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Household Names from the Heights Published 2009 in “View from the Overlook,” with minor edits. Like most cities, Cleveland Heights has its share of widely known, widely respected and even widely reviled citizens.
The Kelvin Home. In the early decades of the 20th Century, racially biased deed restrictions were fairly common in Cleveland Heights. The Struggle for Fair Housing. Cleveland Heights has a wonderful array of structures and districts that have been placed on the National Register.
Journal Archives: View from the Overlook. Enjoy a collection of journals from over the years about Cleveland Heights’ history. Articles have been written by local scholars as well as members of the Cleveland Heights Historical Society.
by Mazie Adams. The city of Cleveland Heights gained two new landmarks in 2021: the Neff-Henderson House, and the Bradford Cinder Path. Mathias Neff built his farmhouse, at what is now 2181 North Taylor Road, in 1885, on what was then a five-acre property.
The series contains interviews with pioneers of suburban residential integration and social activists who supported peaceful managed integration/desegregation and fair housing in Cleveland Heights and Shaker Heights in the 1950s to 1970s.
The famed Van Sweringen brothers, known for developing Shaker Heights, envisioned an architect-designed neighborhood rubbing shoulders with three grand estates in the countryside of Cleveland Heights.
Kazimierz Sumerski is known as an Writer, Assistant Director, Director, and Storyboard. Some of their work includes Gromada and Career.