Mansfield, Ohio Mansfield, Ohio City of Mansfield Skyline of downtown Mansfield Skyline of downtown Mansfield Official seal of Mansfield, Ohio Location of Mansfield in Richland County and state of Ohio Location of Mansfield in Richland County and state of Ohio Carousel horse, downtown Mansfield.

Mansfield is a town/city in and the governmental center of county of Richland County, Ohio, United States. Located midway between Columbus and Cleveland via Interstate 71, it is part of Northeast Ohio and North-central Ohio regions in the foothills of the Allegheny Plateau, approximately 65 miles (105 km) northeast of Columbus, 65 miles (105 km) southwest of Cleveland and 91 miles (146 km) southeast of Toledo.

Greater Cleveland comprises Richland County and Mansfield Metropolitan Statistical Areas as part of the 18-county Northeast Ohio region, which is also part of the Cleveland-Akron, OH Combined Statistical Area.

The 2010 Enumeration showed that the town/city had a total populace of 47,821, making it Ohio's nineteenth biggest city.

According to the 2010 Census, the Mansfield, OH Metropolitan Travel Destination (MSA) has a populace of 124,475 residents, while the Mansfield-Ashland-Bucyrus, OH Combined Travel Destination (CSA) has 221,398 residents. Mansfield's official nickname is "The Fun Center of Ohio".

It is the biggest city in the "Mid-Ohio" region of the state, the north-central region which is generally considered to extend from Marion, Delaware, Knox, Morrow, Crawford, Ashland and Richland counties in the south, to the Firelands region south of Sandusky in the north.

Mansfield is also known as the "Carousel Capital of Ohio," "Danger City," and "Racing Capital of Ohio". S'y - Velt in concert at The Brickyard, downtown Mansfield.

Anchored by the Richland Carousel District, downtown Mansfield is experiencing expansion in the arts and tourism in the last five years. Recent concert affairs in the downtown Brickyard venue have drawn crowds numbering over 5,000 citizens . Mansfield, in partnership with small-town and nationwide partners, has started to address blight and economic stagnation and downturn in the town/city center. The Carousel precinct recently welcomed its first craft brewer, The Phoenix Brewing Company, the first brewer in Mansfield since prohibition. The Renaissance Performing Arts Association at home in the historic Renaissance Theatre annually presents and produces Broadway-style productions, classical music, comedy, arts education programs, concerts, lectures, and family affairs to more than 50,000 citizens .

The Renaissance Performing Arts is home of The Mansfield Symphony, renown as one of the finest mid-size orchestras in the United States.Downtown is also home to two ballet companies, NEOS Ballet Theatre and Richland Academy Dance Ensemble who both perform and offer improve dance opportunities in downtown. Mid-Ohio Opera offers performances of full opera and lesser concerts for downtown residents. Larwell and Jacob Newman, and was platted in June 1808 as a settlement and was titled for Jared Mansfield, the United States, Colonel Surveyor General who directed its planning. Originally platted as a square, known today as the enhance square or Central Park. During that same year of its founding, a log cabin was assembled by Samuel Martin on lot 97 (where the H.L.

Reed building is now), making it the first and only home to be assembled in Mansfield in 1808. Samuel Martin was the first settler in Mansfield and assembled his cabin with the help of Jacob Brubaker.

James Cunningham moved into the cabin in the year of 1809. At that time, there were less than a dozen pioneer in Richland County while Ohio was still largely wilderness. Two blockhouses were erected on the enhance square amid the War of 1812 for protection against the North American colonies and its Indian allies. The block homes were erected in a single evening. Before the war ended, the first courthouse, and jail of Richland County was served in one of two blockhouses that were positioned on the enhance square until 1816. The blockhouse was later used as a school with Miss Eliza Wolf being its teacher. Mansfield was incorporated in 1828, and in 1857 Mansfield was chartered as a town/city with a populace ascertained to be 5,121. Between 1846 and 1863, the barns s came to the town/city with the Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark Railroad being the first barns to reach Mansfield in 1846, the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway in 1849, and the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad in 1863. In 1872 Mansfield became known for the historic Penny Guinness murder, in which an eight-year-old child was killed and left dead in her bed for a several days.

