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NOTES PAGE of William C. Barrow's masters thesis "The Euclid Heights Allotment" (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23) |
 | | The presence of the tracks at Lake View served to stop the eastward migration of elite residential homes along Euclid Avenue, which migration instead moved up into the heights at Euclid Heights and followed Fairmount Boulevard into Shaker Heights in later years. |
 | | In 1891 this latter road was known as either the North-South County Road, or Streator Road, and marked the eastern terminus of Cedar Road. |
 | | Letters from Jennie Brown Turner to the Superintendent of Lake View Cemetery Association, in Cleveland, dated 12 July 1931 and 28 October 1948, state that her brother, John Hartness Brown, of London, England, and New York City, was, by 1948, "deceased and buried elsewhere." His grand-niece, Mrs. |
| www.clevelandmemory.com /SpecColl/barrow/thesis/notes.html (7479 words) |
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