Revered former Cleveland planning director Hunter Morrison is dead at age 78 – Ideastream Dec 16, 2026

Revered former Cleveland planning director Hunter Morrison is dead at age 78

During a visit to Cleveland in March, 2025, Hunter Morrison took in the view from the downtown Mall. -Photo from Steven Litt

by Steven Litt, Ideastream, Dec 16, 2025

Hunter Morrison, Cleveland’s highly respected city planning director from 1980 to 2000, died early Tuesday in his sleep at his home in Silver Spring, Maryland, according to members of his family. He was 78.

Morrison was successfully managing a heart condition, his daughter, Catherine Campbell-Morrison said Tuesday, speaking from her home in Washington, D.C. No cause of death is known, she said. The family will announce arrangements when possible, she said.

Serving under former mayors George Voinovich and later, Michael White, Morrison insisted on design excellence from architects and developers and pioneered early efforts to connect downtown to Lake Erie with the construction of North Coast Harbor.

Morrison oversaw planning for the nationally acclaimed Gateway sports complex, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Key Tower, the East Wing of the Cleveland Public Library’s Main Branch, the revival of Playhouse Square and other pivotal projects of the 1980s and ‘90s.

He left his position in Cleveland when his then-wife, Jane Campbell, a Cuyahoga County Commissioner, launched her successful campaign to become the city’s first and only female mayor in 2001.

Morrison went on to hold influential planning jobs in Youngstown and to lead the 12-county Northeast Ohio Sustainable Communities Consortium, which in 2014 completed Vibrant NEO 2040, the most comprehensive regional plan in a half century.

Hunter Morrison and Jane Campbell in an undated photo.

“He was definitely a legend,’’ Grace Gallucci, the director of the Northeast Ohio Areawide Coordinating Agency, said Tuesday in a text.

“His passion for what Cleveland could be, and the physical structure of Cleveland, drove his life,’’ Campbell said, speaking from her home in Cleveland.

Morrison and Campbell divorced in 2008.

“He was imaginative, he was determined we were going to connect to the lakefront, that we were going to have places for people to live at all different economic levels, and that it was going to be the city on the hill, the city on the lake,’’ Campbell said.

During his tenure at Cleveland City Hall, Morrison insisted that architects and developers should bring their A-game to the city.

“That was the message we sent out to everybody,” he told The Plain Dealer in 2020. “You’re building Cleveland. Don’t pimp us, don’t rip us off, and don’t give us junk.”

Cuyahoga County Executive Chris Ronayne, who succeeded Morrison as the city’s planning director, said Tuesday that Morrison “never stopped caring about Cleveland.’’

In addition to Campbell and Campbell-Morrison, survivors include Barbara Orton of Silver Spring, Morrison’s longtime partner; daughter Jessica Merrill (Tyler) and their three children, all of Little Rock, Arkansas; brothers Edward Morrison, (Bei) of Simpsonville, South Carolina; and Thompson Morrison, (Mary Beth) of Anderson Island, Washington; and a brother-in-law, Nat Balch, of New Hampshire.

Morrison grew up in Shaker Heights and Pepper Pike before studying city planning and political science at Yale University and earning a master’s degree in urban planning at Harvard University.

He joined the Peace Corps and worked in Nairobi, Kenya and in eastern Nigeria as a town planner in the early 1970s.

After returning to Cleveland in the late 1970s he led Homes for Hough, a subsidiary of the Hough Area Development Corp.

His work in building the first new housing in the East Side neighborhood torn by a riot in 1966 caught the attention of then-mayor Voinovich, who appointed the 32-year-old Morrison as the city’s planning director.

Early in his tenure, Morrison found out that the architecture firm designing the BP Sohio building, now 200 Public Square, had positioned the building so that when viewed from the north on the nearby downtown Mall, it would have been off the centerline axis of one of Cleveland’s major outdoor spaces — a potentially embarrassing mistake on skyline scale.

Morrison convinced Voinovich to have the city buy the property needed to shift the construction site for the tower to the east so that it would align with the central axis of the Mall. Had he not done so, it would have been a huge embarrassment to Cleveland, Ronayne said Tuesday.

