Historical Marker Search

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRM3_canfield-united-methodist-church_Canfield-OH.html
(side A)On this site, the Canfield Congregational Church, the first church in Canfield village, was built in 1822. The congregation was organized in 1804 by Joseph Badger and Thomas Robbins, both missionaries from the Connecticut Missionary Societ…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRM1_canfield-township-hall_Canfield-OH.html
The Canfield Township Hall was erected in 1884. It served as the first public building in which the Canfield citizens could conduct town business, elections, and public meetings. An example of Renaissance Revival or "Italianate" architecture, the …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRM0_canfield-green_Canfield-OH.html
(side A)Canfield, named for the area's primary landowner Judson Canfield, is one of the earliest examples of a New England town plan in both Ohio and the Western Reserve. It dates to April 20, 1798, when surveyor Nathaniel Church arrived from Conn…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRLZ_canfield-christian-church_Canfield-OH.html
(side A)The Canfield Christian Church began as a Baptist congregation in 1822 and church met for worship in William Dean's home. The Mahoning Baptist Association Meeting of 1826 was held in David Hayes barn. In 1827, Walter Scott was asked by the …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRLL_canfield-cemetery_Canfield-OH.html
(side A)For more than two centuries, this burial ground has been a final resting place for those individuals whose lives represented the community history of Canfield. The earliest existing tombstone marks the death of Huldah Tanner in 1803. Seven…
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