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Kent, Ohio

Kent is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the largest city in Portage County. It is located along the Cuyahoga River in Northeast Ohio on the western edge of the county. The population was 28,215 at the 2020 Census.[3] The city is counted as part of the Akron Metropolitan Statistical Area and the larger Cleveland–Akron–Canton Combined Statistical Area.

Kent
Nickname: 
The Tree City
Coordinates: 41°09′N 81°22′W / 41.15°N 81.36°W / 41.15; -81.36Coordinates: 41°09′N 81°22′W / 41.15°N 81.36°W / 41.15; -81.36[1]
CountryUnited States
StateOhio
CountyPortage
FoundedNovember 1805
Incorporated1867
Founded byJohn Haymaker
Named forMarvin Kent
Government
 • TypeCouncil-Manager
 • City ManagerDave Ruller
 • MayorJerry Fiala
Area
 • Total9.33 sq mi (24.17 km2)
 • Land9.22 sq mi (23.89 km2)
 • Water0.11 sq mi (0.28 km2)
Elevation
1,056 ft (322 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total28,215
 • Density3,059.53/sq mi (1,181.23/km2)
DemonymKentite
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP codes
44240, 44242, 44243
Area code(s)330, 234
FIPS code39-39872
GNIS feature ID2395512[1]
Websitekentohio.org

Part of the Connecticut Western Reserve, Kent was settled in 1805 and was known for many years as Franklin Mills. Settlers were attracted to the area due to its location along the Cuyahoga River as a place for water-powered mills. Later development came in the 1830s and 1840s as a result of the settlement's position along the route of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal. Leading up to the American Civil War, Franklin Mills was noted for its activity in the Underground Railroad. With the decline of the canal and the emergence of the railroad, the town became the home of the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad maintenance shops through the influence of Marvin Kent. In 1864 the town was renamed Kent in honor of and in gratitude for Marvin Kent's efforts. It was incorporated as a village in 1867 and became a city after the 1920 Census. Today Kent is a college town best known as the home of the main campus of Kent State University, founded in 1910, and as the site of the 1970 Kent State shootings.

Historically a manufacturing center, education is the city's largest economic sector with Kent State University being the city's, and one of the region's, largest employers. The Kent City School District and the Kent Free Library provide additional education opportunities and resources. Many of Kent's demographic elements are influenced by the presence of the university, particularly the median age, median income, and those living below the poverty level. The city is governed by a council-manager system with a city manager, a nine-member city council, and a mayor. Kent has nearly 20 parks and preserves and hosts a number of annual festivals including ones related to Earth Day, folk music, and the U.S. Independence Day. In addition to the Kent State athletic teams, the city also hosts a number of amateur and local sporting events at various times during the year. Kent is part of the Cleveland–Akron media market and is the city of license for three local radio stations and three television stations and includes the regional affiliates for National Public Radio (NPR) and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Local transportation infrastructure includes a public bus service and hike-and-bike trails. As the home of the Davey Tree Expert Company, Kent is known as "The Tree City" while residents are referred to as "Kentites". The city has produced a number of notable individuals, particularly in politics, athletics, and the entertainment industry.

History

The region was originally inhabited by various tribes of American Indians, including the early Mound Builders. Around 1780, Captain Samuel Brady achieved notoriety for his activities in the area, including his famous leap of 21 feet (6 m) over the Cuyahoga River to avoid capture by an unknown band of American Indians. The site, known as Brady's Leap, is now a city park.[4] Settlement by Europeans began in the late 1790s and early 19th century. As part of the Connecticut Western Reserve, the area was divided into survey townships in 1798 and almost all of what is now Kent was originally part of Town 3 Range 9, which would eventually be known as Franklin Township.[5] Aaron Olmsted, a wealthy Connecticut merchant, had purchased the 16,000-acre (6,500 ha) township and named it for his son Aaron Franklin Olmsted.[6]

Franklin Township was surveyed in 1803 and settled in November 1805 when John Haymaker and his family moved west from Warren to the banks of the Cuyahoga River. They were joined by John's brother George and their father Jacob Haymaker and their families early the next year, and built a gristmill in 1807.[7] Initial growth in the area was slow, but eventually two small villages would develop due to the potential for power generated by the Cuyahoga River that could be used in gristmills and manufacturing. The first village, known as Franklin Mills, or locally as the "Lower Village", developed mostly around the original Haymaker property. In 1818, Joshua Woodard arrived in the area and began constructing buildings just north of the village forming the "Upper Village" that would come to be known briefly as Carthage.[8]

 
Former P & O Canal lock and dam downtown

In the 1820s, Franklin Mills was included in the route of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal (P & O Canal). When construction began on the canal in the mid-1830s, land speculation was rampant in many areas of northeast Ohio along the canal, including Franklin Mills. As a result, an industrial and business region was established along the east side of the river in what is now downtown Kent. Factories and mills were either planned or constructed along the Cuyahoga River, some of which either were never built or ultimately failed, due mostly to effects of the Panic of 1837. A lock and attached arch dam, however, was completed in 1836.[9] The canal officially opened in 1840, but would only operate into the 1860s. By the 1870s the canal was completely shut down.[10]

In the era leading up to the American Civil War, Franklin Mills was an active stop on the Underground Railroad, giving fugitive slaves shelter on their escape to Canada. There were three notable stops in Franklin Mills, one of which still stands as of 2010.[11] During this period, from 1835 to 1839, noted American abolitionist John Brown moved to the village, operating a tannery along the Cuyahoga River with Zenas Kent.[9]

In 1863 the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad was constructed through Franklin Mills, due largely to the efforts of local businessman Marvin Kent, son of Zenas Kent. Marvin Kent had started his own railroad company, the Franklin and Warren Railroad, in 1851 after Franklin Mills, already home to several Kent family ventures and properties, was bypassed by the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad that same year. Kent was also successful in getting the village named as the location of the railroad's maintenance yards and shops in 1864. The geographic location along the railroad and being home to the shops reinvented and revitalized the village as an important stop on the east–west line between St. Louis and New York City. The shops would open in 1865 and the railroad would play an important part of Kent's industry and development through the early 20th century before the shops were completely shut down in 1930. To honor Marvin Kent, the village was renamed Kent in 1864, although this change was not official until the village was incorporated on May 6, 1867.[12]

John Davey came to Kent in 1881 as head grounds keeper at Standing Rock Cemetery, and planted several trees, landscaped the cemetery, and performed experiments on trees. In 1901, he published his theories on tree surgery with his book The Tree Doctor, and later established the Davey Tree Expert Company in 1909. The efforts of Davey and the presence of Davey Tree led to the establishment of "The Tree City" as a nickname for Kent, which is reflected in the city's seal.[13][14] The company continues to be headquartered in Kent and serves as the city's largest private employer.[15]

 
Lowry Hall, one of the original campus buildings of Kent State University

After a fire destroyed the Seneca Chain Company in 1909, one of the city's main industries at the time, city leaders created the Kent Board of Trade in 1910, a forerunner to the Chamber of Commerce. The new Board was successful later that year in having Kent selected out of twenty northeastern Ohio cities as the site of a new teacher training college, which became known as the "Kent State Normal School".[16] The site for the school was on 53 acres (21 ha) of land donated by William S. Kent, son of Marvin Kent, on what was then the eastern edge of town. By 1929 the school was renamed Kent State College after the establishment of a college of liberal arts and degrees in the arts and sciences and in 1935 was renamed Kent State University after it was given authorization to grant advanced graduate degrees. The bill giving Kent State university status was signed into law by Ohio governor and Kent native Martin L. Davey, son of tree surgeon John Davey.[17] During the 1950s and 1960s the growth of Kent State University combined with the effects of suburbanization resulted in significant population growth for the city, rising from just over 12,000 residents at the 1950 census to over 28,000 by 1970.[18] Black squirrels were brought to the campus from Canada in 1961 by Kent State University head groundskeeper Larry Woodell. The squirrels have become an icon for both KSU and the city and are often used as unofficial mascots and symbols.[19][20]

In early May 1970, protests began on the campus of Kent State University over the United States' invasion of Cambodia in the Vietnam War. These protests and demonstrations, which included rioting in downtown Kent on May 2, culminated in the Kent State shootings on May 4, 1970, where four students were killed and nine were wounded by the Ohio Army National Guard.[21] Several memorials have been placed at the site over the years and commemorations have been held annually since 1971. In 2010 the entire site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[22] Also during the late 1960s and into the 1970s, construction of Haymaker Parkway, completed in 1975, brought changes to the city's layout while eliminating ongoing problems with traffic congestion and blocked rail crossings.[23]

Kent received national attention in 1995 when the city's water was named "Best Tasting Municipality Water" at the Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting. The water and mayor Kathleen Chandler were featured on the March 3 episode of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. Since then, Kent has placed in the top five a total of six times with the most recent being a fifth-place finish in 2011.[24] In 2003, the 1836 arch dam was bypassed to meet water quality standards set by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. To preserve the historic dam, a small park was built behind the dam and the river was rerouted through the old canal lock. During warm-weather months, water is pumped over the dam. The park, known as Heritage Park, was formally dedicated in May 2005.[25]

From 1881 to 2016, downtown Kent was home to a flour mill, housed in a complex originally built from 1880 to 1881 by the Williams brothers and later acquired by the Star of the West Milling Company. The mill closed in 2016 after Star of the West consolidated operations to Willard, Ohio, and the complex was sold to a local developer in 2019. On the morning of December 2, 2022, part of the complex caught fire. In addition to the Kent Fire Department, 11 additional area fire departments and multiple other agencies responded.[26] The fire destroyed part of the original 1881 mill building and the grain elevator, built in 1890, and damaged other parts of the complex. The adjacent taller white silos, built in 1936, were not damaged.[27]

Redevelopment

 
Downtown developments completed or under construction in March 2013

Beginning in 2008, several redevelopment projects in the downtown area, some of which had been discussed for decades, were put into motion and resulted in nearly $110 million in total investment from public and private sources. The first of these was the Phoenix Project, a development privately financed by Kent resident Ron Burbick that renovated and expanded a section of commercial space along East Main Street.[28] Included in the project was construction of a pedestrian alleyway lined with small shops, eventually known as Acorn Alley, which opened in 2009. A second phase of Acorn Alley opened in late 2011.[29] Other aspects of the redevelopment, which include a 360-space parking deck and bus transfer station, a hotel and conference center, and three separate mixed-use buildings, began to take shape in 2010 following the demolition of several buildings in a four block area. New offices for Ametek and the Davey Tree Expert Company opened in late 2012 along with several new small businesses on the first floors of each building.[30] The hotel, operated by Kent State University, opened in June 2013 and the new parking garage, operated by the Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority (PARTA) opened April 30, 2013, as the Kent Central Gateway.[31] In addition to parking, the facility functions as PARTA's main bus transfer station and has storefronts on the ground level facing East Erie Street.[32][33] Included in the redevelopment was the purchase and renovation of the old Kent hotel, which first opened in 1920. After being mostly vacant since 1979 and completely vacant since 2000, it re-opened on April 1, 2013, as the new home to the Kent location of Buffalo Wild Wings and also houses offices, a wine and jazz bar, and apartments.[34] A five-story mixed-use building called The Landmark was completed in 2014 and construction started in November 2015 on an additional five-story mixed-use building featuring microapartments, scheduled to be completed in 2016.[35][36] The developments attracted the attention of The Plain Dealer and The New York Times and earned the city and university the 2013 Larry Abernathy Award from the International Town–Gown Association in recognition of the positive town–gown cooperation and collaboration.[37][38][39]

 
KSU College of Architecture and Environmental Design building, completed in 2016

Additional development has been ongoing on the campus of Kent State University and the largely residential neighborhood located between downtown Kent and the western edge of campus. The university began buying properties in that neighborhood in 2007 and by December 2012 had acquired 43. Construction of the University Esplanade extension, designed to link campus with downtown, started in August 2012 after several of the buildings in the area, most of which had been rental homes, were demolished or moved. The Esplanade extension continued a segment of the Portage Hike and Bike Trail that extends to Dix Stadium and was completed in October 2013.[40][41] Kent State constructed a $48 million, 110,091 square feet (10,227.8 m2) facility for the College of Architecture and Environmental Design along the Esplanade extension and also relocated the former home of May Prentice, the first female faculty member at Kent State, to the extension as the home for the Wick Poetry Center.[42] Construction on the architecture building started in October 2014 and was completed in August 2016.[43][44][45] In total, there are plans totaling approximately $150 million for several other facilities and upgrades across campus, including a new building for the College of Applied Engineering, Sustainability and Technology and a renovation and reorganization of the facilities for the School of Art.[46] The city and county have also seen developments in the same area. A new county municipal courthouse on East Main Street was completed in April 2014, and in 2015, Kent City Council approved the sale of the city hall complex to a private developer for construction of a five-story apartment building on the site, which opened in August 2016.[47][48]

Geography

Kent is located in west-central Portage County in Northeast Ohio approximately 10 miles (20 km) northeast of Akron and 30 miles (50 km) southeast of Cleveland.[49] It is bordered by Franklin Township on the north and east, the unincorporated community of Brady Lake on the east, Brimfield Township on the south, and Stow on the west. Other nearby communities include Ravenna to the east and Sugar Bush Knolls and Streetsboro to the north. It is included in the Akron Metropolitan Statistical Area and the larger Cleveland–Akron–Canton Combined Statistical Area.

Located on the western end of the Glaciated Allegheny Plateau, the topography of Kent includes rolling hills and varied terrain. The Cuyahoga River passes through the city, cutting a gorge with a drop of nearly 40 feet (10 m) adjacent to the downtown area.[50] The United States Geological Survey lists the city's elevation at 1,056 feet (322 m) above sea level at a point near Kent's geographic center.[1] Elevations vary slightly within the city limits with several buildings on the Kent State University campus at altitudes in excess of 1,160 feet (350 m) and points as high as 1,200 feet (370 m).[51][52] According to the United States Census Bureau, as of 2010 the city has a total area of 9.28 square miles (24.04 km2), of which 9.17 square miles (23.75 km2) is land and 0.11 square miles (0.28 km2) is water.[53]

Climate

 
The four main seasons in Kent, from top left clockwise: winter, spring, summer, and fall

Kent's climate is classified as a humid continental climate in the Dfa Köppen climate classification meaning it typically has very warm, humid summers and cold, snowy winters with moderate and variable spring and autumn seasons. The record high temperature is 103 °F (39 °C), set on July 7, 1988, with the record low of −22 °F (−30 °C) recorded January 17, 1982.[54][55] During the spring and summer months, thunderstorms are fairly common and the area is susceptible to tornadoes, though the last recorded tornado in Kent occurred in 1973.[56][57] Effects from tropical systems can also be felt, usually taking the form of increased humidity, rain, and wind, such as with the remnants of Hurricane Ike in September 2008.[58] During the winter months, snowfall is common and can occur in large quantities with considerable cloud cover. Kent is not considered part of the Lake Erie snowbelt, though lake-effect snow does occur at times. The city is in what is referred to as the "secondary snowbelt", meaning it will receive heavier snowfall totals from lake-effect snow when certain wind directions are more prevalent, but typically sees far less snowfall than areas to the north closer to Lake Erie.[59] While temperatures below the freezing point are typical in the winter months, thaw periods where temperatures exceed 50 °F (10 °C) and even 60 °F (16 °C) are not uncommon in January and February.[55]

Climate data for Kent, Ohio
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 65
(18)
70
(21)
81
(27)
88
(31)
94
(34)
101
(38)
103
(39)
100
(38)
95
(35)
84
(29)
76
(24)
72
(22)
103
(39)
Average high °F (°C) 34
(1)
38
(3)
48
(9)
60
(16)
72
(22)
80
(27)
84
(29)
82
(28)
74
(23)
62
(17)
50
(10)
39
(4)
60
(16)
Average low °F (°C) 20
(−7)
23
(−5)
30
(−1)
40
(4)
51
(11)
60
(16)
64
(18)
63
(17)
56
(13)
45
(7)
36
(2)
26
(−3)
43
(6)
Record low °F (°C) −22
(−30)
−6
(−21)
1
(−17)
17
(−8)
30
(−1)
39
(4)
44
(7)
43
(6)
30
(−1)
25
(−4)
2
(−17)
−12
(−24)
−22
(−30)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.02
(51)
2.00
(51)
2.85
(72)
3.15
(80)
3.61
(92)
3.13
(80)
3.87
(98)
3.36
(85)
3.57
(91)
2.46
(62)
3.22
(82)
2.83
(72)
36.07
(916)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 12.4
(31)
10.5
(27)
8.2
(21)
2.7
(6.9)
0.1
(0.25)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.4
(1.0)
3.0
(7.6)
10.2
(26)
47.5
(120.75)
Source 1: Intellicast[60]
Source 2: NOAA[61]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
18702,301
18803,30943.8%
18903,5015.8%
19004,54129.7%
19104,488−1.2%
19207,07057.5%
19308,37718.5%
19408,5812.4%
195012,41844.7%
196017,83643.6%
197028,18358.0%
198026,164−7.2%
199028,83510.2%
200027,906−3.2%
201028,9043.6%
202028,215−2.4%
[18][49][62]

As a college town, Kent's demographic and population statistics are greatly affected by the presence and growth of Kent State University.[63] As a result, several statistics are noticeably higher or lower than state and national averages including median age and the percentage of residents in the 18–24 age bracket, individuals below the poverty line, and percentage of residents with a college degree.