Mansfield's biggest employer was a cigar manufacturer, Hautzenroeder & Company, with 285 employees in 1888. View of downtown Mansfield in 1908, looking south on North Main Street from Third Street.

By 1908, the blockhouse became a motif of Mansfield's tradition amid its 100th birthday celebration, and in 1929, the blockhouse was relocated to its present locale at South Park. In 1913, parts of Mansfield were flooded when the Great Flood of 1913 brought 3 to 8 inches (76 to 203 mm) of rainfall athwart Ohio between March 23 and March 24. The first road athwart America, the Lincoln Highway came to the town/city in 1913, smoothing the path for economic growth. In 1924, Oak Hill Cottage, a Gothic Revival brick home, assembled in 1847 by John Robinson, superintendent of the Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark Railroad was the setting of The Green Bay Tree, Mansfield native Louis Bromfield's first novel. Like many metros/cities in the Rust Belt, the 1970s and 1980s brought urban blight, and loses of momentous homehold name blue-collar manufacturing jobs. In recent years, Mansfield's downtown, which once underscored the community's economic difficulties, has seen innovative revitalization through the establishment of Main Street Mansfield (known today as Downtown Mansfield, Inc.), is a site of new company growth. In 1993, Lydia Reid was sworn in as the city's first female mayor and became the longest-serving mayor of Mansfield encompassing three four-year terms. On November 6, 2007, the citizens of Mansfield propel Donald Culliver as the city's first black mayor who was preceded by Lydia Reid. In December 2009, the town/city was placed on fiscal watch by the state auditor citing substantial deficit balances in structural operating general funds. On August 19, 2010, Mansfield would turn into Ohio's biggest city to be declared in fiscal emergency with a deficit of $3.8 million after town/city officials floundered to pass measures on cost-savings and cut spending, blaming it on the Great Recession. The city's financial crisis lasted nearly four years before being lifted out of fiscal emergency on July 9, 2014. Mansfield is positioned at 40 45 17 N 82 31 22 W (40.754856, 82.522855), directly between Columbus and Cleveland, however, the town/city lies in the foothills of the Allegheny Plateau, and its altitude is among the highest of Ohio cities.

The highest point in the town/city 1,493 feet (455 m) above sea level is positioned at the Woodland Reservoir, an underground water storage (service reservoir) along Woodland Road in southwest Mansfield.

The altitude in downtown Mansfield, which is positioned at Central Park is 1,240 feet (378 m) above sea level, and at Mansfield Lahm Airport, the altitude is 1,293 feet (394 m) above sea level. The highest point in Richland County, second highest point in Ohio (after Campbell Hill) is between 1,510 feet (460 m) and 1,520 feet (463 m) above sea level is positioned southwest of the city, just off Lexington-Ontario Road at Apple Hill Orchards in Springfield Township. Mansfield is bordered by Madison Township to the east, northwest and southwest, Franklin Township to the north, Weller Township to the northeast, Washington Township to the south, Troy Township to the southwest, Springfield Township and the suburban town/city of Ontario to the west.

January is the coldest month with an average mean temperature of 25.5 F ( 4 C), with temperatures dropping to or below 0 F ( 18 C) 5.3 days per year on average. Snowfall is lighter than in the snowbelt areas to the northeast, but is still somewhat influenced by Lake Erie, positioned 38 miles (61 km) north of the city.

