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Dayton

 
US City Guide: Dayton Ohio
 
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Dayton, the seat of Ohio's Montgomery County, is the focus of a four-county metropolitan statistical area that includes Montgomery, Miami, Clark, and Greene counties and the cities of Kettering, Miamisburg, Xenia, Fairborn, Oakwood, and Vandalia. World-famous through the pioneering efforts of the Wright brothers, today Dayton is an aviation center and home of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, headquarters of the United States Air Force bomber program. Dayton, once vulnerable to severe flooding, was the site of the first comprehensive flood control project of its kind. Today the city is at the center of industrial and high-technology development, serving traditional and new markets.

The City in Brief

Founded: 1795 (incorporated, 1805)
Head Official: Mayor Rhine D. McLin (since 2002)
City Population
1980: 203,371
1990: 182,011
2000: 166,179
2003 estimate: 161,696
Percent change, 1990–2000: -8.7%
U.S. rank in 1980: 70th
U.S. rank in 1990: 89th
U.S. rank in 2000: 141st
Metropolitan Area Population
1980: 942,000
1990: 951,270
2000: 950,558
Percent change, 1990–2000: -0.1%
U.S. rank in 1980: 39th
U.S. rank in 1990: 51st
U.S. rank in 2000: 52nd
Area: 56.63 square miles (2000)
Elevation: 750 feet above sea level
Average Annual Temperature: 51.7° F
Average Annual Precipitation: 36.6 inches
Major Economic Sectors: Wholesale and retail trade, manufacturing, services, government, transportation
Unemployment Rate: 7.1% (March 2005)
Per Capita Income: $15, 547 (2000)
2002 FBI Crime Index Total: 15,932
Major Colleges and Universities: University of Dayton; Wright State University
Daily Newspaper:Dayton Daily News
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Dictionary: Day·ton   (dāt'n) pronunciation
 

A city of southwest Ohio north-northeast of Cincinnati. Now a manufacturing center, it was the home of Orville and Wilbur Wright. Population: 157,000.

 

 

City (pop., 2000: 166,179), southwestern Ohio, U.S. Settled on the Miami River in 1796 by a group of Revolutionary War veterans, it developed as a river port shipping agricultural produce. The 1829 opening of the Miami and Erie Canal between Dayton and Cincinnati and the 1851 arrival of the railroad stimulated its industrial growth. It was home to Wilbur and Orville Wright and is also their place of burial. The city is a market and distribution centre. It is the site of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (established 1946) and the Air Force Institute of Technology (1947). Home to several colleges and universities, it also has an art institute and a symphony orchestra.

For more information on Dayton, visit Britannica.com.

 
Dayton, city (1990 pop. 182,044), seat of Montgomery co., SW Ohio, on the Great Miami River where it is joined by the Stillwater River; inc. 1805. It is the trade center for a fertile farm area, but is best known for its involvement with industry, invention, and aviation. Its chief products are computers; machinery; metal, paper, and rubber products; and transportation equipment. Printing and publishing are also important. Dayton grew with the extension of canals (1830s and 40s) and railroads (1850s), and with the industrial demands of the Civil War. It was the first large city to adopt (1913) the city-manager form of government (see city government). It was the home of the Wright brothers, who after their pioneering 1903 flight set up a research operation. Much of their work is preserved in the Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park (see National Parks and Monuments, table). Also in the park is the home of their friend the poet Paul Laurence Dunbar. Dayton's life for decades before the 1990s was dominated by the National Cash Register company, which built many civic amenities. The city's institutions include Wright State Univ., the Univ. of Dayton, and a noted art institute. Nearby Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is a major employer.


 
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Maps: Dayton
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Wikipedia: Dayton, Ohio
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City of Dayton
City
none Downtown Dayton
Downtown Dayton
Flag
Motto : Birthplace of Aviation
Country United States
State Ohio
County Montgomery
Area 56.6 sq mi (147 km²)
 - land 55.7 sq mi (144 km²)
 - water 0.9 sq mi (2 km²), 2%
Center
 - coordinates 39°45′32″N 84°11′30″W / 39.75889°N 84.19167°W / 39.75889; -84.19167Coordinates: 39°45′32″N 84°11′30″W / 39.75889°N 84.19167°W / 39.75889; -84.19167
 - elevation 738 ft (225 m)
Highest point Woodland Cemetery[1]
 - coordinates 39°44′35″N 84°10′30″W / 39.74306°N 84.175°W / 39.74306; -84.175
Population 166,179 (2000)
 - metro 1,073,513
Density 2,852 /sq mi (1,101 /km²)
Government Council-Manager
Founded April 1, 1796
 - Incorporated 1805
Mayor Rhine L. McLin (D)
Time zone EST (UTC-5)
 - summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
Area code 937
Location of Dayton within Ohio
Location of Dayton within Ohio
Location of Ohio in the United States
Location of Ohio in the United States
Location of Dayton in Montgomery County, Ohio
Location of Dayton in Montgomery County, Ohio
Website : http://www.cityofdayton.org