Initial population growth in Kent was influenced by the location on the Cuyahoga River which led to the development of industrial and manufacturing jobs.[64] Early settlers mainly came from the northeastern United States and were largely of German descent.[65] After the arrival of the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad in 1863, growth was steady into the early 20th century with the village battling Ravenna for the position of Portage County's largest city.[66][67] By the 1930 Census, Kent had passed Ravenna as the county's most populous city with even larger population growth in the 1950s and 1960s rising from 12,148 in 1950 to 28,183 by 1970.[68] As of 2010, Kent remains the county's largest city.[69] Most recent population measurements of the city have shown the effect of changes in the city's overall population coinciding with changes in the number of students living on campus as well as a reduction in the number of persons per housing unit.[70]

As of the 2010 Census, there were 28,904 people living in the city for a population density of 3,150.5 people per square mile (1,216.4/km2). There were 11,174 housing units at an average density of 1,218.0 per square mile (470.3/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 83.1% White, 9.6% African American, 3.7% Asian, 0.2% Native American, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 0.5% from other races, and 2.9% from two or more races. 2.2% of the population is Hispanic or Latino of any race.[71] Though slightly below the national averages for diversity, Kent is very close to the averages for Ohio and above the averages for the surrounding area.[63] Between the 2000 and 2010 censuses, the city saw slight increases in the number of minority residents.[71][72] The 2015 estimate placed the population at 29,810.[62]

There were 10,288 households in 2010, out of which 20.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 27.5% were married couples living together, 12.5% had a female householder with no husband present, and 56.3% were non-families. 33.4% of all households were made up of individuals, and 8.0% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size in Kent was 2.2 and the average family size was 2.86, which compares with the national average of 2.58 for a household and 3.14 for a family and the state average household size of 2.44 and average family size of 3.01.[73]

In the city the population was spread out, with 29.4% ages 19 years and under, 44.1% from 20 to 39, 15.9% from 40 to 59, 8.0% from 60 to 79, and 2.5% who were 80 years of age or older. The median age was 22.7 years, which was well below both the median age for Ohio (38.8) and the United States (35.3). The city's population was 46.3% male and 53.7% female. The rate differs slightly from the national average of 49.2% male and 50.8% female and the state average of 48.8% male and 51.2% female. It contrasts with neighboring Franklin Township, which has a population that is 51.3% male and 48.7% female.[74]

The mean income for a household in the city was $46,848, well below the mean household incomes for Ohio ($61,397) and the United States ($70,116) in the 2010 Census. The median household income in Kent was $28,958, compared to $46,563 for Ohio and $51,222 for the U.S. For families, the mean income in Kent was $71,817 with a median income of $59,936, both of which were closer to the state ($73,084 mean, $58,566 median) and national ($81,568 mean, $62,112 median) averages. Males had a median income of $35,316 versus $35,255 for females. The per capita income for workers in the city was $18,339. 10.4% of families and 29.3% of the population were below the poverty line, including 21.1% of those under age 18 and 6.6% of those age 65 or over. While the number of individuals below the poverty line is significantly higher than both the state and national averages, with 14.8% of individuals in Ohio and 14.4% in the United States being below the poverty line, the percentage of families below the poverty line is slightly below the state (10.5%) and national (10.8%) averages. Measures of high poverty rates in similar college towns, however, is not uncommon across the U.S.[75][76]

Educationally, Kent is above the national, state, and local averages for residents who have attained a bachelor's, master's, or above a master's degree. At the 2010 Census, 41.9% of Kent's population above the age of 25 had obtained a college degree compared to 24.9% of the same population in Portage County, 24.1% statewide, and 27.9% nationally.[77]

Economy

 
Corporate headquarters of the Davey Tree Expert Company, Kent's largest private employer

Kent's location along the Cuyahoga River and later the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal and multiple railroad lines made it attractive initially for the establishment of small gristmills for the production of flour and various factories. Progressively larger factories later developed due to increased power available from the river and eventually due to the ease and lower cost of transportation of goods to other markets.[64] During the latter half of the 19th century and into the early 20th century, the city's largest employers were all industrially based, including the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad and its successors, which operated its main maintenance shops in the village; the Seneca Chain Company; and bus manufacturer Twin Coach among others.[78] A disastrous fire at the Seneca Chain Company in 1909 led to the creation of the Kent Board of Trade—an early Chamber of Commerce—which was successful in getting Kent selected in 1910 as the site of what would become Kent State University.[79]

Changes in the structure of the railroad and declines in the manufacturing sector during the mid-20th century combined with the rapid growth of Kent State University following World War II led to the university becoming the city's largest employer and influenced the development of other areas of the city's economy. Beginning in the late first decade of the 21st century, the university, along with the city and private investors, began to play a more active role in the redevelopment of downtown Kent and has aided in the development of local high tech companies.[15][80] Kent State operates Centennial Research Park, along Ohio State Route 59 in Kent's Joint Economic Development District with Franklin Township, which houses two high tech start-up companies in the liquid crystal industry.[81][82] Kent has an additional Joint Economic Development District with Brimfield Township.[83] Through the Kent Regional Business Alliance, the city also supports two business incubators.[84]

 
Kent State University, Kent's largest employer

As of 2010, the educational, health, and social services fields were the city's largest sector, and employed over 33.5% of Kent's workforce. This included the city's two largest employers, Kent State University and the Kent City School District, as well as University Hospitals Portage Medical Center, which operates an outpatient surgery center and general medical facility.[75][85][86] 16.3% of the workforce is employed in arts, entertainment, and food service, with 12.2% employed in retail. Manufacturing accounts for 7.1% of the workforce with a Land O' Lakes plant being the largest employer in the sector.[75][85] Smithers-Oasis, a floristry developer and manufacturer, was founded in Kent in 1954 and operates a plant in the city. Their corporate offices were moved back to Kent from Cuyahoga Falls in September 2013, having originally moved there from Kent in 1992.[87][88] Kent is also home to the corporate headquarters of the Davey Tree Expert Company, which serves as the city's largest private employer.[15] In 2010 Davey Tree announced plans to relocate staff from its Davey Resource Group, who were previously in neighboring Stow, to Kent as part of a planned downtown development and has stated long-term goals include having all corporate offices in Kent.[89] The office, which included some office staff already in Kent at the main corporate headquarters, opened in August 2012.[90]

75.1% of those employed commuted alone to work by way of a car, truck, or van with another 7.1% carpooling. 10.6% of workers walked to work with 1.9% using public transportation. The average commute time was 22 minutes. 13.0% of the workforce was unemployed in 2010, above the 9.8% for the state and 9.0% nationally.[75] the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated the unemployment rate in Kent at 7.9% in 2010 and 6.6% in October 2011.[91]

Culture

 
2010 Kent Heritage Festival along South Water Street

Cultural elements in Kent include various arts, environmental, and entertainment events during the year, as well as the Kent State University Museum. The Kent Heritage Festival is held every July in the downtown area, coinciding with the U.S. Independence Day. The festival includes crafts, booths, entertainment, train rides, 5K and 10K races, and fireworks, drawing approximately 25,000 people each year.[92] In October, Kent hosts the homecoming festivities for Kent State University, including a parade down East Main Street as well as other events and activities both on campus and around the city.[93] Also in October, the downtown area hosts an annual, yet unofficial, Halloween celebration, which usually takes place the last Saturday of October. The event typically draws thousands, largely Kent State students, and includes many who dress in costume.[94] In 2007 Main Street Kent, a local organization that promotes downtown Kent, created a family-oriented Halloween event downtown that precedes the unofficial celebration.[95] Since 2007, Kent has hosted an annual environmental festival known as "Who's Your Mama?" which takes place in conjunction with Earth Day. The festival has events at various locations in the city, such as a vegan chef competition, concerts, a film festival, guest speakers, and booths on environment-based topics.[96] Through Main Street Kent, additional events downtown include an ice cream social event in August, an outdoor concert series and "sidewalk cinema" between May and September, an art and wine festival in June, a cider festival in November, and the Festival of Lights Christmas celebration in early December.[95] Kent Potterfest, a festival celebrating the book and movie series Harry Potter, debuted in late July 2016 and is held annually in the downtown area. It features Harry Potter-themed vendors and activities, a 5k run through the campus of Kent State University, a costume contest, and the transformation of Acorn Alley into Diagon Alley.[97]

From May to October, the Haymaker Farmers' Market operates every Saturday morning in the downtown area adjacent to and under the Greer Bridge of Haymaker Parkway. The location is marked by a commissioned mural completed in October 2012 on the two bridge supports that line each side of the market's area.[98] The market was established in 1992 and includes over 40 vendors, making it one of the oldest and largest farmers' markets in Northeast Ohio.[99] An indoor Winter Market, established in 2008, is held Saturday mornings from November through April.[100]

 
Arrival of Santa Claus by train as part of the annual Festival of Lights in December

The Kent Stage, located downtown, is a performance venue for a variety of arts performances in music and theater. It hosts around 90 concerts, four theatrical performances, and four film festivals or movie premiers per year, including local, national, and international performers. Since opening in 2002, it has been visited by approximately 120,000 patrons from all over Ohio, 38 U.S. states, and 3 countries.[101] In April, it hosts events related to the "Who's Your Mama?" Earth Day festival and in June, it is one of the host venues for the Kent Folk Festival, an annual event in folk music since the late 1960s. The festival includes multiple folk music acts at venues throughout the city over a period of several days.[102] The Kent Stage also hosts the Kent Blues Festival and a local artist music festival known as the Up From The River Music Festival.[101]

Kent is also home to the Kent State University Museum, located in Rockwell Hall on the KSU campus. The museum focuses on the history of fashion design and decorative arts in the United States and around the world from the 18th century to the present.[103] Each year in early May, the university hosts an annual commemoration of the Kent State shootings, which typically features several speakers, forums, artwork, and other related events.[104] On campus, Kent State operates the May 4 Visitors' Center, which covers the shootings and the events surrounding them. It is housed in Taylor Hall on the site added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2010 and includes three galleries covering art and media from the era of the 1960s leading up to the shootings, images from the actual event, and the local and national impact after the shootings. The center opened to the public October 20, 2012, during the Kent State Homecoming weekend.[105][106] The site was named a National Historic Landmark in December 2016.[107][108]

 
The John Davey House, a listing on the National Register of Historic Places

In addition to the Kent State Shootings Site near the center of campus, there are also a number of additional sites and districts in Kent on the National Register of Historic Places, some of which are open to the public. The Kent Industrial District is a historical district along the Cuyahoga River adjacent to downtown that includes an area and structures that were important in Kent's early history.[109] On the northwestern part of the Kent State University campus is the Ohio State Normal College At Kent district, which includes the school's five original classic revival buildings dating to 1913.[110] There is also the West Main Street District just west of downtown that includes 20 private homes of architectural and historical significance from the post-Civil War and early 20th century periods. The district includes the Kent Masonic Center, which was originally built in the early 1880s as the home of Marvin Kent and his family, and the former residence of Martin L. Davey, who served as Governor of Ohio.[111][112] Buildings in Kent listed on the register include three private homes noted for their architecture styles: the John Davey House for the Second Empire style, and both the Aaron Ferrey and Charles Kent Houses as examples of Gothic Revival.[113][114][115] Other buildings include the 1869 Kent Jail, now used by the Parks and Recreation Department, and the 1837 Franklin Township Hall, the site of eventual U.S. President James A. Garfield's first nomination for public office in 1859.[9][116] As part of its renovation and redevelopment, the former Franklin Hotel, first opened in 1920, was added to the NRHP in 2013 for its local historical significance and its connections to notable people.[117] The former L.N. Gross Company Building, built in 1928 and designed by Kent architect Charles Kistler, was added to the NRHP in 2016 as part of its restoration and renovation.[118]

Sports

As the home of Kent State University, Kent is also the home of the university's athletic teams, the Golden Flashes, who compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I level as a member of the Mid-American Conference East Division. Several of Kent State's teams have enjoyed league and national success, the most notable being the men's basketball team's run to the Elite Eight in the 2002 NCAA Tournament and the baseball team's appearance in the 2012 College World Series.[119][120][121] The 6,327-seat Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center, commonly referred to as the MAC Center, is the site of a number of athletic events in multiple sports, including wrestling, women's gymnastics, and women's volleyball in addition to men's and women's basketball. It is also a regular site for the Mid-American Conference's wrestling and women's gymnastics championships.[122][123]

In addition to hosting the KSU football team, Kent State's 25,319-seat Dix Stadium has been a venue for high school football games both in the regular-season and the state playoffs.[124][125] The adjacent Murphy-Mellis Field is a location for Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) field hockey tournament games and the Diamond at Dix is a regular venue for OHSAA regional softball tournament games.[126][127] From 1975 to 1981 the Cleveland Browns held their training camp in Kent at Kent State University.[128]

The Kent State University Ice Arena serves as host to several local ice hockey programs including youth leagues, high school and professional teams, and as a site for OHSAA high school tournament games and ice skating competitions in addition to being home of KSU's club team, which competes in the American Collegiate Hockey Association.[129][130] The ice arena is also the home of the Kent Twisters, a member of the Pennsylvania-Ohio Women's Hockey Association, an adult amateur women's ice hockey league.[131] Kent also plays host to the Portage County Open tennis tournament, held annually at the tennis courts of Theodore Roosevelt High School.[132]

Parks and recreation

 
View from Heritage Park facing downtown

The city operates nearly 20 parks and preserves, the largest of which is the 56-acre (23 ha) Fred Fuller park along the Cuyahoga River, named after a former Kent Parks chairman. The park includes the Kramer Fields baseball and softball complex, which contains four fields, two of which are lighted. Several of the parks along the Cuyahoga River are on or near areas of historical significance. Franklin Mills Riveredge Park, which follows the Cuyahoga River through downtown Kent, passes through a large portion of the Kent Industrial District along with Heritage Park and includes sites related to the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal.[25][133] Adjacent on the south is the John Brown Tannery Park, on the site of the former tannery John Brown helped fund with Zenas Kent in the 1830s, while Brady's Leap park, adjacent to the north, is at the location of the famed leap over the Cuyahoga River by Captain Samuel Brady circa 1780.[134][135] The parks and recreation department, in addition to operating and maintaining the city's parks and preserves, also operates a recreation center on the city's south side and offers several sports, arts, and education programs at various locations in Kent.[136][137] The department also sponsors events throughout the year including Art in the Park, an ice-skating party, hayrides, and Santa's Arrival.[138] The Kent City School District operates an indoor pool at Theodore Roosevelt High School that is available for public recreational and instructional use outside of its use by the school for athletics and physical education. The pool hosts swimming lessons and serves as a home venue for the Hudson-based Hudson Explorers Aquatic Team, a competitive swimming program for ages five and above.[139][140]

Within the city are segments of the Portage Hike and Bike Trail, which is jointly managed with Kent State University, the Portage Park District, and the city of Ravenna. The main portion of the trail follows the Cuyahoga River in Kent with most of the trail paved with asphalt. In August 2012, as part of several redevelopment projects in the downtown area, Kent State University began construction of the Esplanade Extension, which was completed in August 2013 and connects the university's portion of trail extending to Dix Stadium, known as the University Esplanade, to downtown Kent.[141][142][143][144] The trail connects with the hike and bike trails in neighboring Summit County and links Kent with nearby communities in Portage County.[145] The city is also home to the Cooperrider-Kent Bog State Nature Preserve, located in the southern edge of Kent. It is one of the most intact bogs in Ohio, with the southernmost and largest stand of tamarack trees in the continental United States.[146]

Through partnerships with Kent State University Recreational Services and other local agencies, additional recreational opportunities are available to city residents. A livery known as Crooked River Adventures is available at Tannery Park. The livery generally operates from May to October depending on weather and water levels. Canoe, kayak, tubing, and bicycle rentals are available to residents and students with kayak and canoe service as far as Brust Park in Munroe Falls and Water Works Park in Cuyahoga Falls. Kent also has a bicycle-sharing system known as Flashfleet in partnership with the university and PARTA. The program offers yearly memberships or hourly rentals with locations on campus and in the downtown area.[147][148]

