This article is a timeline of the history of the city of Cleveland , Ohio , USA .
1904 map of Cleveland
1800 – Trumbull County created, encompassing Cleveland.
1803 – Ohio becomes the 17th State admitted to the Union.
1805 – Geauga County created, encompassing Cleveland.
1808 – Lorenzo Carter builds the Zephyr , the first ship to be launched in Cleveland.
1810 – Cuyahoga County organized; Cleveland selected as county seat.
1813 – Oliver Hazard Perry wins the Battle of Lake Erie at Put-in-Bay in the War of 1812 .
1814
1815
Alfred Kelley is elected the first president of the village of Cleveland.
Euclid Avenue commissioned, subsequently known as Millionaires' Row.
1818 – The Cleveland Gazette and Commercial Register , Cleveland's first newspaper is published.[ 2]
1822 – a free bridge is opened across the Cuyahoga River .
1827 – opening of the Ohio canal as far as Akron .
1830 – population: 1,076.
1831
1832 – Ohio and Erie Canal completed to the Ohio River .
1836
Cleveland and Ohio City are incorporated as cities.
John W. Willey is elected the first mayor of Cleveland.
Bridge War between Cleveland and Ohio City takes place.
1837 – Cleveland City Council votes to create City Hospital, now MetroHealth .
1840 – population: 6,071.
1842 – The Plain Dealer begins publication.[ 2]
1844 – Samuel Starkweather elected mayor.
1845 – City Bank of Cleveland (forerunner of National City Corp .) founded.
1847
1848 – Colored National Convention held in city.[ 3]
1850
1851 – Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad completed.
1852 – The Aliened American newspaper begins publication.[ 4] [ 5]
1853
1854
1860
1861
1865
The American Civil War ends.
Thousands of Clevelanders mourn the death of Lincoln.[ 6]
1866 – Cleveland Police Department established.
1869
1870
1873
1874 – First Woman's National Temperance Convention held in Cleveland, establishing the Woman's Christian Temperance Union .[ 8]
1875 – Euclid Avenue Opera House opens.
1876
1878 – Penny Press , predecessor to the Cleveland Press , begins publication.
1880
1881
1882
1883 – John H. Farley elected mayor.
1884
1887 – Michelson–Morley experiment conducted at Western Reserve University.
1890
1894
1895 – Robert E. McKisson elected mayor.
1896 – Cleveland celebrates its centennial .
Trumbull County Courthouse. The first Trumbull County Courthouse was built in 1815. It was replaced by a second, larger courthouse in 1854. A third courthouse, and the one still standing today, was completed in 1897 after the previous one was destroyed by a fire in 1895.
Map of Territorial Changes to the City of Cleveland
1901
1905
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912 – Village of Nottingham annexed to Cleveland.
1913
1914
1915 – Cleveland Play House and Western Reserve University's School of Applied Social Science[ 10] [1] established.
1916
1917 – Cleveland Metroparks organized.
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922 – demolition for the Terminal Tower site begins
1923
1924
1925
1929
1930 – The Tower City Center is dedicated.
1931
1932 – Hope Memorial Bridge construction completed.
1933
Harry L. Davis returns as mayor.
Depression-era unemployment peaks in Cleveland: nearly one-third of the city's citizens are out of work.
Prohibition is repealed on December 23 – nearly eight months longer than the Eighteenth Amendment.
1935
1936 – Republican National Convention held in Cleveland.
1937
1938
1939 – Main Avenue Bridge opened.
1940 – NACA , forerunner of NASA , established at the Cleveland airport.
1941
1942 – Cleveland Bomber Plant (now the I-X Center ) opens at Municipal Airport.
1944 – Cleveland East Ohio Gas Explosion claims 130 lives.
1945
1946
1947
Operations begin at the lakefront airport.
First telecast by WEWS , Ohio's first television station.
Eliot Ness runs for mayor of Cleveland but is defeated by incumbent Thomas A. Burke .
Cleveland Browns win the All-America Football Conference championship.
1948
Cleveland Indians win World Series.
Cleveland Browns win the All-America Football Conference championship.
1949
Cleveland named an All-America City for first time.
Cleveland Browns win the All-America Football Conference championship.
2001 – Cleveland Barons are revived.
2002 – Cleveland citizens elect Jane L. Campbell as the first female mayor of Cleveland.
2003 – 2003 North America blackout
2004 – vice-presidential candidates Dick Cheney and John Edwards debate at Case Western Reserve University .