Dayton is a city in and the county seat of Montgomery County, Ohio, United States,[2] in the southwestern part of the state. The population was 166,179 at the 2000 census. The Dayton Metropolitan Statistical Area, which includes Montgomery, Miami, Greene, and Preble counties, had an estimated population of 848,153 in the 2000 census. [3] Dayton is the fourth largest metropolitan area in Ohio and the 61st largest Metropolitan Area in the United States. The Dayton-Springfield-Greenville Combined Statistical Area had a population of 1,085,094 in 2000. Dayton is situated within the Miami Valley region of Ohio, just north of the Cincinnati metropolitan area.

Dayton plays host to significant industrial, aerospace, and technological/engineering research activity and is known for the many technical innovations and inventions developed there. Much of this innovation is due in part to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and its place within the community. With the decline of heavy manufacturing, Dayton's businesses have diversified into the service economy, including the insurance, legal, and healthcare sectors, though the city's population has continued to decline. Dayton is also noted for its association with aviation; the city is home to the National Museum of the United States Air Force. The city was the home of the signing of the Dayton Peace Accords, which brought an end to the war in Bosnia. Orville Wright, poet Paul Laurence Dunbar, and entrepreneur John H. Patterson were born in Dayton. Dayton is also known for it's many patents, inventions, and inventors that have come from the area,[4] most notable being the Wright Brother's invention of powered flight.[5]

Contents

History

Dayton in 1870

Dayton was founded on April 1, 1796 by a small group of US settlers seven years before the admission of Ohio to the Union in 1803. The town was incorporated in 1805 and given its name after Jonathan Dayton, a captain in the American Revolutionary War and signatory of the U.S. Constitution.

In 1797, Daniel C. Cooper laid out the Mad River Road, the first overland connection between Cincinnati, Ohio and Dayton. This opened up the "Mad River Country" at Dayton and the upper Miami Valley to settlement.

The Miami and Erie Canal, built in the 1830s, connected the Dayton commerce from Lake Erie via the Great Miami River and served as the principal route of transportation for western Ohio until the 1850s. With the completion of the Miami and Erie Canal in 1829, Dayton was linked to Cincinnati and the town continued to thrive. Nine turnpikes connected Dayton to other areas of the state. By the 1840s, Dayton was one of the largest and wealthiest communities in Ohio.[6] In the 1880s, John H. Patterson opened the National Cash Register Company in Dayton. In the twentieth century, Dayton continued to prosper. The city became known as the home of Wilbur and Orville Wright, the brothers who made the first successful flight in a powered aircraft.[7]

The catastrophic Great Dayton Flood of March 1913 severely affected much of the city, stimulated the growth of suburban communities outside central Dayton in areas lying further from the Miami River and on higher ground, and led to the establishment of the Miami Conservancy District in 1914. The flood remains an event of note in popular memory and local histories. The high waters damaged some of the Wright Brothers' glass plate photographic negatives of their glider flights at Kitty Hawk and power flights over Huffman Prairie near Dayton.

On November 29, 1964, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered a speech to more than 6,200 people at the UD Fieldhouse (now called Thomas J. Frericks Center) on the University of Dayton campus. A reel-to-reel recording of this speech was discovered at the University of Dayton. The audio recording was discovered in January 2009 by filmmaker David Schock of Grand Haven, Michigan. He found the unlabeled tape in a box of recordings.[8]

Patents and inventions

Dayton, Ohio, has been the site for many patents and inventions since the 1870s.[4][9] Famous inventors such as the Wright Brothers who invented the airplane and Charles F. Kettering who had numerous inventions also came from Dayton. According to the National Park Service who cited information from the U.S. Patent Office Dayton had more granted patents per capita than any other U.S. city in 1890 and ranked fifth in the nation as early as 1870.[10][11]