Government

 
Map showing the six wards of Kent

Kent is governed by a charter form of government with a council–manager system of nine council members and a mayor. The city is divided into six wards and voters select a mayor, a council member representing their ward, and three at-large council members in staggered four-year terms.[149] The city charter, adopted in 1963, is reviewed by a charter commission every 10 years who then make recommendations for changes, the last review being in 2015.[150][151] The city council hires a city manager who oversees the day-to-day operations in the various city departments and enforces policies set by council. The mayor serves a largely ceremonial role as president of the council and votes only in the event of a tie. Kent voters approved the change from a mayor-council system to council-manager in 1975 and it went into effect in 1977.[150] Jerry Fiala began his term as mayor January 1, 2010, and Dave Ruller began serving as city manager June 15, 2005.[149][152]

As part of the city government, Kent also has departments of community development, health, human services, law, parks and recreation, public safety, and public service.[153] The Public Service Department oversees a variety of construction and maintenance works as well as the city's water treatment and water reclamation systems while the Public Safety Department includes both the police and fire departments.[154] The Kent Police Department is housed in the city's Safety Administration Building and includes 911 dispatch for Kent and Franklin Township.[155] Kent State University also operates its own police department, which mainly patrols the KSU campus and KSU property in and out of the Kent city limits.[156] The two departments frequently communicate and for several years were headed by identical twin brothers: James Peach in the city and John Peach at the university.[157] The fire department operates two stations, the main station adjacent to the Safety Administration Building and the West Side Fire Station along North Mantua Street on the western side of the Cuyahoga River. Kent Fire also provides fire and emergency medical service coverage for Franklin Township and the village of Sugar Bush Knolls.[158]

The city's main sources of tax revenue come from income tax, set at 2.25%, and property tax.[159] Voters approved an increase in the income tax rate from 2.0% in November 2013 to fund a new police station and the new rate took effect January 1, 2014. The rate increase includes a sunset provision that requires the tax rate to return to 2.0% once debt is paid off on the new facility.[160] In 2014, the city operated on a budget of approximately $40 million. The largest percentage of the budget, 31% or $11.9 million, was spent on public safety services followed by 22% or $8.5 million on basic utilities. Debt service accounted for $6.0 million or 17% of the budget while transportation projects accounted for 9% or $3.37 million of the budget, 8% or $3.33 million towards general government expenses, and $2.35 million allocated for construction of a new police station.[161]

At the state level, Kent is in the 68th district of the Ohio House of Representatives, represented since 2011 by Democrat Kathleen Clyde, a Kent resident.[162][163] In the State Senate, Kent is part of the 18th district, represented since 2011 by Republican John Eklund of Geauga County.[164][165] At the Federal level, Kent is included in Ohio's 13th congressional district, represented since 2003 by Democrat Tim Ryan of Niles.[166][167]

Education

 
Stanton Middle School

Preschool, elementary, and secondary education is mainly provided by the Kent City School District. The portion of the city south of State Route 261 is part of the neighboring Field Local School District.[168] The Kent district was created around 1860 and later merged with the Franklin Township and Brady Lake school districts in 1959.[169][170] It serves most of Kent and Franklin Township, the village Sugar Bush Knolls and a small part of southern Streetsboro.[168] Kent has four neighborhood elementary schools that serve students in grades K–5, Stanton Middle School for grades 6–8, and Theodore Roosevelt High School for grades 9–12. The district also operates a preschool program housed at Davey Elementary School, and is a member of the Six District Educational Compact with five surrounding districts to facilitate vocational education, with many of these programs housed at Roosevelt High School.[171][172] In 1985, Roosevelt High School was given the United States Department of Education Excellence in Education award and the school has consistently been rated "Excellent" by the Ohio Department of Education since 2004.[173][174] For 2010, 2015, 2016, and 2018 it was named in U.S. News & World Report as one of the best high schools in the United States, earning the publication's Bronze Medal designation.[175][176] The Kent City School District has been consistently rated as "Excellent" or "Effective" by the Ohio Department of Education and in 2007 Walls Elementary School was named a "School of Promise" by the Ohio Department of Education, while Longcoy Elementary earned the U.S. Department of Education's prestigious Blue Ribbon School award.[174][177]

Kent also has one private school, St. Patrick School, which serves around 300 students in grades K–8 from Kent and several surrounding communities. It is part of Kent's St. Patrick parish and is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Youngstown.[178][179]

 
Newer portion of the Kent Free Library

The Kent Free Library is the main public library. It was established in 1892 after Kent became the first village in Ohio to use an 1892 state law which allowed municipalities under a population of 5,000 to tax residents for the upkeep of a library. Andrew Carnegie donated $10,000 in 1901 for construction of a permanent home for the library, which opened in 1903.[180] The 2006 expansion to the library brought available space to 55,000 square feet (5,100 m2) with a book collection of 147,390 items as of 2010.[181][182] It is a school district library associated with the Kent City School District and is also part of the Portage Library Consortium, connecting it with Reed Memorial Library in Ravenna and the Portage County District Library, which maintains six branch libraries across the county and a bookmobile.[183][184]

The main campus of Kent State University is located in the southeastern part of the city. The campus itself occupies 866 acres (350 ha) and the university owns thousands of additional acres adjacent to the campus. Additional facilities include a research park and golf course just east of the city limits in Franklin Township and the Kent State University Airport, just west of Kent in Stow.[185] Founded in 1910 as a teacher training institution, the university has become a world leader in the development of liquid crystals through the Liquid Crystal Institute and was the site of the first patent for the modern liquid crystal in the 1970s.[186] Kent State also has a nationally recognized fashion design program and nationally ranked programs in library science and business.[187][188] As of 2010, the College of Nursing is the 5th-largest nursing school in the United States and largest in Ohio. In 2009 the university inaugurated the College of Public Health, the second public health program in Ohio and 33rd in the U.S.[187] The Kent State library system, which includes the 12-story main library and houses over 2.6 million volumes, includes six additional department libraries on the main campus and a branch at each of the seven regional campuses.[185][189] The library system is a member of the Association of Research Libraries, one of 3 in Ohio and 124 in North America.[190] The university offers over 300 programs of study combined in the undergraduate and graduate levels and serves over 41,000 students in eight campuses across Northeast Ohio with over 30,000 at the campus in Kent.[191][192]

Media

Kent is part of the Cleveland-Akron Television Market Area as defined by the Federal Communications Commission, which includes a 17-county region of Northeast Ohio.[193] As of 2015 it ranks as the 18th-largest media market in the United States according to Nielsen Media Research.[194] While most stations are located in Cleveland and Akron, Kent is home to the offices and main studio of Western Reserve Public Media, the PBS affiliate for Akron and Youngstown.[195] The studios for WOCV-CD, the local affiliate for the Retro Television Network, are located just east of the city limits in Franklin Township.[196] TV-2, a Kent State University student-run production, is available on campus, on local cable, and online.[197] Kent is also in range of the television stations that broadcast out of Youngstown.[198]

 
Former studios for WKSU on the Kent State University campus.

For radio, Kent is part of the Akron radio market, though it is within range of major stations in the Cleveland radio market as well as many in the Youngstown-Warren and Canton markets.[199] Two radio stations, both on the FM dial, are licensed to Kent. WKSU (89.7 FM), owned by Kent State University and operated by Ideastream Public Media, is a National Public Radio member station for the Akron, Canton and Cleveland radio markets via a region-wide repeater network[200] with studios in Downtown Cleveland; prior to 2021, WKSU broadcast from studios on the Kent State University campus.[201] WNIR (100.1 FM) carries a locally-based talk radio format for the Akron radio market operating from studios shared with WOCV-CD in Franklin Township.[196] One AM station was also previously licensed to Kent but has since ceased operations: WNIR's former AM adjunct, WJMP, which broadcast at 1520 AM from 1965 until 2016 at the same Franklin Township studios housing WNIR, and operated only during the daytime hours.[202] Kent State University also operates a student-run internet radio station: Black Squirrel Radio, both available online and on local cable.[197]

The Record-Courier, a daily newspaper which mainly covers Portage County, is the main source of printed news media for Kent. The Record-Courier was formed by the merger of the Ravenna Evening Record and the Kent Courier-Tribune and is published by the Record Publishing Company, a subsidiary of GateHouse Media. The Record-Courier maintained an office in Kent until 2008 before all offices were moved to Kent from Ravenna in 2012. In addition to the Record-Courier, the Kent offices house the various departments of Record Publishing and its other weekly newspapers that serve several Summit and Portage County communities.[203][204][205] Kent Patch, a local division of Patch Media, mainly serves as an online bulletin board for local events. It was established in 2010 and functioned as a news source specific to Kent before Patch Media downsized hundreds of local Patch sites across the United States in October 2013.[206] The city is also served by Kent State University's Kent Stater, which is available in print at select locations on and off campus and online via KentWired.com, a collaborative site with TV-2 and Black Squirrel Radio.[197] The Akron Beacon Journal and The Plain Dealer also serve Kent through regional coverage and delivery.[207] Magazines published at Kent State include Fusion, an LGBTQ magazine; Kent State Magazine, an official publication of the university; and The Burr, a student-run magazine about events going on in and around Kent.[208][209][210]

Infrastructure

The city operates its own water system, drawing groundwater from wells with an adjacent water treatment plant located just outside the city limits in Franklin Township as well as using a water reclamation facility along the Cuyahoga River in the southwestern part of the city.[211][212] Waste collection for the entire city is handled through a local private contractor and Portage County handles the city's recycling collection.[213] Kent's original recycling program was developed in 1970 by the Kent Environmental Council and was Ohio's first comprehensive and self-supporting program.[214] Local phone utilities are provided through AT&T Ohio through the 330 and 234 area codes, electricity is supplied and lines are maintained by FirstEnergy in the former coverage area of Ohio Edison, and natural gas is supplied and lines are maintained by Dominion Resources East Ohio Energy.[215][216][217] While residents are free to choose their own natural gas and electric suppliers, the city is part of the Northeast Ohio Public Energy Council, or NOPEC, the largest government aggregation in the United States.[218]

Transportation

 
Kent Central Gateway, downtown

State Route 59 is the main east–west highway, following East and West Main Streets and Haymaker Parkway. Summit Street is another major east–west road mainly on Kent's eastern side, passing through and linking much of the Kent State campus. Fairchild Avenue is an important east–west road on the city's west side connecting with Stow and Cuyahoga Falls. State Route 43 is the main north–south highway, mainly following North Mantua and South Water Streets. SR 43 connects Kent with Interstate 76, approximately 3 miles (5 km) to the south via exit 33 in Brimfield and to the Ohio Turnpike/Interstate 80 and the eastern terminus of Interstate 480, approximately 7 miles (11 km) to the north via Turnpike exit 187 in Streetsboro. Both SR 43 and SR 59 are four to five-lane roads within the city limits. State Route 261 passes through the southern and eastern edges of the city and is a four-lane divided highway for a short distance with the remainder a two-lane highway. It serves as a bypass between SR 43, SR 59, and Summit Street on Kent's south and eastern sides and to Tallmadge on the southwest.[219]

Public transportation is provided by the Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority, known as PARTA, which is headquartered just outside the city limits in Franklin Township.[220] PARTA serves Kent through a dial-a-ride service, the Suburban and Kent Circulator routes completely within the city limits, the seasonal Black Squirrel route along SR 59 during Kent State University's Fall and Spring semesters, and the Interurban connecting with Stow and Ravenna. There are also two express routes, one to Akron connecting with METRO Regional Transit Authority via Brimfield, and a Cleveland Express route connecting with the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority via Streetsboro, Twinsburg, and Maple Heights.[221] PARTA also includes Campus Bus Service, which provides three fixed routes on the campus of Kent State University. An intermodal transit facility, known as the Kent Central Gateway, opened in 2013 in the downtown area to provide better integration of the existing bus system, hike-and-bike trails, and parking. The building was financed mainly from a $20 million Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) grant received in February 2010 and construction began in April 2011.[222][223][224]

Kent has three rail lines run by the Norfolk Southern and CSX. They are the former Erie Lackawanna line between Jersey City and Chicago, The Nickel Plate Road line between Cleveland and Zanesville, and the old Baltimore & Ohio line between Baltimore and Willard.

Healthcare

Hospital care is provided mainly through University Hospitals Portage Medical Center, affiliated with University Hospitals of Cleveland, which operates the UH Kent Health Center in the southern part of the city. The UH Kent Health Center includes an emergency services building with 24-hour emergency room and an urgent care center, adjacent to a medical arts building housing a medical imaging center and family medicine doctors.[225][226] The 150-bed main hospital is located in Ravenna and the system operates additional facilities throughout Portage County.[86] Free clinics include the AxessPointe Community Health Center and a clinic operated by social agency Townhall II.[227][228]

Religion

 
St. Patrick Church, a Roman Catholic parish, is the city's largest religious body.

The earliest organized religious services in Kent were held in 1815 when a Methodist group was formed, followed by a Congregational church in 1819.[229] The first religious meetinghouse in Kent, which also served as the first schoolhouse, was built in 1817 and was used by several different denominations. Later, the Methodists built another building in 1828 that was also used by multiple denominations.[230] The oldest church building in Kent still used as a place of worship is the Unitarian Universalist Church on Gougler Avenue, which was dedicated in 1868. The former home of the Congregational Church was dedicated in 1858 and still stands along Gougler Avenue very near the Unitarian Universalist Church. It served as the home of the First Congregational Church—which became the Kent United Church of Christ in 1964—until 1955.[231] It was later purchased by a local business and is used as their corporate headquarters.[232]

As of 2010, within the city are two Roman Catholic parishes affiliated with the Diocese of Youngstown, one a family parish and one a Newman Center, as well as congregations of the United Methodist Church, African Methodist Episcopal Church, Free Methodist Church, United Church of Christ, Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Church of the Brethren, the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Presbyterian Church, Church of Christ, Episcopal Church, and Jehovah's Witnesses. There are also Unitarian Universalist, non-denominational Christian, and Baháʼí Faith congregations.[231] Although there are no Jewish synagogues or temples, there is a Hillel Jewish student center on the campus of Kent State University which serves students at both Kent State and the University of Akron.[233] Just outside the city limits in Franklin Township are the Kent congregations of the Church of the Nazarene, Assemblies of God, as well as Baptist and Free Will Baptist churches. The Islamic Society of Akron and Kent operates a masjid and school on its main campus in Cuyahoga Falls, west of Kent. It was founded in Kent in 1979 and maintains an additional masjid in the city.[234] Kent is also part of a ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Rootstown that was first organized in Kent and includes most of southern Portage County.[231]

Notable people

Kent has produced and been home to a number of notable individuals in varying fields. Its natives and residents are referred to as "Kentites".[235] John Davey, a pioneer in tree surgery and founder of the Davey Tree Expert Company moved to Kent in the 1880s. His son, Martin L. Davey, would later serve as Governor of Ohio and a U.S. Representative. Other political figures to come from Kent include Wisconsin governor Lucius Fairchild, former U.S. Representative Robert E. Cook, and noted abolitionist John Brown, who lived in what was then Franklin Mills from 1835 to 1839.[236][237] Noted athletes to have come from Kent include former National Football League players Mike Adamle, Tom DeLeone, and Stan White and former Major League Baseball player, manager, and executive Gene Michael.[238][239] Three members of the band Devo, which debuted in Kent in 1973 and was founded by Kent State University students, are natives of Kent: Gerald Casale, Peter Gregg, and Rod Reisman.[240] Other performing artists to come from Kent include singer Julianne Baird, playwright Vincent J. Cardinal, and voice actor Joshua Seth.[238][241] Lucien Price, an author and writer for The Boston Evening Transcript and The Atlantic Monthly grew up in Kent and used the pseudonym "Woolwick" for Kent in some of his stories.[242] Kent was also the home of inventor Lucien B. Smith, regarded as the inventor of barbed wire.[243][244] Additionally, people who have lived in Kent while attending Kent State University include comedians Drew Carey and Arsenio Hall, actor Michael Keaton, musicians Joe Walsh and Chrissie Hynde, and additional members of the band Devo.[245] Athletes include football players Antonio Gates, James Harrison, Julian Edelman, Joshua Cribbs, and Jack Lambert; Major League Baseball players Thurman Munson, Rich Rollins, and Andy Sonnanstine; college football coaches Nick Saban and Lou Holtz; and golfer Ben Curtis, who resides in Franklin Township just north of the Kent city limits and lists Kent as his residence.[246][247][248]

Twin town

Kent has one twin town, Dudince, a small spa town of about 1,500 people in southern Slovakia.[249] The relationship was established in 2003 through Sister Cities International and resulted in the formation of the Kent-Dudince Sister City Association to promote learning and understanding of the Slovakian culture.[250] The group meets regularly and organizes cultural exchanges and programs that feature Slovakian dance and music.[251] Cultural exchanges have included a performance of a choir from Kent's Theodore Roosevelt High School in Dudince in 2004 and tour groups from Kent visiting in 2006 and 2008.[252][253][254]

