of Lake Erie, approximately 60 miles west of the Pennsylvania border....
's Euclid Avenue received nationwide attention from the 1860s to the 1920s for its beauty and wealth. A large reconstruction project, which brought a bus rapid transit
Bus rapid transit

Bus rapid transit is a broad term given to a variety of transportation systems that, through improvements to infrastructure, vehicles and scheduling, attempt to use buses to provide a service that is of a higher quality than an ordinary bus line....
 line to the street, was completed in 2008.

Euclid Avenue runs from Cleveland to the suburb of Willoughby
Willoughby, Ohio

Willoughby is a city in Lake County, Ohio, Ohio, United States. It is a suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. The population was 22,621 at the United States Census 2000....
. It passes through the cities of East Cleveland
East Cleveland, Ohio

East Cleveland is a city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Ohio, United States, and is the first suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. The population was 27,217 at the United States Census 2000....
, Euclid
Euclid, Ohio

Euclid is a city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States. It is part of the Greater Cleveland Metropolitan Area, and borders Cleveland. As of the United States Census 2000, the city had a total population of 52,717....
 and Wickliffe
Wickliffe, Ohio

Wickliffe is a city in Lake County, Ohio, Ohio, United States. The population was 13,484 at the United States Census 2000....
 and forms part of the border between Wickliffe and Willowick
Willowick, Ohio

Willowick is a city in Lake County, Ohio, Ohio, United States. The population was 14,361 at the United States Census 2000. A suburb of Cleveland, Ohio, Willowick is served by a branch of the Willoughby-Eastlake Public Library....
. The Cleveland portion of the street begins at Public Square
Public Square

Public Square is the central plaza in Downtown Cleveland Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio, United States. It takes up four city blocks; Superior Avenue and Ontario Street cross through it....
 and extends to University Circle
University Circle

University Circle is the cultural, educational, and medical center of Greater Cleveland, and is located on the east side of Cleveland, Ohio. University Circle occupies approximately 550 acres around the campus of Case Western Reserve University and the adjacent Wade Park Oval....
. The street passes Playhouse Square, Cleveland State University
Cleveland State University

Cleveland State University is a public university located in Cleveland, Ohio. The current President is Michael Schwartz, who was previously president emeritus and a professor at Kent State University....
, the Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland Clinic

The Cleveland Clinic is a multispecialty academic medical center located in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio, United States. Currently regarded as one of the best hospitals in the world, the Cleveland Clinic was established in 1921 by four physicians for the purpose of providing patient care, research, and medical education in an ideal medical setting....
, Severance Hall
Severance Hall

Severance Hall is a concert hall located in the University Circle district of Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio, United States. The hall has been the home of the Cleveland Orchestra since its opening on February 5, 1931....
, Tifereth Israel (The Temple)
The Temple (Cleveland, Ohio)

The Temple built in 1924 is an historic synagogue building located on University Circle at Silver Park in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio. In 1963, a branch synagogue, Temple Tifereth-Israel, was established in suburban Beachwood, Ohio, which is now the main place of worship....
, and Case Western Reserve University
Case Western Reserve University

Case Western Reserve University is a private research university located in Cleveland, Ohio, United States, with some residence halls on the south end of campus located in Cleveland Heights, Ohio....
.

At the turn of the century, Euclid Avenue was internationally known; Baedeker’s Travel Guides called the elm
Elm

Elms are deciduous and semi-deciduous trees comprising the genus Ulmus, family Ulmaceae. Elms first appeared in the Miocene period about 40 million years ago....
-lined avenue “The Showplace of America,” and designated it as a must see for travelers from Europe. The concentration of wealth was unparalleled; the tax valuation of the mansions along “the Avenue” far exceeded the valuation of New York’s Fifth Avenue
Fifth Avenue (Manhattan)

Fifth Avenue is a major thoroughfare in the center of the borough of Manhattan in New York City, USA. Between 34th Street and 59th Street , it is also one of the premier shopping streets in the world, often compared to Oxford Street in London,...
 in the late nineteenth century.
Euclid Ave Streetscape
On August 5, 1914, the American Traffic Signal Company installed a traffic signal system on the corner of East 105th Street and Euclid Avenue, the first traffic light installed in the United States.