Involvement in World War II

During World War II Dayton, like many other American cities, was heavily involved in the war effort. Residential neighborhoods in Dayton and in nearby Oakwood hosted the Dayton Project, in which the Monsanto Company Chemical Company developed methods to industrially produce polonium for use in the triggers of early atomic bombs, including those dropped by the United States on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. Dayton benefited greatly from the growth of wartime industries during World War II and received approximately $1.7 billion in government defense contracts during the war. The city's economy has remained strong in the decades following the Second World War, despite a decline in many of its traditional industries.[12]

Dayton was also home to the National Cash Register Company whose employees built airplane engines, bomb sights and code-breaking machines, including the American bombe designed by Joseph Desch which helped crack the Enigma machine.

Peace accords

The Dayton Agreement, a peace accord between the parties to the hostilities of the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina and the former Yugoslavia, was negotiated in the Dayton area. Negotiations took place from November 1, 1995 to November 21, 1995 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Fairborn, Ohio.

Nicknames

Dayton's primary nickname is the "Gem City". The origin of the name is no longer clear; it appears to stem either from a well-known racehorse named "Gem" that hailed from Dayton, or from descriptions of the city likening it to a gem. The most likely origin appears to be an 1845 article in the Cincinnati Daily Chronicle newspaper, by an author writing with the byline "T", which reads

In a small bend of the Great Miami River, with canals on the east and south, it can be fairly said, without infringing on the rights of others, that Dayton is the gem of all our interior towns. It possesses wealth, refinement, enterprise, and a beautiful country, beautifully developed.[13]

Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872–1906) later acknowledged the nickname in his poem, "Toast to Dayton", which contains this stanza:

She shall ever claim our duty,
For she shines—the brightest gem
That has ever decked with beauty
Dear Ohio's diadem.
Historical Sacred Heart Church

Another explanation for the nickname "Gem", is from Dayton's sister city to the south, Cincinnati. Cincinnati is known as the "Queen City", and Dayton would be the "Gem" in the queen's crown.

The city was advertised as "The Gem City, the Cleanest City in America" in the 1950s, 60s and into the 70s. The phrase was often seen on public trash cans, and other places throughout the city during this time period. Additionally, Dayton has one of the most consistent street cleaning schedules. Every morning, street cleaners sweep downtown Dayton of any trash from the previous day.

Ohio's nickname "Birthplace of Aviation" is also frequently seen due to Dayton being the hometown of the Wright Brothers. In their bicycle shop in Dayton, the Wrights developed the principles of aerodynamics, and designed and constructed a number of gliders and portions of their first airplane. After their first manned flights in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, which had been chosen due to its high average wind speeds, the Wrights continued testing at nearby Huffman Prairie.[14]

Geography

Dayton sits in the Miami River Valley, 55 miles north of Cincinnati, 150 miles south (and slightly west) of Toledo, 75 miles west (and slightly south) of Columbus, and 40 miles east of Richmond, Indiana, in the southwest quadrant of the state. Most official and government designations place it in west-central Ohio (a term which colloquially often refers to Lima, Ohio). It is at the confluence of the Great Miami River, the Stillwater and Mad rivers, and Wolf Creek. Greater Dayton is generally referred to by locals as the Miami Valley, which is understood to mean the area south of Sidney and north of Middletown, and west of Springfield to the Indiana border

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 56.6 square miles (146.7 km²), of which, 55.8 square miles (144.5 km²) of it is land and 0.9 square miles (2.2 km²) of it (1.55%) is water.

Climate

 Weather averages for Dayton, Ohio 
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °F 35 39 49 62 72 81 85 83 76 65 51 39 62
Average low °F 19 22 31 41 51 65 62 55 54 44 34 24 42
Rainfall inches 2.8 2.3 3.2 3.7 3.9 3.9 3.7 3.1 2.5 2.4 3.1 2.8 37.4
Snowfall inches 7.7 6.2 5.2 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3 2.1 5.5 27.7
Average high °C 2 4 9 17 22 27 29 28 24 18 11 4 17
Average low °C -7 -6 -1 5 11 18 17 13 12 7 1 -4 6
Rainfall mm 71.1 58.4 81.3 94 99.1 99.1 94 78.7 63.5 61 78.7 71.1 950
Snowfall mm 195.6 157.5 132.1 17.8 0 0 0 0 0 7.6 53.3 139.7 703.6
Source: [15] 2009-07-02

The region is dominated by a humid continental climate, characterized by hot, muggy summers and cold, dry winters. The highest temperature ever recorded in Dayton was 105 °F in July 1934, and the coldest was -21 °F in January 1985.[16]

Dayton is subject to severe weather typical to the Midwestern United States. Tornadoes are possible from the spring to the fall. Floods, blizzards, and severe thunderstorms can also occur from time to time.