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c "City of Kent". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  2. ^ "ArcGIS REST Services Directory". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  3. ^ "Census - Geography Profile: Kent city, Ohio". Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  4. ^ Brown, R. C.; Norris, J. E. (1972) [1885]. History of Portage County Ohio. Chicago, Illinois: Warner, Beers, and Company. pp. 451–452. This book gives 1790 as the date, but several other sources give 1780 as the date.
  5. ^ Brown and Norris, p. 431; "The present territory of Franklin, Town 3 Range 9..." See also File:Portage County 1826.jpg
  6. ^ Plough, Cyrus T., ed. (1978). 1874–1978 Bicentennial Atlas of Portage County, Ohio. Ravenna, Ohio, United States: Portage County Historical Society. p. A-28. Comes from page 24 of the Combination Atlas Map of Portage County by L. H. Everts, published in 1874, which is included as part of the 1978 Atlas.
  7. ^ Grismer, Karl H. (1932). History of Kent (2001 Revision ed.). Kent, Ohio: Record Publishing (1932), Kent Historical Society (2001). p. 11.
  8. ^ Brown and Norris, p. 435 "...the twin settlements were known respectively as "Upper Village" and "Lower Village." The name Carthage was afterward applied to the Upper Village."
  9. ^ a b c Grismer, pp. 19–25.
  10. ^ "Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal". OhioHistoryCentral.org. Ohio Historical Society. July 1, 2005. Retrieved August 20, 2010.
  11. ^ Smith, Diane (October 12, 2002). . Record-Courier. Dix Publishing. Archived from the original on 2012-03-14. Retrieved January 25, 2014. In Kent, the Joshua Woodard house on Fairchild Avenue is the only building on the Underground Railroad that is still standing.
  12. ^ Grismer, pp. 29, 37, 124, 125.
  13. ^ Grismer, p. 233.
  14. ^ Kent Bicentennial Historical Fun Facts. Kent Area Chamber of Commerce. 2006. p. 5.
  15. ^ a b c Nichols, Jim (November 26, 2009). "Downtown Kent, Ohio, rising Phoenix-like as city, KSU and businesses coalesce". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved April 29, 2010.
  16. ^ Hildebrand, William H.; Keller, Dean H.; Herington, Anita D. (1993). A Book of Memories: Kent State University 1910–1992. Kent, Ohio, United States: Kent State University Press. p. 16. ISBN 0-87338-488-1. The twenty cities were: Ashtabula, Canton, Chagrin Falls, Columbiana, East Liverpool, Geneva, Hubbard, Hudson, Kent, Lorain, Massillon, Medina, Poland, Ravenna, Salem, Seville, Urichsville, Wadsworth, Warren, and Youngstown.
  17. ^ Hildebrand, Keller, and Herington, p. 20.
  18. ^ a b Darrow, Ralph, ed. (1999). Kent, Ohio: The Dynamic Decades. Kent, Ohio, United States: Kent Historical Society. p. 1.
  19. ^ Hildebrand, William (2009). Most Noble Enterprise: The Story of Kent State University, 1910–2010. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-1-60635-030-0.
  20. ^ Farkas, Karen (January 5, 2011). "Kent State University celebrates 50 years of black squirrels on campus". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved January 5, 2011. See also: "Black Squirrel Sightings" 2010-03-16 at the Wayback Machine (April 29, 2010).
  21. ^ Hildebrand, Keller, and Herington, pp. 165–166.
  22. ^ Di Paolo, Roger (2009). Rooted in Kent. Kent, Ohio: Kent Historical Society. pp. 252–254. ISBN 978-1-60725-175-0.
  23. ^ Fredmonsky, Matt (March 30, 2011). "Kent Water Nabs 6th Award in International Contest". Kent Patch. Retrieved August 8, 2011. See also: Kent City Water Scores Big Again 2012-03-23 at the Wayback Machine (March 27, 2011).
  24. ^ a b . City of Kent, Ohio website. City of Kent, Ohio. Archived from the original on June 12, 2007. Retrieved January 10, 2009.
  25. ^ "Kent Fire Department Press Release" (Press release). Kent Fire Department. December 3, 2022. Retrieved December 15, 2022.
  26. ^ "Major fire erupts at former Star of the West mill complex in downtown Kent Friday". Record-Courier. December 2, 2022. Retrieved December 3, 2022.
  27. ^ Fredmonsky, Matt (April 25, 2008). "Kent block to get makeover". Record-Courier. pp. A1, A5.
  28. ^ "About". AcornAlleyKent.com. 2014. Retrieved January 3, 2019.
  29. ^ Magaw, Timothy (April 9, 2012). "Longtime Kent businessman Ron Burbick primes the city's development pump". Crain's Cleveland Business. Retrieved April 6, 2013. Note: Using the direct article link requires a subscription. To access the entire article, cut and paste the title of the article into a web search and then click on the link from the web search.
  30. ^ Reis, Rebecca (June 12, 2013). "Kent State Hotel and Conference Center to open doors Friday". KentWired.com. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
  31. ^ McDonald, Kyle (May 1, 2013). "PARTA parking deck opens for public in Kent". Record-Courier. Retrieved May 1, 2013.
  32. ^ "Welcome to Kent Central Gateway". Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority. 2015. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
  33. ^ Fredmonsky, Matt (April 2, 2013). "Restored Acorn Corner Opens to Public". Kent Patch. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
  34. ^ Nobile, Jeremy (January 19, 2014). "Bricco opens at The Landmark in Kent, apartments soon to follow". Record-Courier. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
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  247. ^ Carducci, David (July 10, 2011). "Kent State Around the Beat". Record-Courier.
  248. ^ . Slideshare.net; originally from Sister-Cities.org. Sister Cities International. October 5, 2008. Archived from the original on October 13, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  249. ^ Nethken, Laura (May 29, 2004). . Record-Courier. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  250. ^ Ruehr, Mary Louise (April 29, 2010). . Record-Courier. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  251. ^ Giltz, Cecil (June 2, 2004). . Record-Courier. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  252. ^ Nethken, Laura (July 19, 2006). . Record-Courier. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  253. ^ Maynard, Joanne (July 2, 2008). . Record-Courier. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved January 27, 2014.

