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North College Hill, Ohio

North College Hill, Ohio
City
Clovernook, childhood home of poets Alice and Phoebe Cary
Clovernook, childhood home of poets Alice and Phoebe Cary
Location in Hamilton County and the state of Ohio.
Location in Hamilton County and the state of Ohio.
Coordinates: 39°13′2″N 84°33′9″W / 39.21722°N 84.55250°W / 39.21722; -84.55250Coordinates: 39°13′2″N 84°33′9″W / 39.21722°N 84.55250°W / 39.21722; -84.55250
Country United States
State Ohio
County Hamilton
Government
 • Mayor Maureen Mason (D)
Area
 • Total 1.83 sq mi (4.74 km2)
 • Land 1.83 sq mi (4.74 km2)
 • Water 0 sq mi (0 km2)
Elevation 823 ft (251 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 9,397
 • Estimate (2012) 9,352
 • Density 5,135.0/sq mi (1,982.6/km2)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP codes 45224, 45239, 45231
Area code(s) 513
FIPS code 39-56322
GNIS feature ID 1065164

North College Hill is a city in Hamilton County in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Ohio approximately ten miles north of downtown Cincinnati. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 9,397. The city takes its name from its proximity to the Cincinnati neighborhood of College Hill (formerly Pleasant Hill) which borders it to the south.

North College Hill City Schools [1] serve approximately 1500 students [2] in the city and portions of adjoining Springfield Township, with an elementary, middle, and high school.

One of the first easterners to survey the area was John Cleves Symmes, a judge and former Congressman from New Jersey, after whom Symmes Township is named. Symmes visited the area in 1787 and received tentative permission from the new Federal government to purchase a section of land between the Little Miami and Great Miami Rivers. This tract became known as the “Symmes Purchase” or “Miami Purchase” and extended south to the Ohio River.

Several of the pioneers who migrated across the midwest to claim a part of Symmes' tract are buried in North College Hill's oldest landmark, the LaBoyteaux-Cary cemetery. Established in approximately 1806, the cemetery includes the graves of two Revolutionary War veterans and several members of the Cary family. The last burial in the cemetery was in 1860.

In 1813-14, William Cary, having migrated from New Hampshire to Cincinnati in 1802, purchased 491 acres (1.99 km2) north of Cincinnati along what is now Hamilton Avenue (U.S. Route 127). Cary built a log cabin and moved his family to this “wilderness,” then known as Mill Creek Township.


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