Flooding can also occur from time to time such as the 2007 Midwest flooding that took place in the region on August 20 21, 2007 when Mansfield received 6.24 inches (158 mm) of precipitation in 24 hours. Monthly rain has ranged from 13.23 in (336 mm) in July 1992 to 0.25 in (6.4 mm) in December 1955, while for annual rain the historical range is 67.22 in (1,707 mm) in 1990 to 21.81 in (554 mm) in 1963. The all-time record high temperature in Mansfield of 105 F (41 C) was established on July 21, 1934, which occurred amid the Dust Bowl drought of the 1930s, and the all-time record low temperature of 22 F ( 30 C) was set on January 19, 1994, and January 20, 1985. The first and last freezes of the season on average fall on October 17 and April 27, in the order given, allowing a burgeoning season of 172 days. The normal annual mean temperature is 49.5 F (9.7 C). Normal annual rain based on the 30-year average from 1981 to 2010 is 44.19 inches (1,122 mm), falling on an average 150 days. Climate data for Mansfield, Ohio (Mansfield Lahm Airport), 1981 2010 normals, extremes 1899 present Other languages that were spoken throughout the town/city include Chinese at 0.21%, Italian at 0.17%, Japanese at 0.11%, and Greek at 0.10% of the population. Mansfield also has a small percentage of inhabitants who speak first languages other than English at home (4.02%). Mansfield Municipal Building Mansfield has a mayor-council government.

Mansfield town/city council is an eight-member legislative group that serve four-year terms.

Six of the members represent specific wards; two are propel citywide as at-large council members. Democrat Phillip Scott has been Mansfield's council president since November 2007. While Mansfield and Richland County have historically supported the Republican Party for decades, other parts of Ohio like Cleveland and parts of Northeast Ohio have historically supported the Democratic Party. During the 2008 Presidential election, although Barack Obama carried Ohio, John Mc - Cain carried Richland County. Mansfield is presently represented in the U.S.

The City of Mansfield is policed by a Municipal Police Department, the Mansfield Division of Police. According to the FBI statistics released in 2012, Mansfield has a violent crime rate far below the nationwide average, with only one homicide reported in the town/city that year.

Top Employers based in Mansfield, Ohio 8 Mansfield Board of Education 700 10 Mansfield Correctional Institution (MANCI) 621 11 City of Mansfield 575 Mansfield's greatest reconstructionof industrialized evolution was led by the city's home appliances and stove manufacturing industries, including Westinghouse Electric Corporation and the Tappan Stove Company. By the late 1920s, Westinghouse had turn into the city's biggest employer, with over 8000 employees, specializing in electric lighting, industrialized heating and engineering, and home appliances. AK Steel Mansfield Works manufacturing facility However, like many metros/cities in the rust belt, Mansfield saw a large diminish in its manufacturing and retail sectors.

Mansfield Tire & Rubber Company, Ohio Brass Company, Westinghouse, Tappan and many other manufacturing plants were either bought-out, relocated or closed, leaving only the AK Steel plant in Mansfield as the last remaining heavy trade employers.

The AK Steel Mansfield Works manufacturing facility, formerly Armco Steel, was the locale of a violent 3-year United Steelworkers Union lock-out and strike from 1999 to 2002. On June 1, 2009, General Motors filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and announced that its Ontario stamping plant (Mansfield-Ontario Metal Center) would close in June 2010. With the loss of the jobs, locally owned businesses in downtown Mansfield closed, as did much of the retail assembled in the 1960s along Park Avenue West (formerly known as "The Miracle Mile") and Lexington Avenue.

New big-box retail, shopping strips and charter restaurants have been assembled in the adjoining suburban town/city of Ontario, which has replaced Mansfield as the retail core for Richland County and north-central Ohio.

Remaining manufacturers in Mansfield include steel manufacturer AK Steel, Honda supplier Newman Technology Incorporated, generator manufacturer Hyundai Ideal Electric Company, thermostats manufacturer Therm-O-Disc, pumps manufacturer The Gorman-Rupp Company, plumbing manufacturer Crane Plumbing, paper merchant converting center and warehouse Sabin Robbins Converting Company, carousel manufacturer The Carousel Works, company process outsourcing business Star - Tek, educational products supplier School Specialty Inc.