External links

  • Official website
  • Kent Area Chamber of Commerce

kent, ohio, kent, city, state, ohio, largest, city, portage, county, located, along, cuyahoga, river, northeast, ohio, western, edge, county, population, 2020, census, city, counted, part, akron, metropolitan, statistical, area, larger, cleveland, akron, canto. Kent is a city in the U S state of Ohio and the largest city in Portage County It is located along the Cuyahoga River in Northeast Ohio on the western edge of the county The population was 28 215 at the 2020 Census 3 The city is counted as part of the Akron Metropolitan Statistical Area and the larger Cleveland Akron Canton Combined Statistical Area KentCityTop from left old Erie Depot and Star of the West mill Franklin Hotel Dix Stadium Theodore Roosevelt High School Kent Hall Main Street Bridge and arch dam Cuyahoga RiverSealNickname The Tree CityCoordinates 41 09 N 81 22 W 41 15 N 81 36 W 41 15 81 36 Coordinates 41 09 N 81 22 W 41 15 N 81 36 W 41 15 81 36 1 CountryUnited StatesStateOhioCountyPortageFoundedNovember 1805Incorporated1867Founded byJohn HaymakerNamed forMarvin KentGovernment TypeCouncil Manager City ManagerDave Ruller MayorJerry FialaArea 2 Total9 33 sq mi 24 17 km2 Land9 22 sq mi 23 89 km2 Water0 11 sq mi 0 28 km2 Elevation1 056 ft 322 m Population 2020 Total28 215 Density3 059 53 sq mi 1 181 23 km2 DemonymKentiteTime zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP codes44240 44242 44243Area code s 330 234FIPS code39 39872GNIS feature ID2395512 1 Websitekentohio orgPart of the Connecticut Western Reserve Kent was settled in 1805 and was known for many years as Franklin Mills Settlers were attracted to the area due to its location along the Cuyahoga River as a place for water powered mills Later development came in the 1830s and 1840s as a result of the settlement s position along the route of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal Leading up to the American Civil War Franklin Mills was noted for its activity in the Underground Railroad With the decline of the canal and the emergence of the railroad the town became the home of the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad maintenance shops through the influence of Marvin Kent In 1864 the town was renamed Kent in honor of and in gratitude for Marvin Kent s efforts It was incorporated as a village in 1867 and became a city after the 1920 Census Today Kent is a college town best known as the home of the main campus of Kent State University founded in 1910 and as the site of the 1970 Kent State shootings Historically a manufacturing center education is the city s largest economic sector with Kent State University being the city s and one of the region s largest employers The Kent City School District and the Kent Free Library provide additional education opportunities and resources Many of Kent s demographic elements are influenced by the presence of the university particularly the median age median income and those living below the poverty level The city is governed by a council manager system with a city manager a nine member city council and a mayor Kent has nearly 20 parks and preserves and hosts a number of annual festivals including ones related to Earth Day folk music and the U S Independence Day In addition to the Kent State athletic teams the city also hosts a number of amateur and local sporting events at various times during the year Kent is part of the Cleveland Akron media market and is the city of license for three local radio stations and three television stations and includes the regional affiliates for National Public Radio NPR and the Public Broadcasting Service PBS Local transportation infrastructure includes a public bus service and hike and bike trails As the home of the Davey Tree Expert Company Kent is known as The Tree City while residents are referred to as Kentites The city has produced a number of notable individuals particularly in politics athletics and the entertainment industry Contents 1 History 1 1 Redevelopment 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Demographics 4 Economy 5 Culture 6 Sports 7 Parks and recreation 8 Government 9 Education 10 Media 11 Infrastructure 11 1 Transportation 11 2 Healthcare 12 Religion 13 Notable people 14 Twin town 15 Notes and references 16 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Kent Ohio The region was originally inhabited by various tribes of American Indians including the early Mound Builders Around 1780 Captain Samuel Brady achieved notoriety for his activities in the area including his famous leap of 21 feet 6 m over the Cuyahoga River to avoid capture by an unknown band of American Indians The site known as Brady s Leap is now a city park 4 Settlement by Europeans began in the late 1790s and early 19th century As part of the Connecticut Western Reserve the area was divided into survey townships in 1798 and almost all of what is now Kent was originally part of Town 3 Range 9 which would eventually be known as Franklin Township 5 Aaron Olmsted a wealthy Connecticut merchant had purchased the 16 000 acre 6 500 ha township and named it for his son Aaron Franklin Olmsted 6 Franklin Township was surveyed in 1803 and settled in November 1805 when John Haymaker and his family moved west from Warren to the banks of the Cuyahoga River They were joined by John s brother George and their father Jacob Haymaker and their families early the next year and built a gristmill in 1807 7 Initial growth in the area was slow but eventually two small villages would develop due to the potential for power generated by the Cuyahoga River that could be used in gristmills and manufacturing The first village known as Franklin Mills or locally as the Lower Village developed mostly around the original Haymaker property In 1818 Joshua Woodard arrived in the area and began constructing buildings just north of the village forming the Upper Village that would come to be known briefly as Carthage 8 Former P amp O Canal lock and dam downtown In the 1820s Franklin Mills was included in the route of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal P amp O Canal When construction began on the canal in the mid 1830s land speculation was rampant in many areas of northeast Ohio along the canal including Franklin Mills As a result an industrial and business region was established along the east side of the river in what is now downtown Kent Factories and mills were either planned or constructed along the Cuyahoga River some of which either were never built or ultimately failed due mostly to effects of the Panic of 1837 A lock and attached arch dam however was completed in 1836 9 The canal officially opened in 1840 but would only operate into the 1860s By the 1870s the canal was completely shut down 10 In the era leading up to the American Civil War Franklin Mills was an active stop on the Underground Railroad giving fugitive slaves shelter on their escape to Canada There were three notable stops in Franklin Mills one of which still stands as of 2010 11 During this period from 1835 to 1839 noted American abolitionist John Brown moved to the village operating a tannery along the Cuyahoga River with Zenas Kent 9 In 1863 the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad was constructed through Franklin Mills due largely to the efforts of local businessman Marvin Kent son of Zenas Kent Marvin Kent had started his own railroad company the Franklin and Warren Railroad in 1851 after Franklin Mills already home to several Kent family ventures and properties was bypassed by the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad that same year Kent was also successful in getting the village named as the location of the railroad s maintenance yards and shops in 1864 The geographic location along the railroad and being home to the shops reinvented and revitalized the village as an important stop on the east west line between St Louis and New York City The shops would open in 1865 and the railroad would play an important part of Kent s industry and development through the early 20th century before the shops were completely shut down in 1930 To honor Marvin Kent the village was renamed Kent in 1864 although this change was not official until the village was incorporated on May 6 1867 12 John Davey came to Kent in 1881 as head grounds keeper at Standing Rock Cemetery and planted several trees landscaped the cemetery and performed experiments on trees In 1901 he published his theories on tree surgery with his book The Tree Doctor and later established the Davey Tree Expert Company in 1909 The efforts of Davey and the presence of Davey Tree led to the establishment of The Tree City as a nickname for Kent which is reflected in the city s seal 13 14 The company continues to be headquartered in Kent and serves as the city s largest private employer 15 Lowry Hall one of the original campus buildings of Kent State UniversityAfter a fire destroyed the Seneca Chain Company in 1909 one of the city s main industries at the time city leaders created the Kent Board of Trade in 1910 a forerunner to the Chamber of Commerce The new Board was successful later that year in having Kent selected out of twenty northeastern Ohio cities as the site of a new teacher training college which became known as the Kent State Normal School 16 The site for the school was on 53 acres 21 ha of land donated by William S Kent son of Marvin Kent on what was then the eastern edge of town By 1929 the school was renamed Kent State College after the establishment of a college of liberal arts and degrees in the arts and sciences and in 1935 was renamed Kent State University after it was given authorization to grant advanced graduate degrees The bill giving Kent State university status was signed into law by Ohio governor and Kent native Martin L Davey son of tree surgeon John Davey 17 During the 1950s and 1960s the growth of Kent State University combined with the effects of suburbanization resulted in significant population growth for the city rising from just over 12 000 residents at the 1950 census to over 28 000 by 1970 18 Black squirrels were brought to the campus from Canada in 1961 by Kent State University head groundskeeper Larry Woodell The squirrels have become an icon for both KSU and the city and are often used as unofficial mascots and symbols 19 20 In early May 1970 protests began on the campus of Kent State University over the United States invasion of Cambodia in the Vietnam War These protests and demonstrations which included rioting in downtown Kent on May 2 culminated in the Kent State shootings on May 4 1970 where four students were killed and nine were wounded by the Ohio Army National Guard 21 Several memorials have been placed at the site over the years and commemorations have been held annually since 1971 In 2010 the entire site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places 22 Also during the late 1960s and into the 1970s construction of Haymaker Parkway completed in 1975 brought changes to the city s layout while eliminating ongoing problems with traffic congestion and blocked rail crossings 23 Kent received national attention in 1995 when the city s water was named Best Tasting Municipality Water at the Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting The water and mayor Kathleen Chandler were featured on the March 3 episode of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno Since then Kent has placed in the top five a total of six times with the most recent being a fifth place finish in 2011 24 In 2003 the 1836 arch dam was bypassed to meet water quality standards set by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency To preserve the historic dam a small park was built behind the dam and the river was rerouted through the old canal lock During warm weather months water is pumped over the dam The park known as Heritage Park was formally dedicated in May 2005 25 From 1881 to 2016 downtown Kent was home to a flour mill housed in a complex originally built from 1880 to 1881 by the Williams brothers and later acquired by the Star of the West Milling Company The mill closed in 2016 after Star of the West consolidated operations to Willard Ohio and the complex was sold to a local developer in 2019 On the morning of December 2 2022 part of the complex caught fire In addition to the Kent Fire Department 11 additional area fire departments and multiple other agencies responded 26 The fire destroyed part of the original 1881 mill building and the grain elevator built in 1890 and damaged other parts of the complex The adjacent taller white silos built in 1936 were not damaged 27 Redevelopment Edit Downtown developments completed or under construction in March 2013 Beginning in 2008 several redevelopment projects in the downtown area some of which had been discussed for decades were put into motion and resulted in nearly 110 million in total investment from public and private sources The first of these was the Phoenix Project a development privately financed by Kent resident Ron Burbick that renovated and expanded a section of commercial space along East Main Street 28 Included in the project was construction of a pedestrian alleyway lined with small shops eventually known as Acorn Alley which opened in 2009 A second phase of Acorn Alley opened in late 2011 29 Other aspects of the redevelopment which include a 360 space parking deck and bus transfer station a hotel and conference center and three separate mixed use buildings began to take shape in 2010 following the demolition of several buildings in a four block area New offices for Ametek and the Davey Tree Expert Company opened in late 2012 along with several new small businesses on the first floors of each building 30 The hotel operated by Kent State University opened in June 2013 and the new parking garage operated by the Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority PARTA opened April 30 2013 as the Kent Central Gateway 31 In addition to parking the facility functions as PARTA s main bus transfer station and has storefronts on the ground level facing East Erie Street 32 33 Included in the redevelopment was the purchase and renovation of the old Kent hotel which first opened in 1920 After being mostly vacant since 1979 and completely vacant since 2000 it re opened on April 1 2013 as the new home to the Kent location of Buffalo Wild Wings and also houses offices a wine and jazz bar and apartments 34 A five story mixed use building called The Landmark was completed in 2014 and construction started in November 2015 on an additional five story mixed use building featuring microapartments scheduled to be completed in 2016 35 36 The developments attracted the attention of The Plain Dealer and The New York Times and earned the city and university the 2013 Larry Abernathy Award from the International Town Gown Association in recognition of the positive town gown cooperation and collaboration 37 38 39 KSU College of Architecture and Environmental Design building completed in 2016 Additional development has been ongoing on the campus of Kent State University and the largely residential neighborhood located between downtown Kent and the western edge of campus The university began buying properties in that neighborhood in 2007 and by December 2012 had acquired 43 Construction of the University Esplanade extension designed to link campus with downtown started in August 2012 after several of the buildings in the area most of which had been rental homes were demolished or moved The Esplanade extension continued a segment of the Portage Hike and Bike Trail that extends to Dix Stadium and was completed in October 2013 40 41 Kent State constructed a 48 million 110 091 square feet 10 227 8 m2 facility for the College of Architecture and Environmental Design along the Esplanade extension and also relocated the former home of May Prentice the first female faculty member at Kent State to the extension as the home for the Wick Poetry Center 42 Construction on the architecture building started in October 2014 and was completed in August 2016 43 44 45 In total there are plans totaling approximately 150 million for several other facilities and upgrades across campus including a new building for the College of Applied Engineering Sustainability and Technology and a renovation and reorganization of the facilities for the School of Art 46 The city and county have also seen developments in the same area A new county municipal courthouse on East Main Street was completed in April 2014 and in 2015 Kent City Council approved the sale of the city hall complex to a private developer for construction of a five story apartment building on the site which opened in August 2016 47 48 Geography EditKent is located in west central Portage County in Northeast Ohio approximately 10 miles 20 km northeast of Akron and 30 miles 50 km southeast of Cleveland 49 It is bordered by Franklin Township on the north and east the unincorporated community of Brady Lake on the east Brimfield Township on the south and Stow on the west Other nearby communities include Ravenna to the east and Sugar Bush Knolls and Streetsboro to the north It is included in the Akron Metropolitan Statistical Area and the larger Cleveland Akron Canton Combined Statistical Area Located on the western end of the Glaciated Allegheny Plateau the topography of Kent includes rolling hills and varied terrain The Cuyahoga River passes through the city cutting a gorge with a drop of nearly 40 feet 10 m adjacent to the downtown area 50 The United States Geological Survey lists the city s elevation at 1 056 feet 322 m above sea level at a point near Kent s geographic center 1 Elevations vary slightly within the city limits with several buildings on the Kent State University campus at altitudes in excess of 1 160 feet 350 m and points as high as 1 200 feet 370 m 51 52 According to the United States Census Bureau as of 2010 the city has a total area of 9 28 square miles 24 04 km2 of which 9 17 square miles 23 75 km2 is land and 0 11 square miles 0 28 km2 is water 53 Climate Edit The four main seasons in Kent from top left clockwise winter spring summer and fall Kent s climate is classified as a humid continental climate in the Dfa Koppen climate classification meaning it typically has very warm humid summers and cold snowy winters with moderate and variable spring and autumn seasons The record high temperature is 103 F 39 C set on July 7 1988 with the record low of 22 F 30 C recorded January 17 1982 54 55 During the spring and summer months thunderstorms are fairly common and the area is susceptible to tornadoes though the last recorded tornado in Kent occurred in 1973 56 57 Effects from tropical systems can also be felt usually taking the form of increased humidity rain and wind such as with the remnants of Hurricane Ike in September 2008 58 During the winter months snowfall is common and can occur in large quantities with considerable cloud cover Kent is not considered part of the Lake Erie snowbelt though lake effect snow does occur at times The city is in what is referred to as the secondary snowbelt meaning it will receive heavier snowfall totals from lake effect snow when certain wind directions are more prevalent but typically sees far less snowfall than areas to the north closer to Lake Erie 59 While temperatures below the freezing point are typical in the winter months thaw periods where temperatures exceed 50 F 10 C and even 60 F 16 C are not uncommon in January and February 55 Climate data for Kent OhioMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 65 18 70 21 81 27 88 31 94 34 101 38 103 39 100 38 95 35 84 29 76 24 72 22 103 39 Average high F C 34 1 38 3 48 9 60 16 72 22 80 27 84 29 82 28 74 23 62 17 50 10 39 4 60 16 Average low F C 20 7 23 5 30 1 40 4 51 11 60 16 64 18 63 17 56 13 45 7 36 2 26 3 43 6 Record low F C 22 30 6 21 1 17 17 8 30 1 39 4 44 7 43 6 30 1 25 4 2 17 12 24 22 30 Average precipitation inches mm 2 02 51 2 00 51 2 85 72 3 15 80 3 61 92 3 13 80 3 87 98 3 36 85 3 57 91 2 46 62 3 22 82 2 83 72 36 07 916 Average snowfall inches cm 12 4 31 10 5 27 8 2 21 2 7 6 9 0 1 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 3 0 7 6 10 2 26 47 5 120 75 Source 1 Intellicast 60 Source 2 NOAA 61 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 18702 301 18803 30943 8 18903 5015 8 19004 54129 7 19104 488 1 2 19207 07057 5 19308 37718 5 19408 5812 4 195012 41844 7 196017 83643 6 197028 18358 0 198026 164 7 2 199028 83510 2 200027 906 3 2 201028 9043 6 202028 215 2 4 18 49 62 As a college town Kent s demographic and population statistics are greatly affected by the presence and growth of Kent State University 63 As a result several statistics are noticeably higher or lower than state and national averages including median age and the percentage of residents in the 18 24 age bracket individuals below the poverty line and percentage of residents with a college degree Initial population growth in Kent was influenced by the location on the Cuyahoga River which led to the development of industrial and manufacturing jobs 64 Early settlers mainly came from the northeastern United States and were largely of German descent 65 After the arrival of the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad in 1863 growth was steady into the early 20th century with the village battling Ravenna for the position of Portage County s largest city 66 67 By the 1930 Census Kent had passed Ravenna as the county s most populous city with even larger population growth in the 1950s and 1960s rising from 12 148 in 1950 to 28 183 by 1970 68 As of 2010 Kent remains the county s largest city 69 Most recent population measurements of the city have shown the effect of changes in the city s overall population coinciding with changes in the number of students living on campus as well as a reduction in the number of persons per housing unit 70 As of the 2010 Census there were 28 904 people living in the city for a population density of 3 150 5 people per square mile 1 216 4 km2 There were 11 174 housing units at an average density of 1 218 0 per square mile 470 3 km2 The racial makeup of the city was 83 1 White 9 6 African American 3 7 Asian 0 2 Native American 0 1 Pacific Islander 0 5 from other races and 2 9 from two or more races 2 2 of the population is Hispanic or Latino of any race 71 Though slightly below the national averages for diversity Kent is very close to the averages for Ohio and above the averages for the surrounding area 63 Between the 2000 and 2010 censuses the city saw slight increases in the number of minority residents 71 72 The 2015 estimate placed the population at 29 810 62 There were 10 288 households in 2010 out of which 20 9 had children under the age of 18 living with them 27 5 were married couples living together 12 5 had a female householder with no husband present and 56 3 were non families 33 4 of all households were made up of individuals and 8 0 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size in Kent was 2 2 and the average family size was 2 86 which compares with the national average of 2 58 for a household and 3 14 for a family and the state average household size of 2 44 and average family size of 3 01 73 In the city the population was spread out with 29 4 ages 19 years and under 44 1 from 20 to 39 15 9 from 40 to 59 8 0 from 60 to 79 and 2 5 who were 80 years of age or older The median age was 22 7 years which was well below both the median age for Ohio 