Suburbs

Dayton's suburbs with a population of 10,000 or more:

Demographics

Historical populations
Census Pop.  %±
1830 2,950
1840 6,067 105.7%
1850 10,977 80.9%
1860 20,081 82.9%
1870 30,473 51.8%
1880 38,678 26.9%
1890 61,220 58.3%
1900 85,333 39.4%
1910 116,577 36.6%
1920 152,559 30.9%
1930 200,982 31.7%
1940 210,718 4.8%
1950 243,872 15.7%
1960 262,332 7.6%
1970 243,601 −7.1%
1980 193,536 −20.6%
1990 182,044 −5.9%
2000 166,179 −8.7%
Est. 2007 155,461 −6.4%
Population 1830–1970.[17]
Population 1980–2000.[18]
Population 2007.[19]
Note: the following demographic information applies only to the city of Dayton proper. For other Dayton-area communities, see their respective articles.

As of the census[20] of 2000, there were 166,179 people, 67,409 households, and 37,614 families residing in the city. The population density was 2,979.3 people per square mile (1,150.3/km²). There were 77,321 housing units at an average density of 1,386.3/sq mi (535.2/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 53.40% White, 43.10% Black, 0.30% Native American, 0.65% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 0.70% from other races, and 1.83% from two or more races. 1.58% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.[21] The population of Dayton has been declining since the 1970s, as can be observed from portrayal of historical population data. This is in part due to the slowdown of manufacturing in the region and the growth of Dayton's suburbs including Englewood, Vandalia, Beavercreek, Miamisburg, and Centerville.[22] Dayton ranked fifth in Forbes magazine's list of America's Emptiest Cities in February 2009. [23]

Households

There were 67,409 households out of which 27.3% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 30.2% were married couples living together, 20.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 44.2% were non-families. 36.8% of all households were made up of individuals and 11.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.30 and the average family size was 3.04.

Age structure and gender ratio

The age structure of Dayton's population is:

  • under 18 years: 25.1%
  • 18 to 24 years: 14.2%
  • 25 to 44 year: 29.0%
  • 45 to 64 years: 19.6%
  • 65 years of age or older: 12.0%

The median age is 32 years. For every 100 females there were 93.1 males, while for every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 89.6 males.

Income

The median income for a household in the city was $27,523, and the median income for a family was $34,978. Males had a median income of $30,816 versus $24,937 for females. The per capita income for the city was $15,547. About 18.2% of families and 23.0% of the population were below the poverty line, including 32.0% of those under age 18 and 15.3% of those age 65 or over.

Political structure

In 1913, Dayton became the first large city in the United States to adopt the council-manager system of city government. In this system, the mayor is merely the chairperson of the city commission and has one vote on the commission just like the other commissioners. The commission hires a separate city manager, who holds administrative authority over the city government.

The city also encourages resident participation through the use of neighborhood associations and priority boards. A total of 65 neighborhoods comprise seven priority board districts.

See also: Neighborhoods of Dayton, Ohio

Economy

C-5 Galaxy at Wright Patterson AFB

Dayton is home to many major corporations and companies such as NCR, Reynolds and Reynolds, CareSource, Cargill, NewPage Corporation, Huffy Bicycles, LexisNexis, Kettering Health Network, Premier Health Partners, ChemStation International, Standard Register, WorkflowOne (formerly Relizon), and Mead prior to becoming MeadWestvaco. It was formerly home of Speedwell Motor Car Company.

