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The Market Street Bridge is a suspension bridge connecting Market Street in Steubenville, Ohio and West Virginia Route 2 in Follansbee, West Virginia over the Ohio River.As a project of the Steubenville Bridge Company, it was constructed in 1905 by the Ohio Steel Erection Company, the framework was created by the Penn Bridge Company, and the original steel was done by Jones and Laughlin Steel ...
Steubenville Stubs (1907) The Pennsylvania–Ohio–Maryland League (abbreviated POM League ) was a Class D baseball minor league which began in 1906. By 1908, however, this baseball minor league was extinct.
1086386 [5] Website. cityofsteubenville.us. Steubenville is a city in and the county seat of Jefferson County, Ohio, United States. [2] Located along the Ohio River 33 miles (53 km) west of Pittsburgh, it had a population of 18,161 at the 2020 census. [7]
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February 27, 1987. Union Cemetery-Beatty Park is a site listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Steubenville, Ohio. Union Cemetery was incorporated as a not for profit in 1854, and through donations and purchase, additional land has been added. That part not suitable for a burial ground was used as a parkland.
823,353 square feet (76,492.0 m 2) [2] No. of floors. 1. Website. Mall website. Fort Steuben Mall is an enclosed shopping mall located on Mall Drive in Steubenville, Ohio. Opened in 1974, it features Walmart and JCPenney as its anchor stores. There are 2 vacant anchor stores that were once Sears and Macy's .
The Weirton–Steubenville, WV–OH Metropolitan Statistical Area, also known as the Upper Ohio Valley, is a metropolitan statistical area consisting of two counties in the Northern Panhandle of West Virginia and one in Ohio, anchored by the cities of Weirton and Steubenville. As of the 2020 census, the MSA had a population of 116,903. [1]
Charles Clinton Beatty (1800–1882) – Presbyterian minister, founder of Steubenville Female Seminary. Daniel DiNardo (born 1949) – Roman Catholic Cardinal, Archbishop of Galveston-Houston. Roger Joseph Foys (born 1945) – 10th bishop of Covington. John McDowell Leavitt (1824–1909) – lawyer, Episcopal priest.