38 8 and the United States 35 3 The city s population was 46 3 male and 53 7 female The rate differs slightly from the national average of 49 2 male and 50 8 female and the state average of 48 8 male and 51 2 female It contrasts with neighboring Franklin Township which has a population that is 51 3 male and 48 7 female 74 The mean income for a household in the city was 46 848 well below the mean household incomes for Ohio 61 397 and the United States 70 116 in the 2010 Census The median household income in Kent was 28 958 compared to 46 563 for Ohio and 51 222 for the U S For families the mean income in Kent was 71 817 with a median income of 59 936 both of which were closer to the state 73 084 mean 58 566 median and national 81 568 mean 62 112 median averages Males had a median income of 35 316 versus 35 255 for females The per capita income for workers in the city was 18 339 10 4 of families and 29 3 of the population were below the poverty line including 21 1 of those under age 18 and 6 6 of those age 65 or over While the number of individuals below the poverty line is significantly higher than both the state and national averages with 14 8 of individuals in Ohio and 14 4 in the United States being below the poverty line the percentage of families below the poverty line is slightly below the state 10 5 and national 10 8 averages Measures of high poverty rates in similar college towns however is not uncommon across the U S 75 76 Educationally Kent is above the national state and local averages for residents who have attained a bachelor s master s or above a master s degree At the 2010 Census 41 9 of Kent s population above the age of 25 had obtained a college degree compared to 24 9 of the same population in Portage County 24 1 statewide and 27 9 nationally 77 Economy Edit Corporate headquarters of the Davey Tree Expert Company Kent s largest private employer Kent s location along the Cuyahoga River and later the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal and multiple railroad lines made it attractive initially for the establishment of small gristmills for the production of flour and various factories Progressively larger factories later developed due to increased power available from the river and eventually due to the ease and lower cost of transportation of goods to other markets 64 During the latter half of the 19th century and into the early 20th century the city s largest employers were all industrially based including the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad and its successors which operated its main maintenance shops in the village the Seneca Chain Company and bus manufacturer Twin Coach among others 78 A disastrous fire at the Seneca Chain Company in 1909 led to the creation of the Kent Board of Trade an early Chamber of Commerce which was successful in getting Kent selected in 1910 as the site of what would become Kent State University 79 Changes in the structure of the railroad and declines in the manufacturing sector during the mid 20th century combined with the rapid growth of Kent State University following World War II led to the university becoming the city s largest employer and influenced the development of other areas of the city s economy Beginning in the late first decade of the 21st century the university along with the city and private investors began to play a more active role in the redevelopment of downtown Kent and has aided in the development of local high tech companies 15 80 Kent State operates Centennial Research Park along Ohio State Route 59 in Kent s Joint Economic Development District with Franklin Township which houses two high tech start up companies in the liquid crystal industry 81 82 Kent has an additional Joint Economic Development District with Brimfield Township 83 Through the Kent Regional Business Alliance the city also supports two business incubators 84 Kent State University Kent s largest employer As of 2010 the educational health and social services fields were the city s largest sector and employed over 33 5 of Kent s workforce This included the city s two largest employers Kent State University and the Kent City School District as well as University Hospitals Portage Medical Center which operates an outpatient surgery center and general medical facility 75 85 86 16 3 of the workforce is employed in arts entertainment and food service with 12 2 employed in retail Manufacturing accounts for 7 1 of the workforce with a Land O Lakes plant being the largest employer in the sector 75 85 Smithers Oasis a floristry developer and manufacturer was founded in Kent in 1954 and operates a plant in the city Their corporate offices were moved back to Kent from Cuyahoga Falls in September 2013 having originally moved there from Kent in 1992 87 88 Kent is also home to the corporate headquarters of the Davey Tree Expert Company which serves as the city s largest private employer 15 In 2010 Davey Tree announced plans to relocate staff from its Davey Resource Group who were previously in neighboring Stow to Kent as part of a planned downtown development and has stated long term goals include having all corporate offices in Kent 89 The office which included some office staff already in Kent at the main corporate headquarters opened in August 2012 90 75 1 of those employed commuted alone to work by way of a car truck or van with another 7 1 carpooling 10 6 of workers walked to work with 1 9 using public transportation The average commute time was 22 minutes 13 0 of the workforce was unemployed in 2010 above the 9 8 for the state and 9 0 nationally 75 the U S Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated the unemployment rate in Kent at 7 9 in 2010 and 6 6 in October 2011 91 Culture Edit 2010 Kent Heritage Festival along South Water Street Cultural elements in Kent include various arts environmental and entertainment events during the year as well as the Kent State University Museum The Kent Heritage Festival is held every July in the downtown area coinciding with the U S Independence Day The festival includes crafts booths entertainment train rides 5K and 10K races and fireworks drawing approximately 25 000 people each year 92 In October Kent hosts the homecoming festivities for Kent State University including a parade down East Main Street as well as other events and activities both on campus and around the city 93 Also in October the downtown area hosts an annual yet unofficial Halloween celebration which usually takes place the last Saturday of October The event typically draws thousands largely Kent State students and includes many who dress in costume 94 In 2007 Main Street Kent a local organization that promotes downtown Kent created a family oriented Halloween event downtown that precedes the unofficial celebration 95 Since 2007 Kent has hosted an annual environmental festival known as Who s Your Mama which takes place in conjunction with Earth Day The festival has events at various locations in the city such as a vegan chef competition concerts a film festival guest speakers and booths on environment based topics 96 Through Main Street Kent additional events downtown include an ice cream social event in August an outdoor concert series and sidewalk cinema between May and September an art and wine festival in June a cider festival in November and the Festival of Lights Christmas celebration in early December 95 Kent Potterfest a festival celebrating the book and movie series Harry Potter debuted in late July 2016 and is held annually in the downtown area It features Harry Potter themed vendors and activities a 5k run through the campus of Kent State University a costume contest and the transformation of Acorn Alley into Diagon Alley 97 From May to October the Haymaker Farmers Market operates every Saturday morning in the downtown area adjacent to and under the Greer Bridge of Haymaker Parkway The location is marked by a commissioned mural completed in October 2012 on the two bridge supports that line each side of the market s area 98 The market was established in 1992 and includes over 40 vendors making it one of the oldest and largest farmers markets in Northeast Ohio 99 An indoor Winter Market established in 2008 is held Saturday mornings from November through April 100 Arrival of Santa Claus by train as part of the annual Festival of Lights in December The Kent Stage located downtown is a performance venue for a variety of arts performances in music and theater It hosts around 90 concerts four theatrical performances and four film festivals or movie premiers per year including local national and international performers Since opening in 2002 it has been visited by approximately 120 000 patrons from all over Ohio 38 U S states and 3 countries 101 In April it hosts events related to the Who s Your Mama Earth Day festival and in June it is one of the host venues for the Kent Folk Festival an annual event in folk music since the late 1960s The festival includes multiple folk music acts at venues throughout the city over a period of several days 102 The Kent Stage also hosts the Kent Blues Festival and a local artist music festival known as the Up From The River Music Festival 101 Kent is also home to the Kent State University Museum located in Rockwell Hall on the KSU campus The museum focuses on the history of fashion design and decorative arts in the United States and around the world from the 18th century to the present 103 Each year in early May the university hosts an annual commemoration of the Kent State shootings which typically features several speakers forums artwork and other related events 104 On campus Kent State operates the May 4 Visitors Center which covers the shootings and the events surrounding them It is housed in Taylor Hall on the site added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2010 and includes three galleries covering art and media from the era of the 1960s leading up to the shootings images from the actual event and the local and national impact after the shootings The center opened to the public October 20 2012 during the Kent State Homecoming weekend 105 106 The site was named a National Historic Landmark in December 2016 107 108 The John Davey House a listing on the National Register of Historic Places In addition to the Kent State Shootings Site near the center of campus there are also a number of additional sites and districts in Kent on the National Register of Historic Places some of which are open to the public The Kent Industrial District is a historical district along the Cuyahoga River adjacent to downtown that includes an area and structures that were important in Kent s early history 109 On the northwestern part of the Kent State University campus is the Ohio State Normal College At Kent district which includes the school s five original classic revival buildings dating to 1913 110 There is also the West Main Street District just west of downtown that includes 20 private homes of architectural and historical significance from the post Civil War and early 20th century periods The district includes the Kent Masonic Center which was originally built in the early 1880s as the home of Marvin Kent and his family and the former residence of Martin L Davey who served as Governor of Ohio 111 112 Buildings in Kent listed on the register include three private homes noted for their architecture styles the John Davey House for the Second Empire style and both the Aaron Ferrey and Charles Kent Houses as examples of Gothic Revival 113 114 115 Other buildings include the 1869 Kent Jail now used by the Parks and Recreation Department and the 1837 Franklin Township Hall the site of eventual U S President James A Garfield s first nomination for public office in 1859 9 116 As part of its renovation and redevelopment the former Franklin Hotel first opened in 1920 was added to the NRHP in 2013 for its local historical significance and its connections to notable people 117 The former L N Gross Company Building built in 1928 and designed by Kent architect Charles Kistler was added to the NRHP in 2016 as part of its restoration and renovation 118 Sports EditSee also Kent State Golden Flashes A KSU men s basketball game at the Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center As the home of Kent State University Kent is also the home of the university s athletic teams the Golden Flashes who compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA at the Division I level as a member of the Mid American Conference East Division Several of Kent State s teams have enjoyed league and national success the most notable being the men s basketball team s run to the Elite Eight in the 2002 NCAA Tournament and the baseball team s appearance in the 2012 College World Series 119 120 121 The 6 327 seat Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center commonly referred to as the MAC Center is the site of a number of athletic events in multiple sports including wrestling women s gymnastics and women s volleyball in addition to men s and women s basketball It is also a regular site for the Mid American Conference s wrestling and women s gymnastics championships 122 123 In addition to hosting the KSU football team Kent State s 25 319 seat Dix Stadium has been a venue for high school football games both in the regular season and the state playoffs 124 125 The adjacent Murphy Mellis Field is a location for Ohio High School Athletic Association OHSAA field hockey tournament games and the Diamond at Dix is a regular venue for OHSAA regional softball tournament games 126 127 From 1975 to 1981 the Cleveland Browns held their training camp in Kent at Kent State University 128 The Kent State University Ice Arena serves as host to several local ice hockey programs including youth leagues high school and professional teams and as a site for OHSAA high school tournament games and ice skating competitions in addition to being home of KSU s club team which competes in the American Collegiate Hockey Association 129 130 The ice arena is also the home of the Kent Twisters a member of the Pennsylvania Ohio Women s Hockey Association an adult amateur women s ice hockey league 131 Kent also plays host to the Portage County Open tennis tournament held annually at the tennis courts of Theodore Roosevelt High School 132 Parks and recreation Edit View from Heritage Park facing downtown The city operates nearly 20 parks and preserves the largest of which is the 56 acre 23 ha Fred Fuller park along the Cuyahoga River named after a former Kent Parks chairman The park includes the Kramer Fields baseball and softball complex which contains four fields two of which are lighted Several of the parks along the Cuyahoga River are on or near areas of historical significance Franklin Mills Riveredge Park which follows the Cuyahoga River through downtown Kent passes through a large portion of the Kent Industrial District along with Heritage Park and includes sites related to the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal 25 133 Adjacent on the south is the John Brown Tannery Park on the site of the former tannery John Brown helped fund with Zenas Kent in the 1830s while Brady s Leap park adjacent to the north is at the location of the famed leap over the Cuyahoga River by Captain Samuel Brady circa 1780 134 135 The parks and recreation department in addition to operating and maintaining the city s parks and preserves also operates a recreation center on the city s south side and offers several sports arts and education programs at various locations in Kent 136 137 The department also sponsors events throughout the year including Art in the Park an ice skating party hayrides and Santa s Arrival 138 The Kent City School District operates an indoor pool at Theodore Roosevelt High School that is available for public recreational and instructional use outside of its use by the school for athletics and physical education The pool hosts swimming lessons and serves as a home venue for the Hudson based Hudson Explorers Aquatic Team a competitive swimming program for ages five and above 139 140 Within the city are segments of the Portage Hike and Bike Trail which is jointly managed with Kent State University the Portage Park District and the city of Ravenna The main portion of the trail follows the Cuyahoga River in Kent with most of the trail paved with asphalt In August 2012 as part of several redevelopment projects in the downtown area Kent State University began construction of the Esplanade Extension which was completed in August 2013 and connects the university s portion of trail extending to Dix Stadium known as the University Esplanade to downtown Kent 141 142 143 144 The trail connects with the hike and bike trails in neighboring Summit County and links Kent with nearby communities in Portage County 145 The city is also home to the Cooperrider Kent Bog State Nature Preserve located in the southern edge of Kent It is one of the most intact bogs in Ohio with the southernmost and largest stand of tamarack trees in the continental United States 146 Through partnerships with Kent State University Recreational Services and other local agencies additional recreational opportunities are available to city residents A livery known as Crooked River Adventures is available at Tannery Park The livery generally operates from May to October depending on weather and water levels Canoe kayak tubing and bicycle rentals are available to residents and students with kayak and canoe service as far as Brust Park in Munroe Falls and Water Works Park in Cuyahoga Falls Kent also has a bicycle sharing system known as Flashfleet in partnership with the university and PARTA The program offers yearly memberships or hourly rentals with locations on campus and in the downtown area 147 148 Government Edit Map showing the six wards of Kent Kent is governed by a charter form of government with a council manager system of nine council members and a mayor The city is divided into six wards and voters select a mayor a council member representing their ward and three at large council members in staggered four year terms 149 The city charter adopted in 1963 is reviewed by a charter commission every 10 years who then make recommendations for changes the last review being in 2015 150 151 The city council hires a city manager who oversees the day to day operations in the various city departments and enforces policies set by council The mayor serves a largely ceremonial role as president of the council and votes only in the event of a tie Kent voters approved the change from a mayor council system to council manager in 1975 and it went into effect in 1977 150 Jerry Fiala began his term as mayor January 1 2010 and Dave Ruller began serving as city manager June 15 2005 149 152 As part of the city government Kent also has departments of community development health human services law parks and recreation public safety and public service 153 The Public Service Department oversees a variety of construction and maintenance works as well as the city s water treatment and water reclamation systems while the Public Safety Department includes both the police and fire departments 154 The Kent Police Department is housed in the city s Safety Administration Building and includes 911 dispatch for Kent and Franklin Township 155 Kent State University also operates its own police department which mainly patrols the KSU campus and KSU property in and out of the Kent city limits 156 The two departments frequently communicate and for several years were headed by identical twin brothers James Peach in the city and John Peach at the university 157 The fire department operates two stations the main station adjacent to the Safety Administration Building and the West Side Fire Station along North Mantua Street on the western side of the Cuyahoga River Kent Fire also provides fire and emergency medical service coverage for Franklin Township and the village of Sugar Bush Knolls 158 The city s main sources of tax revenue come from income tax set at 2 25 and property tax 159 Voters approved an increase in the income tax rate from 2 0 in November 2013 to fund a new police station and the new rate took effect January 1 2014 The rate increase includes a sunset provision that requires the tax rate to return to 2 0 once debt is paid off on the new facility 160 In 2014 the city operated on a budget of approximately 40 million The largest percentage of the budget 31 or 11 9 million was spent on public safety services followed by 22 or 8 5 million on basic utilities Debt service accounted for 6 0 million or 17 of the budget while transportation projects accounted for 9 or 3 37 million of the budget 8 or 3 33 million towards general government expenses and 2 35 million allocated for construction of a new police station 161 At the state level Kent is in the 68th district of the Ohio House of Representatives represented since 2011 by Democrat Kathleen Clyde a Kent resident 162 163 In the State Senate Kent is part of the 18th district represented since 2011 by Republican John Eklund of Geauga County 164 165 At the Federal level Kent is included in Ohio s 13th congressional district represented since 2003 by Democrat Tim Ryan of Niles 166 167 Education EditSee also Kent City School District Kent Free Library and Kent State University Stanton Middle School Preschool elementary and secondary education is mainly provided by the Kent City School District The portion of the city south of State Route 261 is part of the neighboring Field Local School District 168 The Kent district was created around 1860 and later merged with the Franklin Township and Brady Lake school districts in 1959 169 170 It serves most of Kent and Franklin Township the village Sugar Bush Knolls and a small part of southern Streetsboro 168 Kent has four neighborhood elementary schools that serve students in grades K 5 Stanton Middle School for grades 6 8 and Theodore Roosevelt High School for grades 9 12 The district also operates a preschool program housed at Davey Elementary School and is a member of the Six District Educational Compact with five surrounding districts to facilitate vocational education with many of these programs housed at Roosevelt High School 171 172 In 1985 Roosevelt High School was given the United States Department of Education Excellence in Education award and the school has consistently been rated Excellent by the Ohio Department of Education since 2004 173 174 For 2010 2015 2016 and 2018 it was named in U S News amp World Report as one of the best high schools in the United States earning the publication s Bronze Medal designation 175 176 The Kent City School District has been consistently rated as Excellent or Effective by the Ohio Department of Education and in 2007 Walls Elementary School was named a School of Promise by the Ohio Department of Education while Longcoy Elementary earned the U S Department of Education s prestigious Blue Ribbon School award 174 177 Kent also has one private school St Patrick School which serves around 300 students in grades K 8 from Kent and several surrounding communities It is part of Kent s St Patrick parish and is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Youngstown 178 179 Newer portion of the Kent Free LibraryThe Kent Free Library is the main public library It was established in 1892 after Kent became the first village in Ohio to use an 1892 state law which allowed municipalities under a population of 5 000 to tax