Families living along "Millionaire's Row" included those of John D. Rockefeller
John D. Rockefeller

John Davison Rockefeller was an United States industrialist and philanthropist. Rockefeller revolutionized the petroleum industry and defined the structure of modern philanthropy....
, Sylvester T. Everett
Sylvester T. Everett

Sylvester T. Everett was a U.S. financier.Born in Liberty Township, Ohio, he worked on his father's farm until 1850. Everett moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1851 to work, first as a messenger and later as a cashier, at Cleveland's oldest banking house Brockway, Wason, Everett & Co ....
, arc light
Arc Light

Arc Light is the debut novel by Eric L. Harry, a techno-thriller about limited Nuclear warfare published in 1994 and written in 1991-2.As China and Russia clash in Siberia in June 1999, nuclear missiles strike the United States....
 inventor Charles F. Brush
Charles F. Brush

Charles Francis Brush was a U.S. inventor, entrepreneur and philanthropist....
, George Worthington
George Worthington

George Worthington was a 19th century merchant and banker in Cleveland, Ohio, who founded the Geo. Worthington Company, a wholesale hardware and industrial distribution firm, in 1829 , as well as numerous banking and mining concerns, and contributed significantly to the early commercial and industrial development of Cleveland....
, Horace Weddell, Marcus Hanna, Ambrose Swasey
Ambrose Swasey

Ambrose Swasey was an United States mechanical engineer, inventor, entrepreneur, manager, astronomer, and philanthropist. With Worcester Reed Warner he co-founded the Warner & Swasey Company....
, Amasa Stone
Amasa Stone

Amasa Stone was an American industrialist who built railroads and invested in mills in Ohio. He was a major benefactor of Western Reserve College, which became part of Case Western Reserve University in 1967....
, John Hay
John Hay

John Milton Hay was an United States statesman, diplomat, author, journalist, and private secretary and assistant to Abraham Lincoln....
 (personal secretary to Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States. He successfully led the country through its greatest internal crisis, the American Civil War, preserving the Union and ending slavery....
 and Secretary of State under William McKinley
William McKinley

William McKinley, Jr. was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States, and the last veteran of the American Civil War to be elected....
), Jeptha Wade
Jeptha Wade

Jeptha Homer Wade was an American industrialist, philanthropist, and founder of Western Union.Born in Romulus, New York, youngest of nine children of Jeptha and Sarah Wade....
 (Cleveland benefactor and founder of Western Union
Western Union

The Western Union Company is a financial services and communications company based in the United States. Its North American headquarters is at Englewood, Colorado, and its international marketing and commercial services headquarters are in Montvale, New Jersey....
 Telegraph), Alfred Atmore Pope
Alfred Atmore Pope

Alfred Atmore Pope was an American Industrialist and art collector. He was the father of Theodate Pope Riddle, a noted American architect....
 (iron industrialist and art collector) and Dr. Worthy S. Streator
Worthy S. Streator

Dr. Worthy Stevens Streator was an American physician, railroad developer, industrialist and entrepreneur whom the city of Streator, Illinois is named for....
 (railroad baron, coal mine developer, and founder of the city of Streator, Illinois
Streator, Illinois

Streator is a city in LaSalle County, Illinois and partially in Livingston County, Illinois counties in the U.S. state of Illinois. Its population was 17,190 as of the 2000 census....
). Euclid Avenue's most infamous resident was con artist Cassie Chadwick
Cassie Chadwick

Cassie L. Chadwick is the most famous name of a Canadian-born woman who defrauded Cleveland-area banks by claiming to be an illegitimate daughter of Andrew Carnegie....
, the wife of Dr. Leroy Chadwick, who was unaware that his wife was passing herself off to bankers as the illegitimate daughter of steel magnate Andrew Carnegie
Andrew Carnegie

Andrew Carnegie was a Scotland-born United States industrialist, List of business people, and a major philanthropist. He was an immigrant as a child with his parents....
.

In their 1949 musical "South Pacific
South Pacific (musical)

South Pacific is a 1949 in music#Musical theater with music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II and book by Hammerstein and Joshua Logan....
," Rodgers and Hammerstein
Rodgers and Hammerstein

Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II were a well-known United States songwriter duo, usually referred to as Rodgers and Hammerstein....
 indirectly acknowledged the street's fame. In the script, Captain Brackett sends a grass skirt to one "Amelia Fortuna, 325 Euclid Avenue, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio."

