Upper Arlington, Ohio

Upper Arlington, Ohio The Upper Arlington Municipal Services Center functions as the seat of town/city government as well as police command posts The Upper Arlington Municipal Services Center functions as the seat of town/city government as well as police command posts Location of Upper Arlington inside Franklin County Location of Upper Arlington inside Franklin County Location of Upper Arlington inside Ohio Location of Upper Arlington inside Ohio Upper Arlington is an well-to-do suburban town/city in Franklin County, Ohio, United States, on the northwest side of the Columbus urbane area.

Upper Arlington is positioned at 40 1 14 N 83 3 59 W (40.020613, -83.066520). It is bordered on the west by the Scioto River, on the north and east by Columbus, and on the south by Marble Cliff and Grandview Heights.

The Olentangy River and the chief campus of the Ohio State University are a short distance to the east of Upper Arlington.

Downtown Columbus lies to the southeast, its horizon visible athwart the OSU farmland research facilities extending along Upper Arlington's easterly border.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 9.87 square miles (25.56 km2), of which 9.84 square miles (25.49 km2) is territory and 0.03 square miles (0.08 km2) is water. Upper Arlington was established by the real estate developers Ben and King Thompson, who purchased most of the farmland that was to turn into Upper Arlington in 1913. This territory was directly adjoining to the Marble Cliff Quarry Co.

They originally wanted to call it the "Country Club District" after the Country Club evolution in Kansas City, but by 1917, the improve became known as "Upper Arlington", in reference to its southern neighbor of Arlington (now known as Marble Cliff).

The Upper Arlington Company was incorporated that year and directed out of a field office assembled on the former Miller farm; that building is presently the Miller Park branch of the Upper Arlington Library (see no.

This evolution style gave the earliest precinct in Upper Arlington (at its southernmost end) its distinct ively pleasant, park-like feel, though the lack of roadway predictability can lead to some frustrating driving experiences even for those familiar with the neighborhood.

One of the many historic homes in the Upper Arlington Historic District Development resumed shortly afterwards, and on March 20, 1918, Upper Arlington incorporated as a village, with a populace of 200 and James Miller, the initial landowner, serving as the first mayor.

The Mallway company district, which was constructed in the 1920s, was the first commercial precinct in Upper Arlington.

Upper Arlington became a town/city on February 8, 1941, and took in surrounding territory as its populace grew.

As was typical in many developing northern communities of the time, the Thompsons encompassed restrictive covenants in their housing deeds that inhibited African-Americans from purchasing homes in Upper Arlington (though the deeds did allow "colored servants" to be domiciled inside owners' homes).

The southern half of the city, designated as the "Upper Arlington Historic District" (though simply referred to as "Old Arlington"), was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.

The town/city is sister metros/cities with St.

Materials related to Upper Arlington's history and culture can be viewed online at the UA Archives small-town history website. The site is part of the UA Archives program, the Upper Arlington Public Library's digital library initiative, which works with the Upper Arlington Historical Society, City of Upper Arlington, Upper Arlington School District, and other improve groups to digitize, preserve, and furnish no-charge online access to historically and culturally momentous materials related to Upper Arlington, to preserve Upper Arlington's history as well as the Upper Arlington Historic District's listing on the National Register of Historic Places. In the town/city the populace was spread out with 24.9% under the age of 18, 4.4% from 18 to 24, 25.1% from 25 to 44, 27.1% from 45 to 64, and 18.6% who were 65 years of age or older.

One notable feature of the Upper Arlington demographic is a "bottleneck" populace pyramid, with large numbers of kids (under 18), several young grownups, and more older grownups.

This populace bottleneck can be explained by young inhabitants moving outside the town/city upon adulthood and families with kids moving to the town/city at a mostly late age.

Another feature of the Upper Arlington demographic is the overwhelming white majority and the relative lack of other groups except Asians, whose populace proportion is similar to the nationwide average and above the Ohio average.

In general, Upper Arlington has above average rates of home ownership and mostly several unoccupied homes.

The building, which terminates the mallway at the center of the Historic District, was designed by Ohio Stadium architect Howard Dwight Smith and served as the first permanent school in Upper Arlington upon its culmination in 1924.

The Upper Arlington City School District serves the entire municipality.

As of 2000, the Upper Arlington Board of Education was the city's biggest employer. There is one early childhood school titled Burbank, which was assembled as an elementary but was converted due to a less-than-expected number of students.

There is only one high school in the Upper Arlington School District titled Upper Arlington High School.

There is also one private pre-K-12 school, the Wellington School, positioned in the city.

The high school sports squads are titled the Golden Bears, a nickname shared by golf pro and Upper Arlington High School alumnus Jack Nicklaus.

Upper Arlington has won 41 Ohio High School Athletic Association team state championships, the most in state history.

The Upper Arlington tennis squads have won a combined total of 42 team state titles, with an additional 9 single state champions and 21 doubles state champions.

The Upper Arlington golf team has won 17 state championships. The Upper Arlington football team captured the Division I state title in football in 2000, and were led by Jeff Backes, who earned the Mr.

Upper Arlington maintains its own police and fire departments.

The Upper Arlington Police Division is headquartered in the Municipal Service Center and has 49 officers.

Miller Park is positioned in the center of the old Miller Farm; Mallway Park is centered in the city's initial company precinct and contains the memorial to U.S.

Military veterans from Upper Arlington; and Wyandot Park bears the gravesite and contemporary monument to Bill Moose (1837 1937), cited as the "last of the Wyandots." The town/city also owns and operates three enhance swimming pools, positioned at Jones, Hastings, and Tremont schools.

Satellite image of Upper Arlington, Ohio, from the United States Geological Survey, taken April 7, 1994.

Borders are marked in black; the blue line marks the Scioto River, along which Riverside Drive, Upper Arlington's border follows.

Upper Arlington Municipal Services Center; 2.

Upper Arlington annually hosts a Fourth of July parade and fireworks display, thanks to the accomplishments of members of the Upper Arlington Civic Association.

The Upper Arlington Labor Day Arts Festival at Northam Park (see no.

Other affairs include the Chamber's Taste of UA festival, and amid the summer months Upper Arlington also hosts a program called "Movie in the Park" where movies are typically shown no-charge of charge in Upper Arlington's various parks.

The City's Cultural Arts Division hosts a summer Music in the Park series and showcases juried exhibitions featuring two- and three-dimensional art in the Concourse Gallery at the Municipal Services Center, 3600 Tremont Road.

Beverly D'Angelo (1951 ), actress and singer; a graduate of Upper Arlington High School Simon Fraser (1983 ), retired experienced football player; born in Upper Arlington Jack Nicklaus (1940 ), retired experienced golfer; born in Upper Arlington, and a graduate of Upper Arlington High School; interval up playing at Scioto Country Club Jim Tressel (1952 ), former head football coach of The Ohio State Buckeyes, President of Youngstown State University (2014-).

"UA Archives | Upper Arlington History".

"Ohio: Population and Housing Unit Counts" (PDF).

"Upper Arlington Diver Abby Johnston Juggles Olympics, Medical School".

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Upper Arlington, Ohio.

Upper Arlington Historical Society UA Archives - Explore the History of Upper Arlington Upper Arlington, Ohio at DMOZ Municipalities and communities of Franklin County, Ohio, United States Bexley Canal Winchester Columbus Dublin Gahanna Grandview Heights Grove City Groveport Hilliard New Albany Pickerington Reynoldsburg Upper Arlington Westerville Whitehall Worthington

Categories:
Upper Arlington, Ohio - Cities in Franklin County, Ohio - Populated places established in 1917 - 1917 establishments in Ohio