residents for the upkeep of a library Andrew Carnegie donated 10 000 in 1901 for construction of a permanent home for the library which opened in 1903 180 The 2006 expansion to the library brought available space to 55 000 square feet 5 100 m2 with a book collection of 147 390 items as of 2010 181 182 It is a school district library associated with the Kent City School District and is also part of the Portage Library Consortium connecting it with Reed Memorial Library in Ravenna and the Portage County District Library which maintains six branch libraries across the county and a bookmobile 183 184 The main campus of Kent State University is located in the southeastern part of the city The campus itself occupies 866 acres 350 ha and the university owns thousands of additional acres adjacent to the campus Additional facilities include a research park and golf course just east of the city limits in Franklin Township and the Kent State University Airport just west of Kent in Stow 185 Founded in 1910 as a teacher training institution the university has become a world leader in the development of liquid crystals through the Liquid Crystal Institute and was the site of the first patent for the modern liquid crystal in the 1970s 186 Kent State also has a nationally recognized fashion design program and nationally ranked programs in library science and business 187 188 As of 2010 the College of Nursing is the 5th largest nursing school in the United States and largest in Ohio In 2009 the university inaugurated the College of Public Health the second public health program in Ohio and 33rd in the U S 187 The Kent State library system which includes the 12 story main library and houses over 2 6 million volumes includes six additional department libraries on the main campus and a branch at each of the seven regional campuses 185 189 The library system is a member of the Association of Research Libraries one of 3 in Ohio and 124 in North America 190 The university offers over 300 programs of study combined in the undergraduate and graduate levels and serves over 41 000 students in eight campuses across Northeast Ohio with over 30 000 at the campus in Kent 191 192 Media EditKent is part of the Cleveland Akron Television Market Area as defined by the Federal Communications Commission which includes a 17 county region of Northeast Ohio 193 As of 2015 it ranks as the 18th largest media market in the United States according to Nielsen Media Research 194 While most stations are located in Cleveland and Akron Kent is home to the offices and main studio of Western Reserve Public Media the PBS affiliate for Akron and Youngstown 195 The studios for WOCV CD the local affiliate for the Retro Television Network are located just east of the city limits in Franklin Township 196 TV 2 a Kent State University student run production is available on campus on local cable and online 197 Kent is also in range of the television stations that broadcast out of Youngstown 198 Former studios for WKSU on the Kent State University campus For radio Kent is part of the Akron radio market though it is within range of major stations in the Cleveland radio market as well as many in the Youngstown Warren and Canton markets 199 Two radio stations both on the FM dial are licensed to Kent WKSU 89 7 FM owned by Kent State University and operated by Ideastream Public Media is a National Public Radio member station for the Akron Canton and Cleveland radio markets via a region wide repeater network 200 with studios in Downtown Cleveland prior to 2021 WKSU broadcast from studios on the Kent State University campus 201 WNIR 100 1 FM carries a locally based talk radio format for the Akron radio market operating from studios shared with WOCV CD in Franklin Township 196 One AM station was also previously licensed to Kent but has since ceased operations WNIR s former AM adjunct WJMP which broadcast at 1520 AM from 1965 until 2016 at the same Franklin Township studios housing WNIR and operated only during the daytime hours 202 Kent State University also operates a student run internet radio station Black Squirrel Radio both available online and on local cable 197 The Record Courier a daily newspaper which mainly covers Portage County is the main source of printed news media for Kent The Record Courier was formed by the merger of the Ravenna Evening Record and the Kent Courier Tribune and is published by the Record Publishing Company a subsidiary of GateHouse Media The Record Courier maintained an office in Kent until 2008 before all offices were moved to Kent from Ravenna in 2012 In addition to the Record Courier the Kent offices house the various departments of Record Publishing and its other weekly newspapers that serve several Summit and Portage County communities 203 204 205 Kent Patch a local division of Patch Media mainly serves as an online bulletin board for local events It was established in 2010 and functioned as a news source specific to Kent before Patch Media downsized hundreds of local Patch sites across the United States in October 2013 206 The city is also served by Kent State University s Kent Stater which is available in print at select locations on and off campus and online via KentWired com a collaborative site with TV 2 and Black Squirrel Radio 197 The Akron Beacon Journal and The Plain Dealer also serve Kent through regional coverage and delivery 207 Magazines published at Kent State include Fusion an LGBTQ magazine Kent State Magazine an official publication of the university and The Burr a student run magazine about events going on in and around Kent 208 209 210 Infrastructure EditThe city operates its own water system drawing groundwater from wells with an adjacent water treatment plant located just outside the city limits in Franklin Township as well as using a water reclamation facility along the Cuyahoga River in the southwestern part of the city 211 212 Waste collection for the entire city is handled through a local private contractor and Portage County handles the city s recycling collection 213 Kent s original recycling program was developed in 1970 by the Kent Environmental Council and was Ohio s first comprehensive and self supporting program 214 Local phone utilities are provided through AT amp T Ohio through the 330 and 234 area codes electricity is supplied and lines are maintained by FirstEnergy in the former coverage area of Ohio Edison and natural gas is supplied and lines are maintained by Dominion Resources East Ohio Energy 215 216 217 While residents are free to choose their own natural gas and electric suppliers the city is part of the Northeast Ohio Public Energy Council or NOPEC the largest government aggregation in the United States 218 Transportation Edit Kent Central Gateway downtown State Route 59 is the main east west highway following East and West Main Streets and Haymaker Parkway Summit Street is another major east west road mainly on Kent s eastern side passing through and linking much of the Kent State campus Fairchild Avenue is an important east west road on the city s west side connecting with Stow and Cuyahoga Falls State Route 43 is the main north south highway mainly following North Mantua and South Water Streets SR 43 connects Kent with Interstate 76 approximately 3 miles 5 km to the south via exit 33 in Brimfield and to the Ohio Turnpike Interstate 80 and the eastern terminus of Interstate 480 approximately 7 miles 11 km to the north via Turnpike exit 187 in Streetsboro Both SR 43 and SR 59 are four to five lane roads within the city limits State Route 261 passes through the southern and eastern edges of the city and is a four lane divided highway for a short distance with the remainder a two lane highway It serves as a bypass between SR 43 SR 59 and Summit Street on Kent s south and eastern sides and to Tallmadge on the southwest 219 Public transportation is provided by the Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority known as PARTA which is headquartered just outside the city limits in Franklin Township 220 PARTA serves Kent through a dial a ride service the Suburban and Kent Circulator routes completely within the city limits the seasonal Black Squirrel route along SR 59 during Kent State University s Fall and Spring semesters and the Interurban connecting with Stow and Ravenna There are also two express routes one to Akron connecting with METRO Regional Transit Authority via Brimfield and a Cleveland Express route connecting with the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority via Streetsboro Twinsburg and Maple Heights 221 PARTA also includes Campus Bus Service which provides three fixed routes on the campus of Kent State University An intermodal transit facility known as the Kent Central Gateway opened in 2013 in the downtown area to provide better integration of the existing bus system hike and bike trails and parking The building was financed mainly from a 20 million Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery TIGER grant received in February 2010 and construction began in April 2011 222 223 224 Kent has three rail lines run by the Norfolk Southern and CSX They are the former Erie Lackawanna line between Jersey City and Chicago The Nickel Plate Road line between Cleveland and Zanesville and the old Baltimore amp Ohio line between Baltimore and Willard Healthcare Edit Hospital care is provided mainly through University Hospitals Portage Medical Center affiliated with University Hospitals of Cleveland which operates the UH Kent Health Center in the southern part of the city The UH Kent Health Center includes an emergency services building with 24 hour emergency room and an urgent care center adjacent to a medical arts building housing a medical imaging center and family medicine doctors 225 226 The 150 bed main hospital is located in Ravenna and the system operates additional facilities throughout Portage County 86 Free clinics include the AxessPointe Community Health Center and a clinic operated by social agency Townhall II 227 228 Religion Edit St Patrick Church a Roman Catholic parish is the city s largest religious body The earliest organized religious services in Kent were held in 1815 when a Methodist group was formed followed by a Congregational church in 1819 229 The first religious meetinghouse in Kent which also served as the first schoolhouse was built in 1817 and was used by several different denominations Later the Methodists built another building in 1828 that was also used by multiple denominations 230 The oldest church building in Kent still used as a place of worship is the Unitarian Universalist Church on Gougler Avenue which was dedicated in 1868 The former home of the Congregational Church was dedicated in 1858 and still stands along Gougler Avenue very near the Unitarian Universalist Church It served as the home of the First Congregational Church which became the Kent United Church of Christ in 1964 until 1955 231 It was later purchased by a local business and is used as their corporate headquarters 232 As of 2010 within the city are two Roman Catholic parishes affiliated with the Diocese of Youngstown one a family parish and one a Newman Center as well as congregations of the United Methodist Church African Methodist Episcopal Church Free Methodist Church United Church of Christ Lutheran Church Missouri Synod Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Church of the Brethren the Christian Church Disciples of Christ Presbyterian Church Church of Christ Episcopal Church and Jehovah s Witnesses There are also Unitarian Universalist non denominational Christian and Bahaʼi Faith congregations 231 Although there are no Jewish synagogues or temples there is a Hillel Jewish student center on the campus of Kent State University which serves students at both Kent State and the University of Akron 233 Just outside the city limits in Franklin Township are the Kent congregations of the Church of the Nazarene Assemblies of God as well as Baptist and Free Will Baptist churches The Islamic Society of Akron and Kent operates a masjid and school on its main campus in Cuyahoga Falls west of Kent It was founded in Kent in 1979 and maintains an additional masjid in the city 234 Kent is also part of a ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in Rootstown that was first organized in Kent and includes most of southern Portage County 231 Notable people EditMain article List of people from Kent Ohio See also List of Kent State University alumni Lucius Fairchild Kent has produced and been home to a number of notable individuals in varying fields Its natives and residents are referred to as Kentites 235 John Davey a pioneer in tree surgery and founder of the Davey Tree Expert Company moved to Kent in the 1880s His son Martin L Davey would later serve as Governor of Ohio and a U S Representative Other political figures to come from Kent include Wisconsin governor Lucius Fairchild former U S Representative Robert E Cook and noted abolitionist John Brown who lived in what was then Franklin Mills from 1835 to 1839 236 237 Noted athletes to have come from Kent include former National Football League players Mike Adamle Tom DeLeone and Stan White and former Major League Baseball player manager and executive Gene Michael 238 239 Three members of the band Devo which debuted in Kent in 1973 and was founded by Kent State University students are natives of Kent Gerald Casale Peter Gregg and Rod Reisman 240 Other performing artists to come from Kent include singer Julianne Baird playwright Vincent J Cardinal and voice actor Joshua Seth 238 241 Lucien Price an author and writer for The Boston Evening Transcript and The Atlantic Monthly grew up in Kent and used the pseudonym Woolwick for Kent in some of his stories 242 Kent was also the home of inventor Lucien B Smith regarded as the inventor of barbed wire 243 244 Additionally people who have lived in Kent while attending Kent State University include comedians Drew Carey and Arsenio Hall actor Michael Keaton musicians Joe Walsh and Chrissie Hynde and additional members of the band Devo 245 Athletes include football players Antonio Gates James Harrison Julian Edelman Joshua Cribbs and Jack Lambert Major League Baseball players Thurman Munson Rich Rollins and Andy Sonnanstine college football coaches Nick Saban and Lou Holtz and golfer Ben Curtis who resides in Franklin Township just north of the Kent city limits and lists Kent as his residence 246 247 248 Twin town EditKent has one twin town Dudince a small spa town of about 1 500 people in southern Slovakia 249 The relationship was established in 2003 through Sister Cities International and resulted in the formation of the Kent Dudince Sister City Association to promote learning and understanding of the Slovakian culture 250 The group meets regularly and organizes cultural exchanges and programs that feature Slovakian dance and music 251 Cultural exchanges have included a performance of a choir from Kent s Theodore Roosevelt High School in Dudince in 2004 and tour groups from Kent visiting in 2006 and 2008 252 253 254 Notes and references Edit a b c City of Kent Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior ArcGIS REST Services Directory United States Census Bureau Retrieved September 20 2022 Census Geography Profile Kent city Ohio Retrieved January 12 2022 Brown R C Norris J E 1972 1885 History of Portage County Ohio Chicago Illinois Warner Beers and Company pp 451 452 This book gives 1790 as the date but several other sources give 1780 as the date Brown and Norris p 431 The present territory of Franklin Town 3 Range 9 See also File Portage County 1826 jpg Plough Cyrus T ed 1978 1874 1978 Bicentennial Atlas of Portage County Ohio Ravenna Ohio United States Portage County Historical Society p A 28 Comes from page 24 of the Combination Atlas Map of Portage County by L H Everts published in 1874 which is included as part of the 1978 Atlas Grismer Karl H 1932 History of Kent 2001 Revision ed Kent Ohio Record Publishing 1932 Kent Historical Society 2001 p 11 Brown and Norris p 435 the twin settlements were known respectively as Upper Village and Lower Village The name Carthage was afterward applied to the Upper Village a b c Grismer pp 19 25 Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal OhioHistoryCentral org Ohio Historical Society July 1 2005 Retrieved August 20 2010 Smith Diane October 12 2002 Area s abolitionist roots unveiled Record Courier Dix Publishing Archived from the original on 2012 03 14 Retrieved January 25 2014 In Kent the Joshua Woodard house on Fairchild Avenue is the only building on the Underground Railroad that is still standing Grismer pp 29 37 124 125 Grismer p 233 Kent Bicentennial Historical Fun Facts Kent Area Chamber of Commerce 2006 p 5 a b c Nichols Jim November 26 2009 Downtown Kent Ohio rising Phoenix like as city KSU and businesses coalesce The Plain Dealer Retrieved April 29 2010 Hildebrand William H Keller Dean H Herington Anita D 1993 A Book of Memories Kent State University 1910 1992 Kent Ohio United States Kent State University Press p 16 ISBN 0 87338 488 1 The twenty cities were Ashtabula Canton Chagrin Falls Columbiana East Liverpool Geneva Hubbard Hudson Kent Lorain Massillon Medina Poland Ravenna Salem Seville Urichsville Wadsworth Warren and Youngstown Hildebrand Keller and Herington p 20 a b Darrow Ralph ed 1999 Kent Ohio The Dynamic Decades Kent Ohio United States Kent Historical Society p 1 Hildebrand William 2009 Most Noble Enterprise The Story of Kent State University 1910 2010 Kent Ohio Kent State University Press p 276 ISBN 978 1 60635 030 0 Farkas Karen January 5 2011 Kent State University celebrates 50 years of black squirrels on campus The Plain Dealer Retrieved January 5 2011 See also Black Squirrel Sightings Archived 2010 03 16 at the Wayback Machine April 29 2010 Hildebrand Keller and Herington pp 165 166 Weekly List Actions National Park Service Retrieved 2010 03 05 Di Paolo Roger 2009 Rooted in Kent Kent Ohio Kent Historical Society pp 252 254 ISBN 978 1 60725 175 0 Fredmonsky Matt March 30 2011 Kent Water Nabs 6th Award in International Contest Kent Patch Retrieved August 8 2011 See also Kent City Water Scores Big Again Archived 2012 03 23 at the Wayback Machine March 27 2011 a b Cuyahoga River Restoration Project City of Kent Ohio website City of Kent Ohio Archived from the original on June 12 2007 Retrieved January 10 2009 Kent Fire Department Press Release Press release Kent Fire Department December 3 2022 Retrieved December 15 2022 Major fire erupts at former Star of the West mill complex in downtown Kent Friday Record Courier December 2 2022 Retrieved December 3 2022 Fredmonsky Matt April 25 2008 Kent block to get makeover Record Courier pp A1 A5 About AcornAlleyKent com 2014 Retrieved January 3 2019 Magaw Timothy April 9 2012 Longtime Kent businessman Ron Burbick primes the city s development pump Crain s Cleveland Business Retrieved April 6 2013 Note Using the direct article link requires a subscription To access the entire article cut and paste the title of the article into a web search and then click on the link from the web search Reis Rebecca June 12 2013 Kent State Hotel and Conference Center to open doors Friday KentWired com Retrieved November 18 2015 McDonald Kyle May 1 2013 PARTA parking deck opens for public in Kent Record Courier Retrieved May 1 2013 Welcome to Kent Central Gateway Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority 2015 Retrieved November 18 2015 Fredmonsky Matt April 2 2013 Restored Acorn Corner Opens to Public Kent Patch Retrieved April 6 2013 Nobile Jeremy January 19 2014 Bricco opens at The Landmark in Kent apartments soon to follow Record Courier Retrieved November 18 2015 Pompili Dan November 13 2015 Ground broken for Kent s Avant building Record Courier Retrieved November 18 2015 Farkas Karen June 11 2012 100 million in development projects in downtown Kent Whatever happened to The Plain Dealer Retrieved April 25 2013 Schneider Keith February 5 2013 A Partnership Seeks to Transform Kent State and Kent New York Times Retrieved April 25 2013 Kent State and the City of Kent Honored with Inaugural Award for Town Gown Collaboration Kent State University April 16 2013 Archived from the original on 2015 02 02 Retrieved April 25 2013 Fredmonsky Matt August 5 2012 Esplanade Construction to Start Monday Kent Patch Retrieved April 25 2013 Kent State University Esplanade to be celebrated Friday Record Courier October 3 2013 Retrieved April 23 2015 Fredmonsky Matt March 22 2013 Historic House Inches Toward Esplanade Kent Patch Retrieved April 25 2013 Rosenfield Karissa April 2 2013 WEISS MANFREDI to Design Kent State s New 40 Million Architecture Building Architecture Daily Retrieved April 25 2013 Kent State to break ground for new architecture environmental design building Crain s Cleveland Business September 25 2014 Retrieved April 23 2015 Anderson Kristin December 22 2016 Kent State Celebrates Grand Opening of the New Center for Architecture and Environmental Design Kent State University Retrieved January 11 2018 Kent State Gets Green Light for Historic Campus Transformation Kent State University September 12 2012 Archived from the original on 2015 02 02 Retrieved April 25 2013 Schleis Paula March 9 2014 New Portage County courthouse almost ready to open Kent considers what to do with old one Akron Beacon Journal Retrieved November 18 2015 Pompili Dan October 6 2015 Apartments at former Kent City Hall site on schedule Record Courier Retrieved November 18 2015 a b Grismer p 202 for population years 1870 1930 Google Earth Map 5 1 ed Cartography by State of Ohio OSIP Google February 28 2006 Kent Ohio inset 41 9 13 30 N 81 21 33 85 W Feature Query Results Geographic Names Information System U S Geological Survey February 11 1999 Retrieved April 17 2010 Google Earth Map 5 1 ed Cartography by State of Ohio OSIP Google February 28 2006 Kent Ohio inset 41 8 59 01 N 81 20 56 76 W US Gazetteer files 2010 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on August 17 2014 Retrieved August 6 2013 July Daily Averages for Kent OH Weather com The Weather Channel 2010 Retrieved April 18 2010 a b January Daily Averages for Kent OH Weather com The Weather Channel 2010 Retrieved April 18 2010 News Briefs eIndide Kent State University March 23 2009 Retrieved April 29 2010 Darrow p 17 Fredmonsky Matt Sever Mike Piltz Marci September 15 2008 Heavy winds hammer Portage Record Courier pp A1 A5 Johnson Mark November 12 2010 Where is northern Ohio s snow belt NewsNet5 com NewsChannel 5 Archived from the original on November 19 2010 Retrieved August 6 2013 Historic Averages Kent Ohio Intellicast Retrieved December 3 2014 Kent Ohio Average Snowfall National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration a b Exner Rich May 19 2016 Cleveland population loss slows The Plain Dealer Retrieved May 19 2016 a b Locke Gary 2004 Demographic Profile PDF Kent Bicentennial Plan City of Kent Ohio pp 13 36 Archived from the original PDF on August 2 2010 Retrieved April 28 2010 a b Grismer pp 11 25 Brown R C and Norris J E pp 658 716 Grismer p 46 Hildebrand p 2 North Dakota Oregon PDF 1930 US Census United States Census Bureau 1931 p 54 Retrieved April 29 2010 Population Housing Units Area and Density 2010 County County Subdivision and Place American FactFinder U S Census Bureau 2010 Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved November 25 2015 Locke pp 27 28 a b Kent city Ohio Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics 2010 United States Census Bureau U S Census Bureau 2010 Retrieved May 12 2011 Kent city Ohio Fact Sheet Factfinder Census gov U S Census Bureau 2000 Archived from the original on 2020 02 12 Retrieved April 30 2010 General Housing Characteristics 2010 FactFinder Census gov U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved December 14 2012 Includes date from United States Ohio and Kent Age Groups and Sex Factfinder Census gov U S Census Bureau 2010 Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved December 14 2012 Compared statistics from the United States Ohio Portage County Franklin Township and Kent a b c d Selected Economic Characteristics United States Ohio Kent city Ohio 2010 United States Census United States Census Bureau 2010 Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved December 27 2011 Ivey Mike February 24 2010 Despite city s relative affluence poverty rate grows Madison com Measuring poverty in college towns can be somewhat misleading researchers caution since many students live below the poverty line and are counted by the U S Census Bureau as officially poor even if they come from wealthy families Educational Attainment United States Ohio Portage County Ohio and Kent city Ohio 2010 United States Census United States Census Bureau 2010 Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved December 27 2011 Grismer pp 168 185 Hildebrand pp 2 10 Staul Jenna March 10 2010 KSU research earns national rank KentWired com Retrieved December 7 2015 Fredmonsky Matt November 27 2008 Kent shares taxes from AlphaMicron Record Courier the university s Centennial Research Park which falls inside the Kent Franklin Joint Economic Development District Centennial Research Park Kent edu Kent State University 2010 Archived from the original on 2010 05 27 Retrieved April 29 2010 Brimfield Kent Joint Economic Development District PDF City of Kent Ohio Archived from the original PDF on August 15 2014 Retrieved August 6 2013 KRBA Business Incubators Kent Regional Business Alliance 2013 Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved August 6 2013 a b City of Kent Ohio Principal Employers City of Kent Ohio Department of Budget and Finance 2009 a b UH Portage Medical Center uhhospitals org University Hospitals of Cleveland 2021 Retrieved February 20 2021 North America Smithers Oasis Retrieved February 20 2021 Fredmonsky Matt August 11 2013 Longtime Kent Firm Relocating Downtown Kent Patch Retrieved August 11 2013 Fredmonsky Matt May 6 2010 Davey plans downtown move Record Courier pp A1 A3 Gallick Thomas August 10 2012 Davey Tree opens new downtown Kent office Record Courier pp A1 A2 Local Area Unemployment Statistics BLS gov U S Bureau of Labor Statistics December 2011 Retrieved December 28 2011 Kent Heritage Festival 2013 Record Turnout KentBiz com Kent Area Chamber of Commerce 2013 Archived from the original on November 20 2015 Retrieved December 7 2015 Homecoming Week KSUAlumni org Kent State University Alumni Association 2009 Archived from the original on July 27 2011 Retrieved October 4 2009 Kent Gears up for Annual Downtown Halloween Celebration Record Courier October 24 2013 Retrieved January 27 2014 a b Downtown Kent Events MainStreetKent org Main Street Kent 2010 Archived from the original on 2010 10 12 Retrieved October 15 2010 Retrieved from Internet Archive January 25 2014 Who s Your Mama Earth Day Festival WhosYourMama org WhosYourMama org 2010 Retrieved May 24 2010 Dray April April 4 2017 A Harry Potter Wonderland OnlyInYourState com Retrieved April 17 2017 Abraham Lisa September 14 2012 Haymaker Farmers Market celebrates 20 years Akron Beacon Journal Retrieved April 20 2013 Snook Debbi May 23 2010 Haymaker Farmers Market in Kent opens Saturday for 18th season The Plain Dealer Retrieved April 20 2013 History Mission Haymaker Farmers Market 2012 Archived from the original on 2013 06 04 Retrieved April 20 2013 a b Murphy Chad December 31 2009 The Kent Stage one of decade s success stories Record Courier Kent Folk Festival intermission features Eagles Don Felder begins on June 9 The Plain Dealer May 6 2015 Retrieved May 30 2015 The Collection Kent State University Museum website The Kent State University Museum Archived from the original on 2010 08 17 Retrieved August 16 2010 Fredmonsky Matt May 1 2010 Events to mark May 4 milestone Record Courier Archived from the original on April 12 2011 Retrieved January 25 2014 Fredmonsky Matt May 3 2010 KSU s May 4 center to host exhibit during event Record Courier McDonald Kyle October 20 2012 May 4 Visitors Center opens Record Courier pp A1 A3 Farkas Karen January 11 2017 May 4 site at Kent State University named National Historic Landmark The Plain Dealer Retrieved January 11 2017 Crosson Thomas January 11 2017 Interior Department Announces 24 New National Historic Landmarks United States Department of the Interior Retrieved January 11 2017 Kent Industrial District National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form United States Department of the Interior December 30 1974 Ohio State Normal College At Kent National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form United States Department of the Interior May 30 1975 West Main Street District National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form United States Department of the Interior June 17 1977 Fredmonsky Matt 25 February 2009 Kent landmark is immortalized in novel Record Courier Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved January 25 2014 John Davey House National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form United States Department of the Interior May 29 1975 Aaron Ferrey House National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form United States Department of the Interior August 13 1974 The Charles Kent Residence National Register of Historic Places Iventory Nomination Form United States Department of the Interior February 23 1978 Kent Jail National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form United States Department of the Interior July 11 2001 Franklin Hotel PDF National Register of Historic Places Registration Form United States Department of the Interior January 18 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 04 Retrieved March 6 2013 Gross L N Company Building National Register of Historic Places Program National Park Service 2017 Retrieved April 17 2017 Gigenbach Cara Walton Theresa 2008 Kent State University Athletics Charleston South Carolina Chicago Portsmouth New Hampshire and San Francisco Arcadia ISBN 978 0 7385 5176 0 Ticker March 22 2002 Kent St 78 Pittsburgh 73 SportsIllustrated CNN com CNN Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on 2011 06 28 Retrieved May 9 2010 College baseball Kent State beats Oregon to reach first College World Series USA Today Associated Press June 12 2012 Retrieved December 7 2015 Flashes to Host 2014 MAC Championships Saturday amp Sunday KentStateSports com Kent State University March 6 2014 Retrieved November 25 2015 Gymnastics PDF Mid American Conference 2014 Retrieved November 25 2015 Hardesty Tom October 13 1997 Ravens Rough Riders to meet Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 25 2014 Ohio High School Athletic Association 2001 Football Tournament PDF OHSAA org Ohio High School Athletic Association 2001 Retrieved October 4 2009 2009 Girls Field Hockey Tournament Regulations PDF OHSAA org Ohio High School Athletic Association 2009 Retrieved October 4 2009 Manion Jim May 28 2010 Mogadore s softball team keeps marching through postseason Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 25 2014 King Steve July 9 2008 Camp history unique ClevelandBrowns com Cleveland Browns Archived from the original on 2012 04 04 Retrieved May 17 2010 Ice Arena Kent State University 2015 Retrieved November 25 2015 Skating for Skills KentSkatingClub net Kent Skating Club 2008 Archived from the original on 2010 05 27 Retrieved October 4 2009 POWHA Rink Locations POWHA website POWHA 2009 Retrieved October 4 2009 Staff reports June 23 2009 Registration begins for PC Open Tennis tourney Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 25 2014 Franklin Mills Riveredge Park KentParksandRec com Kent Parks and Recreation Retrieved October 4 2009 John Brown Tannery Park KentParksandRec com Kent Parks and Recreation Retrieved October 4 2009 Brady s Leap Park KentParksandRec com Kent Parks and Recreation Retrieved October 4 2009 General Information KentParksandRec com Kent Parks and Recreation Retrieved October 4 2009 Recreation Department For Kent Parks amp Recreation KentParksandRec com Kent Parks and Recreation Retrieved October 4 2009 Annual Events KentParksandRec com Kent Parks and Recreation Retrieved October 4 2009 RHS Pool KentSchools net Kent City School District 2009 Archived from the original on 2010 10 18 Retrieved August 13 2010 Hudson Explorers Aquatic Team HudsonHEAT com Hudson Explorers Aquatic Team 2010 Archived from the original on 2011 01 28 Retrieved August 13 2010 Fredmonsky Matt August 5 2012 Esplanade Construction to Start Monday Kent Patch Retrieved October 2 2012 Myers Julie September 19 2013 Let s Take a Walk Ride Down the Esplanade KentWired com Retrieved December 6 2015 Fairchild Avenue Bridge KentOhio org City of Kent Ohio 2012 Archived from the original on December 16 2010 Retrieved October 2 2012 Kovac Marc September 24 2013 State gives Crain Avenue bridge project 421 000 cites delays Record Courier Retrieved September 26 2013 The Portage Hike and Bike PortageParkDistrict com Portage Park District Archived from the original on April 12 2009 Retrieved October 4 2009 See also map link Cooperrider Kent Bog State Nature Preserve OhioDNR com Ohio Department of Natural Resources Retrieved October 6 2021 Pompili Dan October 5 2015 Kent and Kent State partner on bike share rentals Record Courier Retrieved October 5 2015 Adventure Center Kent State University Recreational Services 2015 Retrieved October 5 2015 a b City Council KentOhio org City of Kent Ohio January 2010 Archived from the original on July 20 2009 Retrieved January 12 2010 a b Darrow p 27 initially the charter called for reviews every 5 years until a change to 10 years in 1985 Howard Conner May 8 2015 Kent Charter Review Commission approves changes to road funding term limits Record Courier Retrieved February 1 2016 Smith Diane June 16 2005 Council gets charter changes Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 25 2014 Departments KentOhio org City of Kent Ohio January 2010 Archived from the original on January 21 2010 Retrieved January 12 2010 Public Service KentOhio org City of Kent Ohio January 2010 Archived from the original on January 17 2010 Retrieved January 12 2010 Communications Dispatch of the Kent Police Department KentPD org Kent Ohio Police Department April 2012 Archived from the original on July 26 2012 Retrieved April 22 2012 Kent State University Police Services Kent edu Kent State University July 15 2009 Archived from the original on 2010 06 19 Retrieved June 15 2010 Wolford Ben November 23 2009 Kent State police chief Race not a factor in Kernich death KentNewsnet com Retrieved December 7 2015 Peach is meeting with his twin brother James Peach chief of the Kent Police Department See also Lee taking helm at Kent PD January 9 2011 Fire Department KentOhio org City of Kent Ohio January 2010 Archived from the original on March 25 2010 Retrieved January 12 2010 Division of Income Tax City of Kent Ohio 2014 Archived from the original on April 11 2015 Retrieved March 30 2015 McDonald Kyle November 6 2013 Kent approves police income tax Record Courier Retrieved March 30 2015 Note subscription required to access link City of Kent 2015 Recommended Budget PDF City of Kent Ohio 2014 Archived from the original PDF on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 30 2015 House District Map OhioHouse gov Ohio House of Representatives 2014 Retrieved January 27 2014 Sever Mike November 3 2010 Clyde tapped for Ohio House Record Courier Archived from the original on November 7 2010 Retrieved January 25 2014 Senate District Map OhioSenate gov Ohio Senate Archived from the original on January 5 2016 Retrieved December 26 2015 Senator John Eklund R OhioSenate gov Ohio Senate 2015 Retrieved December 26 2015 United States House of Representatives House gov United States House of Representatives 2014 Retrieved January 27 2014 Biography timryan house gov Office of Tim Ryan Retrieved January 19 2010 a b Property Tax 2007 www cleveland com Business Cleveland Plain Dealer 2008 Archived from the original on April 4 2010 Retrieved May 6 2010 See also File Portage County school districts overlay png Wardle Michelle 2005 Images of America Kent Charleston South Carolina United States Arcadia Publishing p 53 ISBN 0 7385 3381 5 Di Paolo Roger March 19 2006 New chapter for old school Record Courier p A5 School Buildings at KCS KentSchools net Kent City School District 2010 Retrieved July 21 2014 See also Kent City Schools Preschool Program College Tech Prep and Career Program Schedule PDF SixDistrict com Six District Educational Compact 2009 Archived from the original PDF on July 16 2011 Retrieved May 6 2010 Darrow p 175 a b Archives Education Ohio Gov Ohio Department of Education 2015 Retrieved December 7 2015 Roosevelt High School Best High Schools USNews com U S News amp World Report 2009 Archived from the original on September 19 2010 Retrieved December 14 2009 Roosevelt High School Best High Schools USNews com U S News amp World Report 2015 Archived from the original on September 19 2010 Retrieved August 25 2015 2007 Blue Ribbon Schools Nominations PDF U S Department of Education 2007 p 38 General Information St Patrick ODE state oh us Ohio Department of Education June 15 2010 Retrieved June 15 2010 dead link To access the records place St Patrick in the school box and Kent in the city and use the search button About Us StPatsKent org St Patrick School 2013 Retrieved January 27 2014 Getrost Christina 1993 A History of the Kent Free Library Kent Ohio 1958 1992 Kent Ohio United States Kent State University pp 11 12 Wroten Bryan September 25 2006 Kent Free Library opens tomorrow KentWired com Retrieved September 12 2016 Kent Free Library lib web cats Library Technology Guides May 3 2010 Retrieved May 5 2010 Portage Library Consortium PortageCounty lib oh us Portage Library Consortium 2015 Archived from the original on December 29 2015 Retrieved November 18 2015 Hours amp Locations PortageCounty lib oh us Portage County District Library 2015 Retrieved November 18 2015 a b Welcome to Kent State s Eight Campus System Kent State University website Kent State University May 5 2010 Retrieved November 18 2015 Johnson Christopher May 10 1999 Liquid Lessons The Missed Opportunity of Liquid Crystal Technology isn t Lost on Researchers Striving to Establish a MEMS Industry Here Crain s Cleveland Business Crain Communications in the 1970s soon after Kent State University researcher James Fergason first invented the basic liquid crystal a b Scott Michael May 2 2010 Kent State Coming of age 40 years after May 4 1970 shootings that stunned America The Plain Dealer Retrieved May 5 2010 Library and Information Studies U S News amp World Report 2017 Retrieved May 4 2017 Libraries Kent edu Kent State University 2015 Retrieved November 18 2015 List of ARL Members ARL org Association of Research Libraries 2015 Retrieved November 18 2015 The other two Ohio members are Ohio University and Ohio State University Graduation Planning System Kent edu Kent State University 2015 Retrieved November 18 2015 Fifteenth Day Enrollment Statistics PDF Kent State University September 2015 Retrieved November 18 2015 Updated Maps of All Full Service Digital Television Stations Authorized by the FCC Cleveland Akron Market PDF Map Federal Communications Commission 2010 Retrieved April 20 2010 Local Television Market Universe Estimates PDF Nielsen com Nielsen Media Research September 26 2015 Archived from the original PDF on April 12 2016 Retrieved November 26 2015 Organization Profile WesternReservePublicMedia org Western Reserve Public Media 2009 Retrieved April 18 2010 The operations center administrative offices main studio and location of public files are housed at 1750 Campus Center Drive Kent Ohio 44240 a b The Real Yellow Pages AT amp T 2010 p Business 32 a b c About Kentwired com KentWired com KentWired com January 7 2010 Retrieved January 26 2010 Updated Maps of All Full Service Digital Television Stations Authorized by the FCC Youngstown Market PDF Map Federal Communications Commission 2010 Retrieved April 20 2010 2009 Arbitron Radio Metro Map PDF Map Arbitron 2009 Archived from the original PDF on July 20 2011 Retrieved April 20 2010 Broadcast Coverage Area WKSU org WKSU 2010 Archived from the original on May 26 2010 Retrieved May 3 2010 Gaetjens Bob September 15 2021 WKSU expected to merge with Cleveland s Ideastream by Oct 1 following Kent State trustees approval Record Courier Retrieved April 13 2022 Fybush Scott February 2 2007 More AMs in Canton Akron and Kent Ohio www fybush com Retrieved February 19 2020 Darrow pp 153 154 Murphy Chad December 7 2008 R C Kent office to close Monday Record Courier Record Courier Moves to New Offices in Kent Record Courier August 18 2012 Retrieved January 5 2013 Cho Janet H October 15 2013 Northeast Ohio Patch com editors bid farewell to readers as Patch cuts Ohio journalists The Plain Dealer Retrieved November 9 2014 Darrow p 155 About ThatGayMagazine com Fusion Magazine Archived from the original on August 14 2009 Retrieved April 19 2010 About Us Kent edu Kent State University 2015 Retrieved November 26 2015 About TheBurr com The Burr Magazine 2015 Archived from the original on November 26 2015 Retrieved November 26 2015 Secondary water source found off Fairchild Ave Record Courier May 15 2004 Water Reclamation Division KentOhio org City of Kent Ohio Archived from the original on May 23 2010 Retrieved April 30 2010 Collection Schedule Map Kent360 com City of Kent Ohio 2009 Archived from the original on July 13 2011 Retrieved April 30 2010 Kent Environmental Council Records 1970 Kent State University Special Collections and Archives Kent State University July 1997 Retrieved April 30 2010 the KEC initiated recycling in Kent in 1970 and from 1979 89 managed Ohio s first comprehensive self supporting recycling program Telephone Service Areas and Area Codes in Ohio PDF Map Public Utilities Commission of Ohio 2009 Archived from the original PDF on April 29 2011 Retrieved January 26 2014 Electric Service Areas in Ohio PDF Map Public Utilities Commission of Ohio 2010 Archived from the original PDF on June 17 2011 Retrieved January 26 2014 PUCO Regulated Natural Gas Companies PDF Map Public Utilities Commission of Ohio 2002 Archived from the original PDF on June 17 2011 Retrieved January 26 2014 Frequently Asked Questions NOPECinfo org Northeast Ohio Public Energy Council Archived from the original on 2014 02 01 Retrieved January 26 2014 Kent Ohio PDF KentOhio org City of Kent Ohio April 2008 Archived from the original PDF on August 2 2010 Retrieved April 23 2010 Get In Touch PARTAonline org Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority 2015 Retrieved December 6 2015 Maps amp Schedules PARTAonline org Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority 2015 Retrieved December 6 2015 Sever Mike February 18 2010 20 Million for Kent Record Courier Gallick Thomas April 5 2011 PARTA breaks ground on transit center Record Courier McDonald Kyle May 19 2013 PARTA sets parking rates for Kent Central Gateway Record Courier Retrieved June 7 2013 UH Kent Health Center University Hospitals of Cleveland 2015 Retrieved December 14 2015 Gaetjens Bob July 18 2017 Kent UH Emergency Dept opens to quiet weekend Record Courier Retrieved July 19 2017 Locations AxessPointe org Retrieved February 20 2021 Medical Clinic Townhall2 com Townhall II Retrieved February 6 2014 Wardle p 16 Grismer pp 191 194 a b c Darrow pp 89 102 Burnell Sally 2010 History of the UU Church in Kent KentUU org Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent Retrieved December 7 2015 On August 23 1868 the building was dedicated The other churches were the Congregational Church built in 1858 which still stands and is the site of an area business Hillel KentHillel org Hillel at Kent 2010 Retrieved November 6 2010 About Us ISAK org Islamic Society of Akron and Kent 2010 Archived from the original on October 1 2013 Retrieved April 20 2013 Fredmonsky Matt March 18 2010 Kentite among the finalists on reality program Record Courier Di Paolo Roger September 8 2006 Civil War hero governor had roots in Kent Kent Celebrating 200 Years Record Courier p 5 Cook Robert Eugene 1920 1988 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress United States Congress Retrieved September 3 2008 a b Kent City Schools Hall of Fame archives KentSchools net Kent City Schools 2009 Retrieved June 27 2010 Gene Michael Baseball Reference com Baseball Reference com 2010 Retrieved June 28 2010 Dellinger Jade Giffels David 2003 The Beginning Was the End We Are Devo Archived from the original on February 16 2009 Retrieved January 6 2009 See also Photos of Devo s First Live Performance Archived 2016 01 23 at the Wayback Machine Kallio Chris March 26 2008 Hilarious hypnotism KentWired com Di Paolo Roger April 27 2008 Portage Pathways He never forgot Kent Record Courier Record Publishing Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved August 15 2009 Retrieved from Internet Archive January 26 2014 The American Experience Technology Timeline 1752 1990 The American Experience Public Broadcasting Systems 2000 Archived from the original on February 7 2009 Retrieved January 28 2009 Lucien B Smith Ohio History Central Ohio Historical Society July 31 2006 Archived from the original on October 3 2007 Retrieved January 28 2009 What You Need to Know About Kent State Kent edu Kent State University April 21 2010 Archived from the original on December 23 2012 Retrieved February 15 2010 Golden Flashes in the Pros PDF Kent State Baseball 2010 Media Guide Kent State University 2010 pp 45 48 Retrieved June 27 2010 History and Records Kent State Football 2009 Media Guide Kent State University 2009 pp 91 94 Carducci David July 10 2011 Kent State Around the Beat Record Courier Online Directory Ohio Slideshare net originally from Sister Cities org Sister Cities International October 5 2008 Archived from the original on October 13 2012 Retrieved January 13 2010 Nethken Laura May 29 2004 Sister City Association celebrates Slovak music and dancing provide entertainment after dinner Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 27 2014 Ruehr Mary Louise April 29 2010 Kent Dudince banquet planned Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 27 2014 Giltz Cecil June 2 2004 Choralworks bound for Europe Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 27 2014 Nethken Laura July 19 2006 Sister Cities planning tour set Sept 6 to 20 Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 27 2014 Maynard Joanne July 2 2008 Sister City group plans 4th trip Record Courier Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved January 27 2014 External links EditKent Ohio at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Ohio portalOfficial website Kent Area Chamber of Commerce Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kent Ohio amp oldid 1127593419, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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