As the Cleveland’s commercial district began to push eastward along Euclid Avenue, families moved east towards University Circle. However, southeast of University Circle, the topography of the area rises sharply into what is referred to as "The Heights," and the development of Cleveland Heights
Cleveland Heights, Ohio

Cleveland Heights is a city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Ohio, United States, a suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. The city's population was 49,958 at the United States Census 2000....
 and Shaker Heights
Shaker Heights, Ohio

Shaker Heights is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio. As of the United States Census, 2000, the city population was 29,405, and was the tenth-largest city in Cuyahoga County....
, along with more efficient means of travel, became more attractive than the increasingly commercialized Euclid Avenue.

By the 1920s, the former "Millionaire's Row" was in decline. During the Great Depression
Great Depression

File:International depression.pngThe Great Depression was a worldwide economic Recession starting in most places in 1929 and ending at different times in the 1930s or early 1940s for different countries....
, many mansions were converted by their owners into rooming houses, which accelerated the decline. In the 1950s, Cleveland's Innerbelt Freeway
Innerbelt Freeway

An Innerbelt Freeway is a set of freeway facilities arranged in a Loop route that serves the interior of a major city, primarily as a traffic reliever for downtown commuters....
 cut through the Euclid Avenue between downtown
Downtown Cleveland

Downtown Cleveland is the central business district of the City of Cleveland, Ohio and Northeast Ohio. Reinvestment in the area in the mid-1990s spurred a rebirth that continues to this day, with over $2 billion in capital projects slated to involve the downtown area over the next few years....
 and the rail crossing at East 55th Street. By the 1960s, the street that once rivaled Fifth Avenue as the most expensive address in America was a two mile (3 km) long slum of commercial buildings and substandard housing. In the late 1960s, Cleveland Cavaliers
Cleveland Cavaliers

The Cleveland Cavaliers are a professional basketball team based in Cleveland, Ohio. They began playing in the National Basketball Association in 1970 as an expansion team and won their first Eastern Conference Championship in 2007....
 owner Nick Mileti
Nick Mileti

Nick Mileti was during the 1970s the owner of the Cleveland Indians, Cleveland Cavaliers, Cleveland Crusaders hockey team, the Coliseum at Richfield and radio station 1100AM WWWE ....
 announced plans to move the basketball club from Euclid Avenue's Cleveland Arena
Cleveland Arena

Cleveland Arena was an arena in Cleveland, Ohio. It was built and privately financed by local businessman Albert C. Sutphin during the height of the Great Depression in 1937 as a playing site for Sutphin's American Hockey League team, the Cleveland Barons ....
 to a new arena
Coliseum at Richfield

The Coliseum at Richfield was an arena located in Richfield Township, Summit County, Ohio in Summit County, Ohio, Ohio, roughly halfway between Cleveland, Ohio and Akron, Ohio....
 in suburban Richfield Township
Richfield Township, Summit County, Ohio

Richfield Township is one of the nine civil township of Summit County, Ohio, Ohio, United States. The United States Census, 2000 found 5,424 people in the township, 2,138 of whom lived in the unincorporated portions of the township....
.

Today, eight houses from the era remain on Euclid, including the Samuel Mather
Samuel Mather

Samuel Mather was born in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio and for many years was that city's richest citizen and a major philanthropist, particularly favoring Kenyon College....
 and Howe Mansions owned and used by Cleveland State University
Cleveland State University

Cleveland State University is a public university located in Cleveland, Ohio. The current President is Michael Schwartz, who was previously president emeritus and a professor at Kent State University....
. The most recent to be demolished was the Lyman Treadway Mansion, which served as part of the Cleveland Museum of Health from the 1930s until it was razed in 2002 for a new museum building.

In April 2006, parts of Euclid Avenue were closed to traffic for the filming of a scene from the film Spiderman 3. No major stars were on location, but the filming drew thousands of gawkers. Most of the filming involved explosions and destroyed cars, with hired extras walking the sidewalks. The sections of the street that were closed off were redressed to resemble a city street in New York City
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
, complete with magazine stands and poster-covered walls.

