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The Star Beacon is a seven-day morning daily newspaper published in Ashtabula, Ohio, United States. It is owned by Community Newspaper Holdings Inc. It is published Monday through Friday, and a Weekend Edition delivered on Saturday mornings. It does publish a Sunday edition. Its marketing slogan is "Your daily connection to the community".
The Smolen–Gulf Bridge is a covered bridge which carries State Road (Ashtabula County Road 25) across the Ashtabula River at the Plymouth and Ashtabula Township line in northern Ashtabula County, Ohio, United States. At 613 feet (187 m), it is the longest covered bridge in the United States – a title formerly held by the Cornish–Windsor ...
Ashtabula Towne Square. / 41.882015; -80.756142. Ashtabula Towne Square, formerly Ashtabula Mall, is an enclosed shopping mall serving the city of Ashtabula, Ohio, United States. It has the capacity for 70 stores as well as a food court. The mall does not have an open anchor store . The mall has six vacant anchors last occupied by Sears, Steve ...
The first light marking Ashtabula's harbor was built in 1836, a short hexagonal wooden tower standing on a wooden crib just off the eastern pier. [5] This used the oil lamps typical of the time and remained in service until replaced by a new tower on the west pier, a pyramidal tower with clapboard sides. [6] [7] This change was prompted by ...
Ashtabula ( / ˌæʃtəˈbjuːlə / ASH-tə-BYU-lə [7]) is the largest city in Ashtabula County, Ohio, United States. It lies at the mouth of the Ashtabula River, on Lake Erie, 53 miles (85 km) northeast of Cleveland. At the 2020 census, the city had 17,975 people. Like many other cities in the Rust Belt, it has lost population because of a ...
Sep. 19—JEFFERSON — An appellate court last week reversed a seven-year prison sentence for an Ashtabula woman and remanded it for further proceedings consistent with its opinion, meaning the ...
The Ashtabula River railroad disaster (also called the Ashtabula horror, the Ashtabula Bridge disaster, and the Ashtabula train disaster) was the failure of a bridge over the Ashtabula River near the town of Ashtabula, Ohio, in the United States on December 29, 1876. A Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway train, the Pacific Express, passed ...
Ashtabula County ( / ˌæʃtəˈbjuːlə / ASH-tə-BYU-lə) is the northeasternmost county in the U.S. state of Ohio. As of the 2020 census, the population was 97,574. [1] The county seat is Jefferson, while its largest city is Ashtabula. [2] The county was created in 1808 and later organized in 1811. [3]