A Changing Cultural Landscape in the West
A CHANGING C ULTURAL L ANDSCAPE IN THE W EST E ND BETTS HOUSE BICENTENNIAL EXHIBIT I. In the Beginning Introduction Acknowledgments This exhibit was made possible in part by the Luther Foundation. With the celebration of the Bicentennial of the Beth Sullebarger Principal, Sullebarger Associates, Historic Betts House in 2004, came the desire to understand how it came to survive 200 years. As the oldest Preservation Consultants remaining house in Cincinnati, the Betts House is an important landmark and has a story to tell. Steven Muzik Student Intern, Community Design Why has it remained while its surroundings have radically changed? How did that process take Center, College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning, University of place? How did it impact this little brick house in the West End? What can this tell us about urban Cincinnati Menelaos Triantafillou neighborhoods? Associate Professor, School of Planning, College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning, University of Cincinnati Frank Russell This exhibit illustrates the physical and social evolution of the landscape around the house, from Director and Assistant Professor, Community Design Center, College of pre-history to country homestead to urban “superblocks.” It discusses the social evolution of the area Design, Architecture, Art and Planning, University of Cincinnati from European settlers to African Americans and the impact of transportation improvements such Eric Triantafillou as the Miami & Erie Canal, Cincinnati Union Terminal and Interstate I-75. Graphic Designer John Mitchell, Map of the British and French Dominions in North America (London, 1755), pls. 2 and 6, in Cincinnati: The Queen City, Cincinnati Historical Society, 3rd ed., 1996.
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