Tremont Neighborhood in 1932
Dublin Core
Title
Tremont Neighborhood in 1932
Subject
Labor
Ethnicity
Description
The neighborhood of Tremont in Cleveland became a fast growing ethnic neighborhood that had its roots all the way back to 1860 when Germans and Irish migrated to Cleveland. The 1890 migration of Poles to Tremont gave it a very diverse identity that would eventually combine over 20 major ethnic groups. This picture in 1932 depicts a normal Tremont street lined with two story houses. Notice that housing was cramped only separated by a few feet and yards were extremely small.
Creator
Joseph E. Cole
Source
Cleveland State University Special Collections, Michael Schwartz Library, Cleveland Press Collection
Date
1932
Contributor
Justin Burgy
Rights
Users contributing materials to this site must agree to the following provisions: You confirm that your submission does not violate copyright or other applicable laws, and that appropriate credit has been given to the creator of this item. You give consent to the use of this item (including text, files, and other information) on this website and by its affiliates and partners. You agree to hold harmless the proprietors of this website, as well as its affiliates and partners. Contributors bear sole responsibility for user-generated content.
Relation
http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/press&CISOPTR=1633&CISOBOX=1&REC=2
Coverage
Tremont (Cleveland,Ohio)
Contribution Form
Online Submission
Yes
Posting Consent
Yes
Submission Consent
Yes
Contributor is Creator
No
Disclaimer
This site contains user-generated material. It is the responsibility of each user to evaluate the accuracy of information presented on this site. Feel free to share corrections and other responses using the comment form below.
Users contributing materials to this site must agree to the following provisions: "You confirm that your submission does not violate copyright or other applicable laws, and that appropriate credit has been given to the creator of this item. You give consent to the use of this item (including text, files, and other information) on this website and by its affiliates and partners. You agree to hold harmless the proprietors of this website, as well as its affiliates and partners. Contributors bear sole responsibility for user-generated content."
To request the removal of this item, please contact the CSU Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at csudigitalhumanities@gmail.com
Users contributing materials to this site must agree to the following provisions: "You confirm that your submission does not violate copyright or other applicable laws, and that appropriate credit has been given to the creator of this item. You give consent to the use of this item (including text, files, and other information) on this website and by its affiliates and partners. You agree to hold harmless the proprietors of this website, as well as its affiliates and partners. Contributors bear sole responsibility for user-generated content."
To request the removal of this item, please contact the CSU Center for Public History + Digital Humanities at csudigitalhumanities@gmail.com
Social Bookmarking









Geolocation
This item has no location info associated with it.
blog comments powered by Disqus