“He was a special guy, a big thinker who cared about the details,’’ Ronayne said. “He knew history, and he respected it.’’

 

Teaching Cleveland Welcome Page

Teaching Cleveland Welcome Page

Welcome to Teaching Cleveland Digital phase 2
Here is the original site

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Unfortunately it was an old platform and the time had come to move on
Also unfortunately all of our links from google are lost too. But the search function works pretty well. So just enter the topic you want to find in search and it should should pop up
Thank you for your patience. Click on the photos below if you want more content on the people shown
or use Google with a topic and “Teaching Cleveland” in search.
This link takes you to a search button
This link takes you to a recommended 5 week reading list
This link goes to “Teaching Cleveland Stories”

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Cleveland History Self Study: A 5 Week Syllabus of Recommended Essays

Cleveland Stories: An Informal Look at the City’s Past

A 5 Week essay-based syllabus suggested by Dr. Marian Morton, professor emerita at John Carroll University with expertise in Cleveland area history.

Overview: A discussion of some of Cleveland’s most interesting and important people, places, and events
Objective: To link the city’s past with its present policies, politics, and practices

Week 1. Introduction. Read Teaching Cleveland Stories (TCS)John J. Grabowski, “Cleveland: Economics, Images, and Expectations”

Week 2. TCS: Mike Roberts and Margaret Gulley, “The Man Who Saved Cleveland.” Elizabeth Sullivan, “Immigration”  John Vacha, “The Heart of Amasa Stone”; Joe Frolik, “Mark Hanna: The Clevelander Who Made a President”

Supplemental: TeachingCleveland.org:
Connecticut Western Reserve Aggregation
Lorenzo Carter Aggregation
Moses Cleaveland Aggregation
Battle of Lake Erie/War of 1812 Aggregation

The Erie and Ohio Canals Aggregation
Amasa Stone Aggregation
Building the Railroads
Charles F. Brush Aggregation
Flora Stone Mather Aggregation
Henry Flagler Aggregation
Immigration Aggregation
James A. Garfield Aggregation
John D. Rockefeller Aggregation

Manufacturing in Cleveland Aggregation
Mark Hanna Aggregation

Philanthropy in Cleveland Aggregation
Samuel Mather Aggregation
Social Settlement Movement Aggregation

Steel Industry in Cleveland Aggregation
Transportation in Cleveland Aggregation
Timeline of Cleveland/NE Ohio;

Week 3. TCS: John J. Grabowski, “Cleveland 1912 – Civitas Triumphant”; Joe Frolik, “Regional Government versus Home Rule”  John Vacha, “When Cleveland Saw Red”  Margaret Bernstein, ‘’Inventor Garrett Morgan, Cleveland’s Fierce Bootstrapper”  Marian Morton, “How Cleveland Women Got the Vote and What They Did With It”

Supplemental: TeachingCleveland.org:

Tom L. Johnson Aggregation
Newton D. Baker Aggregation
Frederick Howe Aggregation
Maurice Maschke Aggregation
Ohio Constitution Aggregation
Regional Government vs. Home Rule in Northeast Ohio
Collinwood School Fire Aggregation
The Group Plan Aggregation
Eliot Ness Aggregation
The Van Sweringen Aggregation
Highway System Creation in Northeast Ohio
Black Political Power in Cleveland: Pre World War II
Public Housing/Ernest Bohn Aggregation
WPA in Cleveland Aggregation
Great Lakes Exposition Aggregation
John O. Holly Aggregation
Cleveland Orchestra Aggregation
Garrett A. Morgan Aggregation
The Metroparks Aggregation
Cleveland Clinic Origins Aggregation
Fred Kohler Aggregation

Week 4. TCS: Thomas Suddes, “The Adult Education Tradition in Greater Cleveland”  Bill Lubinger, “Bill Veeck: The Man Who Conquered Cleveland and Changed Baseball Forever”  Jay Miller, “Cyrus Eaton: Khruschev’s Favorite Capitalist” Roldo Bartimole, “One Man Can Make a Difference”  Mike Roberts, “Cleveland in the 1960s” and “Cleveland in the 1970s”

