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  1. The year was 1833. The first residents of Oberlin and signers of the Oberlin Covenant wanted to found a Christian perfectionist settlement away from the sinful world. Part of their mission included education, which they considered a necessary part of proper living.

  2. In spring 1833, the first settler, Peter Pindar Pease, built his log house at the center of Oberlin. That December, 29 men and 15 women began classes as the first students of the Oberlin Collegiate Institute.

  3. Apr 26, 1983 · Oberlin College was one of those rare exceptions: when it was founded 150 years ago in a desolate forest swamp in Ohio, its agenda included evangelistic morality, abolition of slavery and equal...

  4. Towards the middle of the 19th century, Oberlin became a major focus of the abolitionist movement in the United States. The town was conceived as an integrated community, and blacks attended Oberlin College from 1835, when brothers Gideon Quarles and Charles Henry Langston were admitted.

  5. Nov 2, 2021 · In the summer of 1942 in Nazi-occupied France, French actor Sandrine Kiberlain’s Jewish grandparents received a visit from a local gendarme in the small country town where they were living.

  6. Ohio City—or the “City of Ohio” as it was known at its 1818 founding—was originally a part of Brooklyn Township. On March 3, 1836, just two days before Cleveland’s incorporation, the City of Ohio became an independent municipality.

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  8. In 1772, he helped create two Moravian communities called Gnadenhutten (German for House of Grace) and Schoenbrunn (German for Beautiful Spring). It was in the village of Schoenbrunn that some believe the first school was created in what would become Ohio, as well as developing the first “Civil Code” ….

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