Has a distribution center in Mansfield, and Mansfield Engineered Components, a designer and manufacturer of motion control components for the appliance, transportation, medical casegoods and general industrialized markets.

Mansfield's healthcare trade includes Med - Central Health System, the city's biggest employer and the biggest in Richland County. The hospital is the city's major provider of community care and serves as the primary county-wide trauma center for north-central Ohio. Mansfield is also home of three well-known food companies.

From the 1950s through the 1970s, Mansfield was the home of the continuing Highway Safety Foundation, the organization that created the controversial driver's education scare films that featured gruesome film photography taken at fatal automobile accidents in the Mansfield area. The films include Signal 30 (1959), Mechanized Death (1961), Wheels of Tragedy (1963), and Highways of Agony (1969).

In 1962, The Highway Safety Foundation loaned camera equipment to the Mansfield Police Department to film the escapades of some of the city's homosexual men, who met for sexual relations in an underground enhance restroom on the north side of Central Park.

The resulting footage, combined with overdubbed audio commentary by officials of the Mansfield Police Department, was eventually compiled by HSF as the 1964 film Camera Surveillance.

Jones of Massillon, Ohio, obtained copies of the initial footage shot by the Mansfield Police Department.

Mansfield has also been used as a locale for a several big-budget Hollywood movies; among the most notable of these were The Shawshank Redemption, Air Force One, and Tango & Cash, all of which featured the Ohio State Reformatory as a backdrop in pivotal scenes.

Simon (1908 1992), an American character actor who appeared in film and on tv from 1950 to 1985, was born in Mansfield.

The Mansfield/Mehock Relays, an annual two-day invitational track and field meet for high school boys and girls, held in April since 1927 (except for Second World War years), began on the initiative of Harry Mehock, track coach at host Mansfield Senior High School.

The Miss Ohio Pageant (Miss America preliminary), hosted by Mansfield since 1975, is staged annually at The Renaissance. The Richland County Fair is also held in Mansfield, at the Richland County Fairgrounds. The fair is held in the beginning of August.

The fair started on October 26, 1849. In 1872 and 1873, Mansfield also hosted the Ohio State Fair. At the fair there are a several rides, livestock judging.

They are hosted by The Ohio State University Mansfield in the John and Pearl Conard Performance Hall.

Oak Hill Cottage, Mansfield, Ohio: Carpenter Gothic trim on a brick home in the manner of A.J.

Mansfield is home to the old Ohio State Reformatory, constructed between 1886 and 1910 to resemble a German castle.

The reformatory is positioned north of downtown Mansfield on Ohio 545, and has been the locale for many primary films, including The Shawshank Redemption, Harry and Walter Go to New York, Air Force One and Tango & Cash.

Most of the prison yard has now been completed to make room for expansion of the adjoining Mansfield Correctional Institution and Richland Correctional Institution, but the Reformatory's Gothic-style Administration Building remains standing and due to its prominent use in films, has turn into a tourist attraction.

Many citizens visit Mansfield to take part in the haunted tour, some from as far as Michigan and Indiana. Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Building, established in 1889 homes the Mansfield Memorial Museum.

Located in the heart of downtown, the Mansfield Memorial Museum, assembled in 1887, and opened to the enhance in 1889 as the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall, is a exhibition of many different exhibits. Oak Hill Cottage, positioned amongst the ruins of Mansfield's once mighty industrialized district, is a Gothic Revival brick home, assembled in 1847.

One of the most perfect Carpenter Gothic homes in the United States, it is directed by the Richland County Historical Society. Located in the Woodland neighborhood, the Mansfield Art Center, opened in 1945, is a visual arts organization. The Living Bible Museum (aka "Bible - Walk") opened in 1987, is Ohio's only life-size wax exhibition. The Bissman Building, assembled in 1886, is now open for tours from March to November.