The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority
Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority

The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority is the public transport agency for Cleveland, Ohio, United States, and the surrounding suburbs of Cuyahoga County, Ohio....
 completely refurbished the western section of Euclid Avenue as part of the Euclid Corridor Transportation Project, which opened fully in 2008. A bus rapid transit
Bus rapid transit

Bus rapid transit is a broad term given to a variety of transportation systems that, through improvements to infrastructure, vehicles and scheduling, attempt to use buses to provide a service that is of a higher quality than an ordinary bus line....
 line, the HealthLine
HealthLine

The HealthLine is a bus rapid transit line run by the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio, United States. The line runs along Euclid Avenue from Public Square in downtown Cleveland to the Louis Stokes Station at Windermere in East Cleveland, Ohio....
, now runs from Public Square to the Stokes Rapid Transit station
Louis Stokes Station at Windermere

Louis Stokes Station at Windermere is a rapid transit metro station on the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority Red Line in East Cleveland, Ohio, USA....
 in East Cleveland
East Cleveland, Ohio

East Cleveland is a city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Ohio, United States, and is the first suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. The population was 27,217 at the United States Census 2000....
, which is the eastern terminus of the Red Line
Red Line (Cleveland)

The Red Line is a rapid transit line of the RTA Rapid Transit in Cleveland, Ohio, running from Cleveland Hopkins International Airport northeast to Tower City Center in downtown Cleveland, then east and northeast to East Cleveland, Ohio....
 rapid transit route.

Route designations


Euclid Avenue has carried various route designations throughout history:

  • 1923–1925: State Route 2 from Willoughby to Mayfield Road and State Route 2/State Route 15 from Mayfield Road to Public Square in Cleveland
  • 1926: State Route 2 from Willoughby to Superior Avenue, and State Route 15 from Mayfield Road to Public Square
  • 1926–1931: U.S. Route 20
    U.S. Route 20

    U.S. Route 20 is an east-west United States highway. As the "0" in its route number implies, U.S. 20 is a coast-to-coast route; however, because national park roads do not have signage for U.S....
     from Willoughby to Superior Avenue, and U.S. Route 322
    U.S. Route 322

    U.S. Route 322 is a long, east-west United States Highway, traversing Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. The road is a spur route of U.S. Route 22 and one of the original highways from 1926....
     from Mayfield Road to Public Square
  • 1932–1935: U.S. Route 6
    U.S. Route 6

    U.S. Route 6, also called the Grand Army of the Republic Highway, is a main route of the U.S. Highway system, running east-northeast from Bishop, California to Provincetown, Massachusetts....
    /U.S. Route 20 from Willoughby to Superior Avenue, and U.S. Route 322 from Mayfield Road to Public Square
  • 1936–1949: U.S. Route 6/U.S. Route 20 from Willoughby to Superior Avenue, Alternate U.S. Route 6
    U.S. Route 6 Alternate (Ohio)

    Alternate US 6 is an east-west alternate route of U.S. Route 6 located in Greater Cleveland, Ohio, running . Its western terminus is at U.S. 6 in Rocky River, Ohio, just west of the Rocky River , overlapping U.S....
    /Alternate U.S. Route 20
    U.S. Route 20A (Ohio)

    U.S. Route 20A is a 53 mile long east-west alternate route of U.S. Route 20 located in northwest Ohio. The western terminus of the route is at US 20 south of Pioneer, Ohio....
     from Superior Avenue to Mayfield Road, and U.S. Route 322/Alternate U.S. Route 6/Alternate U.S. Route 20 from Mayfield Road to Public Square
  • 1950–1966: U.S. Route 6/U.S. Route 20 from Willoughby to Superior Avenue, and Alternate U.S. Route 6/Alternate U.S. Route 20 from Superior Avenue to Public Square (U.S. Route 322/Alternate U.S. Route 6/Alternate U.S. Route 20 from Mayfield Road to Chester Avenue)
  • Since 1967: U.S. Route 20 from Willoughby to Public Square (U.S. Route 20/U.S. Route 322 from Mayfield Road to Chester Avenue)


External links

  • from The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
  • This is the history museum of Cleveland that owns many photographs, manuscripts, and has housed two exhibitions about Millionaires' Row. Many of the decorative arts collections are from the personal collections of families that lived on Millionaires' Row.
  • , Plain Dealer
    The Plain Dealer (newspaper)

    The Plain Dealer is the major daily newspaper of Cleveland, Ohio. It has the largest newspaper circulation of any Ohio newspaper, and is a top 20 newspaper for circulation in the United States....
     special section, June 19, 2006.
  • "" by Steven Litt, The Plain Dealer
    The Plain Dealer (newspaper)

    The Plain Dealer is the major daily newspaper of Cleveland, Ohio. It has the largest newspaper circulation of any Ohio newspaper, and is a top 20 newspaper for circulation in the United States....
    , February 10, 2008. Includes video.