Supplemental: TeachingCleveland.org:
Carl Stokes Era as Mayor Aggregation
Cleveland Aggregation
Cuyahoga River Fire Aggregation
Cyrus Eaton Aggregation
Frank Lausche Aggregation
Dennis Kucinich as Mayor Aggregation
Glenville Riots Aggregation
Hough Riots Aggregation
Kent State Shootings Aggregation

Lake Erie Aggregation
Martin Luther King in Cleveland Aggregation
Water Aggregation

Week 5TCS: Mike Roberts, “Cleveland in the 1980s” and “Cleveland in the 1990s” Supplemental: TeachingCleveland.org:
“10 Greatest Clevelanders”;
“12 Most Significant Events”;
Cleveland Politician Interview Series (George Forbes, Jim Rokakis, Louis Stokes, George Voinovich, Michael R. White); Mike Roberts,
“Cleveland in the 2000s

George Forbes Aggregation
George Voinovich Era as Mayor Aggregation
Louis Stokes Aggregation
Mike White Era as Mayor Aggregation
Playhouse Square Aggregation

General questions: what is the main point of each article? Did you agree or disagree? What did you find most interesting? What would you add? Or subtract? 

 

Tribute to PD Editorial cartoonist predecessors, Plain Dealer, October 5, 2025

First Plain Dealer Editorial cartoonist James Donahey at his drawing table
cleveland.com
Edward Kuekes at his drawing table after taking over for James Donahey after his passing
cleveland.com

Tribute to PD Editorial cartoonist predecessors
by Jeff Darcy, Plain Dealer, October 5, 2025

The link is here

Jeff Darcy’s farewell, in his own words
The link is here

Cleveland native Agnes Gund, 84, still pushes boundaries in art and philanthropy, nationally and in her hometown by Steven Litt, May 26, 2023

Agnes Gund passed away on September 18, 2025.
This article in Cleveland.com was written by Steven Litt in Cleveland.com on  May 26, 2023

John Kuntz, cleveland.com
Cleveland native and nationally respected philanthropic leader Agnes Gund at the Pivot Center, April 27, 2023

Cleveland native Agnes Gund, 84, still pushes boundaries in art and philanthropy, nationally and in her hometown
by Steven Litt, Cleveland.com, May 26, 2023
The link is here

Mary Rose Oakar, pioneering Ohio congresswoman, dies at 85 – Cleveland.com Sept 14, 2025

 

Mary Rose Oakar, pioneering Ohio congresswoman, dies at 85
by Sabrina Eaton, Cleveland.com
September 14, 2025
The Cleveland Democrat served eight terms, championed women’s economic rights and secured $400 million for breast cancer research during her congressional career.
The link is here

Former U.S. Congresswoman Mary Rose Oakar comments about the West Side Market during a panel discussion on Jan. 28, 2020.Lisa DeJong/The Plain Dealer

 

Remembering Oliver “Pudge” Henkel, key player behind Playhouse Square’s rebirth – Ideastream Sept 10, 2025

Oliver Henkel was one of the driving forces behind the resurrection of Cleveland’s theater district. (Playhouse Square)

Remembering Oliver “Pudge” Henkel, key player behind Playhouse Square’s rebirth

Ideastream Public Media | By Kabir Bhatia
Published September 10, 2025

Sewer District recommends removing Lower Lake Dam in Shaker Heights, Cleveland Heights by Steven Litt 7/24/25

 

 

 

Sewer District recommends removing Lower Lake Dam in Shaker Heights, Cleveland Heights
by Steven Litt 7/23/25, Ideastream

Lower Shaker Lake (Google Maps)

The Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District will soon recommend removal of the Lower Lake Dam in Shaker Heights and Cleveland Heights, resulting in the draining of Lower Lake, replacing the lake bed with 17 acres of park land.

The link is here

Teaching Cleveland Digital