Mansfield has 33 parks ranging in size from the 1/2 acre Betzstone Park to the 35-acre (140,000 m2) South Park. There are also a several enhance golf courses in and around the city.

Located in downtown Mansfield's Historic Carrousel District is the Richland Carrousel Park, opened in 1991.

Southwest of Mansfield near Lexington is the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, a road course auto racing facility which hosts AMA Motorcycle Racing and Indy Car racing.

Malabar Farm State Park, positioned southeast of the city, is the former home and farm of Mansfield native and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Louis Bromfield.

The Richland B & O Bike Trail, opened in 1995 and directed by the Richland County Park District, is a paved 18.3-mile (29.5 km) hiking and bicycle trail laid out on the abandoned Baltimore & Ohio rail branch line from Butler via Bellville and Lexington to North Lake Park in Mansfield.

The Renaissance, assembled in 1927 and opened in 1928 as the Ohio Theatre, is a historic 1,402 seat movie palace theatre positioned in downtown Mansfield that presents and produces a range of arts and cultural performances, and is also the home of The Mansfield Symphony. Mid-Ohio Opera is an opera manufacturing company based in downtown Mansfield, Ohio.

The downtown region is the home of the Mansfield Playhouse, Ohio's second earliest, and one of its most successful, improve theatres. In 2012 Mansfield jubilated the 75th anniversary of Safety Town, a no-charge program advanced in Mansfield for pre-kindergarten kids about pedestrian safety.

The Mansfield News Journal's editorial command posts in downtown Mansfield.

Mansfield is served electronically by Richland Source, a strictly digital newspaper.

Mansfield is served in print by the Mansfield News Journal, the city's only daily newspaper. A defunct journal is the Mansfield Shield.

It ran from 1892 to 1912 as the Mansfield Daily Shield, and from 1912 to 1913 as the Mansfield Shield. Mansfield is part of the greater Cleveland radio and tv media markets.

Mansfield's first AM-radio station (1926) was WLGV (later WJW Mansfield).

The Mansfield studio and transmitter were on the ninth floor of the Richland Trust Building.

Among Mansfield's current airways broadcasts are locally owned Mid-State Multimedia properties of WVNO-FM (106.1) and ESPN Radio WRGM (AM 1440 / 97.3 - FM), also heard in the market WOSV (91.7 - FM) NPR News and classical music station, WVMC (90.7 - FM) Mansfield Christian music station, WYHT (105.3 - FM) pop/rock, WVNO-FM 106.1 adult contemporary, and WMAN (1400 AM) / (98.3 FM), a news/talk airways broadcast.

Mansfield's small-town tv station is WMFD-TV, part of Mid-State Multimedia Group, the first autonomous digital station in America. Among the station's more prominent programs is four hours of News - Watch HD now in high-definition tv at 5,6,10 and 11pm, small-town high school football and basketball and extensive small-town programming.

Mansfield Public Schools enroll 4,591 students in enhance major and secondary grades. The precinct has 9 enhance schools including one Spanish immersion school, four elementary schools, one intermediate school, one middle school, one high school, and one alternative school.

Peter's Elementary School and two Christian schools, Mansfield Christian School and Temple Christian School.

The Madison Local School District serves easterly parts of Mansfield, neighboring Madison Township, most of Mifflin Township, and parts of Washington Township. Mansfield is home to three establishments of higher learning.

The Ohio State University has a county-wide ground at Mansfield, North Central State College, a improve college that shares the Mansfield Campus with OSU, and Ashland University's Dwight Schar College of Nursing & Health Sciences, a newly constructed 46,000-square-foot academic and nursing building that opened for classes on August 20, 2012, is a private institution of higher education, positioned on the University's Balgreen Campus at Trimble Road and Marion Avenue in Mansfield, offering programs of study dominant to the baccalaureate degree in nursing. Mansfield/Richland County Public Library, the chief branch in downtown Mansfield.

