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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johnson-as-the-motorman  carl-stokes-wins-1967

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perk-on-fire-1972  voinovich-and-forbes-1986  kucinich-with-forbes

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The Reverse Demolition of the Guardians of Traffic, by Pamela Dorazio Dean

IMAGE CREDIT
Western Reserve Historical Society of Cleveland

The Reverse Demolition of the Guardians of Traffic
by Pamela Dorazio Dean, Director, Italian American Museum of Cleveland
The 43-foot-tall statues, masterfully carved by Italian immigrants and now the namesake of Cleveland’s MLB team, once faced demolition — but the official behind the plan met his downfall instead.
The link is here
https://orderisda.org/culture/old-school/the-reverse-demolition-of-the-guardians-of-traffic/

Miriam Kerruish Stage Memorial in Shakerite 2029

Early Shakerite archive is now on line thanks to

Dr. Miriam Kerruish Stage died in the Cleveland Clinic fire of 1929.

This memorial was in the Shakerite, November 11, 1929. Dr. Kerruish’s bio is here

She was a physician, activist, a mother active in education and greatly revered in the community

Cleveland Main Library and Linda Anne Eastman: A rare library and librarian by Grant Segall May 8, 2025

 

Innovators William Brett and Linda Eastman made the Cleveland Public Library influential worldwide. [Photo by Grant Segall]
Cleveland Main Library and Linda Anne Eastman: A rare library and librarian
by Grant Segall May 8, 2025
One hundred years ago, a pioneering librarian opened a new flagship for the pioneering Cleveland Public Library.
The link is here

Cleveland’s role in Earth Day? Bigger than you’d think – Signal, April 18, 2025

Cleveland State University students march to the Cuyahoga River on the nation’s first Earth Day in 1970. Credit: Photo courtesy of Cleveland State University, Michael Schwartz Library, Special Collections

Cleveland’s role in Earth Day? Bigger than you’d think
by Celia Hack, Signal, April 18, 2025

Cleveland students marched in support of the nation’s first Earth Day in 1970, and journalists and politicians advocated for funding and policy change.

Rev. Joan Brown Campbell, who advocated tirelessly for civil and human rights, dies at 93 – Plain Dealer April 15, 2025

 

Joan Brown Campbell, who advocated tirelessly for civil and human rights, dies at 93
– By Nora Tree Newhouse, Plain Dealer April 15, 2025
The link is here

Naso/NY Daily News Archive, via Getty Images

Joan Brown Campbell Dies at 93; Led Largest Ecumenical Body in U.S.
-New York Times obit

When Joan Campbell invited the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to speak at her all-white church in the Cleveland suburbs in 1965, she had no idea of the furor it would cause.

Bomb threats were made to her family’s spacious home in Shaker Heights, where Ms. Campbell was a full-time wife and mother. Some members of Heights Christian Church, where she worshiped, refused to let Dr. King cross its threshold.
Read more

Joan Campbell, former activist who led U.S. church council, dies at 93
-Washington Post obit

“During a visit by King to Cleveland, he met briefly with Rev. Campbell and mentioned offhand that he had never been invited to speak at a mostly White church in the area. She suggested he come to the Heights Christian Church, where she was part of the congregation.”

Read more

HUNTING FOR GROWTH IN A SHRINKING CITY by Richey Piiparinen (2012)

 

HUNTING FOR GROWTH IN A SHRINKING CITY
Chapter written by Richey Piiparinen from
Rust Belt Chic,
by Anne Trubek (Editor), Richey Piiparinen (Editor)

The link to chapter is here

The full book is available on Ebay and other retail outlets

Richey Piiparinen passed away in early 2025. This bio is from his obit:
Richey was an accomplished Author, writer and urban affairs researcher. He worked at Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland State University as the Director of Center of Population Dynamics., part of the Levine College of Urban Affairs. Richey recently published a book titles “Octopus Hunting” a book of essays linking the author’s fight for life and a city’s fight for life.

Richey appeared in “The Daily Beast, The Plain Dealer and Huffington Post. His research has been highlighted by the Wall Street Journal, CBS Evening News, NPR’s Morning Edition to name a few.

Finding Sustainability: Cleveland (part 1)—from a Forest to a Fire to a Flight – by Richey Piiparinen (2012)

Finding Sustainability: Cleveland (part 1)—from a Forest to a Fire to a Flight
By Richey Piiparinen for Teaching Cleveland (2012)
A pdf version is here

Richey Piiparinen passed away in early 2025. This bio is from his obit:
Richey was an accomplished Author, writer and urban affairs researcher. He worked at Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland State University as the Director of Center of Population Dynamics., part of the Levine College of Urban Affairs. Richey recently published a book titles “Octopus Hunting” a book of essays linking the author’s fight for life and a city’s fight for life.

Richey appeared in “The Daily Beast, The Plain Dealer and Huffington Post. His research has been highlighted by the Wall Street Journal, CBS Evening News, NPR’s Morning Edition to name a few.

Sustainability in Northeast Ohio (part 2) – by Richey Piiparinen (2016)

 


Sustainability in Northeast Ohio
(part 2)

Better  than  it  was, not  where  it  needs  to be
by Richey Piiparinen (2016)
for Teaching Cleveland
The link is here

Richey Piiparinen passed away in early 2025. This bio is from his obit:
Richey was an accomplished Author, writer and urban affairs researcher. He worked at Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland State University as the Director of Center of Population Dynamics., part of the Levine College of Urban Affairs. Richey recently published a book titles “Octopus Hunting” a book of essays linking the author’s fight for life and a city’s fight for life.

Richey appeared in “The Daily Beast, The Plain Dealer and Huffington Post. His research has been highlighted by the Wall Street Journal, CBS Evening News, NPR’s Morning Edition to name a few.

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: Timeline of Cleveland/NE Ohio; The Western Reserve, 1796-1820, and Pre-Industrial (Erie and Ohio Canals), 1820-1865 and The Industrial Revolution/ John D. Rockefeller/ Mark Hanna, 1865-1900

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: Progressive Era/Tom L. Johnson/ Newton D. Baker, 1900-1915 and Fred Kohler/City Managers/Political Bosses, 1920s and The Van Sweringens/ Depression … 1930s

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: World War 2- Post War, 1940s; Carl Stokes- Civil Rights, 1960s and Ralph Perk-Dennis Kucinich, 1970s

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

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? 

 

Teaching Cleveland Digital