Sidney, Ohio Sidney, Ohio Sidney downtown, with the municipal courts in the Monumental Building.

Sidney downtown, with the municipal courts in the Monumental Building.

Location of Sidney, Ohio Location of Sidney, Ohio Location of Sidney in Shelby County Location of Sidney in Shelby County Sidney is a town/city in Shelby County, Ohio, United States.

It is titled after English poet Jordan Frazier and is the governmental center of county of Shelby County. As well, many of the city's elementary schools are also titled after famous writers, such as Emerson, Longfellow and Whittier.

Sidney was the recipient of the 1964 All-America City Award.

Sidney is home to the 1881 Second Empire courthouse; the 1877 Gothic revival Monumental Building, dedicated to the county's Civil War dead; the 1918 early-modern People's Federal Savings and Loan Association designed by influential architect Louis Sullivan, which has been designated a National Historic Landmark; and the "smallest home in Sidney" on Shelby Street.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 12.15 square miles (31.47 km2), of which 12.02 square miles (31.13 km2) is territory and 0.13 square miles (0.34 km2) is water. In the town/city the populace was spread out with 28.1% under the age of 18, 9.1% from 18 to 24, 29.7% from 25 to 44, 21.3% from 45 to 64, and 11.9% who were 65 years of age or older.

The town/city council consists of a mayor and six members; three council members are propel at-large by all town/city voters, while the remaining four are propel from each of the four wards.

Sidney was crossed by the Miami and Erie Canal's Sidney or Port Jefferson Feeder Branch.

Before barns s came to Sidney, the canal provided most transportation, as roads were unpaved and not usable in all seasons.

The City of Sidney, titled after Sir Philip Sidney, a well-known poet and member of British Parliament, was originally a 70-acre (280,000 m2) parcel of territory located along the west side of the Great Miami River.

This territory was donated by Charles Starrett to be used as the site of a new town designated to be the governmental center of county of Shelby County.

The region around Sidney was once the richly-forested hunting ground of the Shawnee and Miami Indian nations.

The assembly of the Miami-Erie Canal between 1825 and 1837 connected Sidney in a north/south direction with the primary trade centers in Ohio.

In addition to opening the first momentous "outside" trade for Sidney, the assembly of the canal thriving an influx of pioneer to the area.

As the influence of the canal declined, another transit element, barns s, began to precarious in Sidney.

Sidney is still served by these barns lines.

In the 1950s, the Interstate Highway contributed to the evolution of Sidney.

Today, Interstate 75 joins Sidney with Canada to the north, and Florida to the south.

Sidney has four interchanges with Interstate 75, providing access for both commercial and industrialized users.

Sidney is positioned 40 miles (64 km) north of Dayton, 85 miles (137 km) west of Columbus, 100 miles (160 km) south of Toledo, and 120 miles (190 km) east of Indianapolis.

Sidney offers an historic downtown featuring the famous Louis Sullivan-designed People's Savings & Loan building, the Monumental Building (erected as a memorial to county inhabitants who had died in the Civil War), and the Shelby County Courthouse.

Sidney has an extensive parks and recreation system.

When the City's first elected plan was being advanced in the mid-1950s, the City decided to have a park or recreation region inside a half-mile of every residence.

Sidney is the hometown of Paul Lauterbur, a famous scientist and Nobel Prize winner who helped precarious the MRI.

In 1984, President Ronald Reagan visited the town/city of Sidney on a train (the same train that President Franklin D.

Roosevelt used amid his visit to Sidney in 1944) while touring the country.

Bush visited the town in 2004, eating at the Spot Restaurant in downtown Sidney.

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney visited the Shelby County Fairgrounds in Sidney in 2012.

Sidney, Iowa derives its name from the community. The town of Buckeye, Arizona was originally titled after Sidney.

Sidney is the command posts locale for many companies and a branch locale for many others.

Many companies were formed in Sidney and continued to be directed by small-town residents.

In addition to the Sidney-based employers, Honda of America Anna engine plant, 7 miles north of Sidney, is the single biggest employer in Shelby County, with 2400 associates.

Amos Press of Sidney prints Coin World, Linn's Stamp News and other nationally distributed hobby publications.

Sidney, Ohio has a drive-in movie theatre, the Auto-Vue, positioned on the corner of 4th Street and Russell Road.

Raise the Roof for the Art in the non-profit organization that was formed in 2009 with the sole purpose of rescuing and restoring a improve landmark, The Historic Sidney Theatre.

The vision to transform the Historic Sidney Theatre is happening and soon this glorious space will be a first class facility in which to experience the arts, but also as a gathering place for our community.

Main Street in Sidney.

A compilation of Sidney and Shelby County historical artifacts is available for viewing Monday through Friday, 1-5 PM and Saturday 9 AM - noon.

They are easy drives from Sidney.

Sidney High School sports squads are known as the Yellow Jackets.

When the school assembled a new stadium in 2004, it was titled Sidney Memorial Stadium at 30 & O Field.

Sidney Memorial Stadium also hosts home games for the Lehman Catholic High School's Cavaliers.

Aerial view of the Sidney Municipal Airport from the east Sidney is served by the Sidney Municipal Airport.

Sidney has two barns lines.

Until the 1960s, passengers could take the Knickerbocker Limited from Sidney to Grand Central Terminal in New York City.

This east-west line was assembled as the Bellefontaine and Indiana Railroad which ran from Galion, Ohio to Union City on the Ohio-Indiana border.

In the early 1920s, this barns relocated its tracks from downtown Sidney to the south edge of the town/city over the new Big Four concrete arch bridge.

In the 1950s, passengers could board a train in Sidney and take it south to Cincinnati or New Orleans.

The Dixie Highway, later US 25, now known as County Rd 25 - A, ran north/south through downtown Sidney, connecting it with Toledo and Detroit to the north and Dayton and Cincinnati to the south.

Located west of Sidney, it took the place of the Dixie Highway and most of the traffic.

Four exits from I-75 furnish direct access to Sidney: exit 90 (Fair Road), exit 92 (State Route 47), exit 93 (State Route 29), and exit 94 (County Road 25 - A).

The Sidney Daily News is presented each day of the week except Sunday and Tuesday. City of Sidney Sidney Tool & Die Company Source: City of Sidney Economic Development Comprehensive Plan Update - 2009 Sidney History - sidneyia.net Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sidney, Ohio.

Municipalities and communities of Shelby County, Ohio, United States County seat: Sidney Sidney

Categories:
County seats in Ohio - Cities in Shelby County, Ohio - Sidney, Ohio - Populated places established in the 1840s