The Mansfield/Richland County Public Library (M/RCPL) has been serving inhabitants of north-central Ohio since 1887. The fitness has nine chapters throughout Richland County including the chief library in downtown Mansfield and locations in Bellville, Butler, Crestview, Lexington, Lucas, Madison Township, Ontario, and Plymouth.

Three barns s previously served Mansfield, but presently only two, the Norfolk Southern and the Ashland Railway, furnish service in the area.

The Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark Railroad opened in 1846 and became part of the Washington-Chicago chief line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) and then later part of a B&O branch line from Newark to Sandusky.

In 1849 the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway (later Pennsylvania Railroad mainline) reached Mansfield, and in 1863 the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad (later Erie Railroad mainline) reached Mansfield.

After the B&O branch line was abandoned, the 18.3-mile (29.5 km) section from Butler to North Lake Park in Mansfield was opened in 1995 as the recreational Richland B&O Trail. The former B&O track from Mansfield to Willard combined with a piece of the abandoned Erie Railroad east of Mansfield to West Salem to form the L-shaped 56.5-mile (90.9 km) Ashland Railway (1986).

Mansfield is positioned on a primary east-west highway corridor that was originally known in the early 1900s as "Ohio Market Route 3".

The arrival of the Lincoln Highway to Mansfield was a primary influence on the evolution of the city.

Upon the advent of the federal numbered highway fitness in 1928, the Lincoln Highway through Mansfield on Park Avenue East and Park Avenue West became U.S.

The celebration's easterly transcontinental tour group visited Mansfield for an overnight stay on June 25 at the Holiday Inn on Park Avenue West, the highway's route through the city.

Mansfield is well connected to the Interstate Highway System.

Three highway exits from Interstate 71 connect travelers to Mansfield from Louisville, Kentucky, Cincinnati, Ohio, Columbus, Ohio and points southwest, and from Cleveland, Ohio and points northeast.

Freeway) westbound approaching the Ohio 13 (Main Street) exit in Mansfield One limited-access highway serves Mansfield.

Route 30 that connect travelers to Mansfield from Portland, Oregon, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Fort Wayne, Indiana and points west, and from Atlantic City, New Jersey, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Canton, Ohio and points east.

Two divided highways serve Mansfield.

Ohio 309, which joins travelers from the primary shopping region of the suburban town/city of Ontario and points west, and continues east into Mansfield before it merges into U.S.

Ohio 13 turns into a four-lane divided highway at South Main Street and Chilton Avenue and runs 3.5 miles (5.6 km) to Interstate 71 (full-access interchange) and runs another 3.7 miles (6.0 km) and turns back into a two-lane highway just 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Bellville.

Route 42 downtown (Park Avenue East, Hedges Street, East 1st Street and South Main Street), Ohio 13 (North Main Street and South Main Street), North Ohio 13 downtown (East 2nd Street, South Diamond Street and North Diamond Street), South Ohio 13 downtown (West 5th Street, North Mulberry Street, South Mulberry Street and West 1st Street), Ohio 39 (Springmill Street, North Mulberry Street, West 5th Street, East 5th Street, Park Avenue East and Lucas Road), Ohio 430 (Park Avenue East and Park Avenue West), and Ohio 545 (Wayne Street and Olivesburg Road). The RCT bus line operates 14 fixed routes inside the metros/cities of Mansfield and Ontario along with fixed routes extending into the town/city of Shelby and Madison Township. Mansfield Checker Cab operates small-town and county-wide taxi service 24 hours a day, seven days a week. C & D Taxi also operates small-town and county-wide taxi service (Richland and Ashland Counties) seven days a week.