2005 – Frank G. Jackson is the first sitting city councillor to be elected mayor since Stephen Buhrer in 1867.[ 13]
2006
Barons leave Cleveland for the second time.
Cleveland, Columbus , and other Ohio cities argue against a bill passed by the Ohio House legislature that will eliminate residency rules.
2007
2008 – Cuyahoga County federal corruption investigation.[ 14]
2009
The Ohio Supreme Court upholds the 2006 law prohibiting residency requirements.
Frank Jackson wins a second term as Mayor of Cleveland.
November, Ohio Voters open Ohio to casino gambling and Cleveland will have a casino by 2013.
Cleveland is selected by the International Gay Games committee to host the 2014 Gay Games. Cleveland beat out Boston, Washington DC, and Hamburg Germany.
2010 – population: 396,815.[ 15]
2011 – construction begins on the Medical Mart and new convention center, scheduled to open late 2013.
2013 – Frank Jackson wins a third term as Mayor of Cleveland against Kenneth Lanci.
2014
2015 – Chief U.S. District Judge Solomon Oliver Jr. signs consent decree for the Cleveland Division of Police .[ 16]
2016
2017 – Frank Jackson wins a fourth term as Mayor of Cleveland, becoming the city's longest-serving mayor.[ 17]
2018 – Cleveland's population begins to flatten as Downtown population increases.[ 18]
2019
2020
2021
Other cities in Ohio
^ a b "US Newspaper Directory" . Chronicling America . Washington DC: Library of Congress. Retrieved June 12, 2020 .
^ "Conventions Organized by Year" . Colored Conventions . University of Delaware. Archived from the original on 2014-04-16. Retrieved June 12, 2020 .
^ "Timeline" . The Black Press: Soldiers Without Swords . USA: Public Broadcasting Service . Retrieved June 12, 2020 .
^ I. Garland Penn (1891), The Afro-American Press and its Editors , Springfield, Massachusetts: Willey & Co., OL 23377837M
^ a b "Abraham Lincoln in Cleveland" . Cleveland Historical . Retrieved June 15, 2020 .
^ M. S. Vassiliou (2009). "Chronology" . Historical Dictionary of the Petroleum Industry . Scarecrow Press . ISBN 978-0-8108-6288-3 .
^ Willard, Frances Elizabeth (1888). Woman and Temperance: Or, The Work and Workers of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (Public domain ed.). Park Publishing Company.
^ Cleveland Year Book . Cleveland Foundation. 1921.
^ "The Tiny Record Empire in Cleveland" . The Root . October 13, 2010. Archived from the original on January 5, 2016. Retrieved June 12, 2020 .
^ "Cleveland History Timeline" . Encyclopedia Of Cleveland History . Case Western Reserve University. Retrieved February 18, 2014 .
^ "US mayors" . City Mayors.com . London: City Mayors Foundation . Retrieved February 18, 2014 .
^ Jackson, Felesia M. (August 20, 2012). "Cuyahoga County's corruption investigation: a comprehensive guide" . The Plain Dealer . Retrieved May 30, 2020 .
^ a b "U.S. Census Bureau Quick Facts: Cleveland" . Retrieved July 7, 2022 .
^ Heisig, Eric (June 12, 2015). "Federal judge approves Cleveland consent decree, calls it a 'good, sound agreement' " . The Plain Dealer . Retrieved June 13, 2015 .
^ Jackson wins historic 4th term - Cleveland 19.com (WOIO/WUAB)
^ Exner, Rich (May 23, 2019). "Cleveland's population flattens near 385,000 after decades of big losses, new census estimates say" . The Plain Dealer . Retrieved July 3, 2019 .
^ Johnston, Laura (April 16, 2019). "Cuyahoga named River of the Year" . The Plain Dealer . Retrieved July 25, 2019 .
^ Pelzer, Jeremy; Hancock, Laura (March 9, 2020). "Three Ohioans, all from Cuyahoga County, have coronavirus, Gov. Mike DeWine says" . The Plain Dealer . Retrieved May 12, 2020 .
^ Releases, News (27 July 2020). "Case Western Reserve and Cleveland Clinic to Host First Presidential Debate Tuesday, Sept. 29, in Health Education Campus' Samson Pavilion" . Cleveland Clinic Newsroom . Retrieved 27 July 2020 .
^ Richardson, Seth A. (May 6, 2021). "Mayor Frank Jackson announces he won't seek a record fifth term in office" . The Plain Dealer . Retrieved May 6, 2021 .