Mansfield Lahm Regional Airport (IATA: MFD, IACO: KMFD, FAA LID: MFD), a city-owned and directed , joint usage facility with global ties, positioned 3 miles (4.8 km) north of downtown Mansfield. The Mansfield Lahm Air National Guard Base and the 179th Airlift Wing of the Ohio Air National Guard is positioned at the airport.

In 1962, the Mansfield Police Department conducted a sting operation in which they covertly filmed men having sex in the enhance restroom underneath Central Park.

The Shawshank Redemption, which was filmed in and around Mansfield Mansfield has sister town/city relationships with: United Kingdom Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, England, United Kingdom List of citizens from Mansfield, Ohio "In the Heartland: An Ohio Road Trip by RV, Part II by Harry Basch & Shirley Slater".

"Historic Carrousel District, Mansfield, Ohio".

"Carrousel gives Mansfield's downtown precinct another ride".

Mansfield News Journal.

"Mansfield, Ohio PR Project Path to Revitalization" Brownfield Initiative A National Model" (PDF).

"New batons to lead Mansfield Symphony, Chorus".

"Creating Mansfield: The man behind Mid-Ohio Opera".

Mansfield News Journal.

Mansfield News Journal.

The Mansfield Savings Bank.

Jared Mansfield (1759 1830).

Welcome to The City of Mansfield, Ohio.

History of Richland County 1807 1880.Compiled by A.A.

"History of Richland County by A.J.

Mansfield News.

"Mansfield's Railroads".

Mansfield Weekly News.

"Mansfield, Ohio".

"Mansfield, Ohio: The Flood of 1913".

"Mansfield, Ohio "PR Project-Path to Revitalization" Brownfield Initiative A National Model" (PDF).

Downtown Mansfield Inc.

Culliver Mayor, City of Mansfield, Ohio" (PDF).

City of Mansfield.

"Mansfield, like Massillon, faces 'fiscal emergency'".

"Mansfield Ohio out of fiscal emergency" (PDF).

City of Mansfield, Ohio.

"Mansfield Lahm Regional Airport".

"Top 10 Records for Mansfield, Ohio" (PDF).

"Station Name: OH MANSFIELD LAHM MUNI AP".

"WMO Climate Normals for MANSFIELD WSO AP, OH, OH 1961 1990".

Mansfield, Ohio Fact Sheet.

"Data Center Results - Mansfield, Ohio".

Welcome to The City of Mansfield, Ohio.

Welcome to The City of Mansfield, Ohio.

Mansfield Division of Police.

"Mansfield Crime Statistics: 2012".

"Mansfield crime rates and statistics".

Ohio History Central Online Encyclopedia.

"Ohio Brass Co.".

Ohio Brass business "COMPANY NEWS; AK STEEL ENDS 3-YEAR LOCKOUT OF WORKERS AT OHIO PLANT".

"Two Ohio cities, Parma and Ontario, react to news from General Motors".

Mansfield Engineered Components.

"About The Mansfield Art Center".

Mansfield Art Center.

Welcome to The City of Mansfield, Ohio.

"Map of Mansfield, OH".

"Mid Ohio Opera".

"History of the Mansfield Playhouse".

Mansfield Playhouse.

"richlandsource.com | Independent small-town news from Mansfield Ohio and encircling communities in Richland and Crawford Counties.

"Mansfield News Journal".

Mansfield News Journal.

"Mansfield Daily Shield".

"Mansfield City School District Profile".

The Ohio State University Mansfield.

"Mansfield Checker Cab homepage".

Welcome to The City of Mansfield, Ohio.

"Sister Cities of Mansfield, Ohio, USA".

Sister Cities Association of Mansfield, England.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mansfield, Ohio.

Downtown Mansfield, Inc Mansfield travel guide from Wikivoyage Municipalities and communities of Richland County, Ohio, United States

Categories:
Mansfield, Ohio - Populated places established in 1808 - County seats in Ohio - Cities in Richland County, Ohio - English-American culture in Ohio - 1808 establishments in Ohio