Two of these companies, NCR and NewPage Corporation, are both Fortune 1000 companies.[24] NCR announced on June 2, 2009 they plan to move their corporate headquarters to Duluth, Georgia.[25]

The research and development arm of the U.S. Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is the fifth largest employer in the state of Ohio and the largest employer at a single location.[26] Apart from Wright Patterson Air Force Base, the Kettering Health Network and Premier Health Partners Network have a major role on the Dayton area's economy. Hospitals in the Greater Dayton area have an estimated combined employment of nearly 32,000, a yearly economic impact of $5 billion.[27] In addition, several Dayton area hospitals consistently earn top national ranking and recognition including the U.S. News & World Report's list of "America's Best Hospitals."[28] The most notable hospitals are Miami Valley Hospital and Kettering Medical Center. The Dayton region is also known for it's high concentration of aerospace and aviation technology. The region is working to build on the companies and techology in the area to make the Dayton region the state's aerospace hub.[29]

Below is a list of the Dayton region's largest employers:

Largest employers and Number of employees:[30]

Urban design and architecture

Panorama of Dayton

Unlike many midwestern cities of its age, Dayton has very broad and straight downtown streets (generally two or three full lanes in each direction), facilitating access to the downtown even after the automobile became popular. The main reason for the broad streets was that Dayton was a marketing and shipping center from its beginning: streets were broad to enable wagons drawn by teams of three to four pairs of oxen to turn around. In addition, some of today's streets were once barge canals flanked by draw-paths.[31]

Mutual Home Savings Building

A courthouse building was constructed in downtown Dayton in 1888 to supplement Dayton's original Neoclassical courthouse, which still stands. This second, "new" courthouse has since been replaced with new facilities as well as a park. The Old Court House has also been a favorite campaign stop. On September 17, 1859, future President Abraham Lincoln delivered an address on the steps of the building. Eight other presidents have visited the courthouse, either as presidents or during presidential campaigns. They include Andrew Johnson, James Garfield, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, and Bill Clinton.[32]

Dayton's ten historic neighborhoods — Oregon District, Wright Dunbar, Dayton View, Grafton Hill, McPherson Town, Webster Station, Huffman, Kenilworth,St. Anne's Hill, and South Park — feature mostly single-family houses and mansions in the Neoclassical, Jacobethan, Tudor Revival, English Gothic, Chateauesque, Craftsman, Queen Anne, Georgian Revival, Colonial Revival, Renaissance Revival Architecture, Shingle Style Architecture, Prairie, Mission Revival, Eastlake/Italianate, American Foursquare, and Federal styles of architecture.[33]

In 2009, The CareSource Management Group completed construction of a $55 million corporate headquarters at the corner of Main Street and Monument Avenue in downtown Dayton. The 300,000-square-foot, 10-story building marks downtown's first new office tower in more than a decade.[34]

The two tallest buildings of the Dayton skyline are the Kettering Tower at 408 ft (124 m) and the KeyBank Tower at 385 ft (117 m).[35] Kettering Tower was originally Winters Tower, the headquarters of Winters Bank. The building was renamed after Virginia Kettering when Winters was merged into BankOne. KeyBank Tower was formerly known as the MeadWestvaco Tower before KeyBank gained naming rights to the building in 2008.[36]

Culture and recreation

Fine arts

The Benjamin and Marian Schuster Performing Arts Center in downtown Dayton, is a world class performing arts center and the home performance venue of the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra, Dayton Opera, and the Dayton Ballet.[37] In addition to Philharmonic and Opera performances, the Schuster Center hosts concerts, lectures, traveling Broadway shows, and is a popular spot for weddings, and other events.[38]

The historic Victoria Theatre, located in downtown Dayton, hosts concerts, traveling Broadway shows, ballet, a summertime classic film series, and more. The Loft Theatre, also located downtown, is the home of the Human Race Theatre Company.[39]

Also home to Dayton is the Dayton Ballet. The Dayton Ballet is considered one of the oldest and finest professional dance companies in the United States.[40] Also within the Dayton Ballet company is the Dayton Ballet School. The Dayton Ballet School is the oldest dance school in Dayton and one of the oldest dance schools in the United States. It is also the only ballet school in the Miami Valley associated with a professional dance company.[41]

The Dayton Playhouse, in West Dayton, is also the site of numerous plays and theatrical production.[42]

Dayton is also the home to the Gem City Ballet and Progressive Dance Theater, companies in residence at the Pontecorvo Ballet Studio.

Food

Marion's Piazza

Dayton is home to a variety of popular pizza chains that have become woven into local culture, the most notable of which are Cassano's and Marion's Piazza.

Dayton is also home to the Mexican Restaurant chain Hot Head Burritos. Hot Head Burritos was ranked by AOL.com in 2009 as one of America's next big chains. [43]

Other Dayton-based food chains are Super Subby's which specializes in submarine sandwiches and chili[44], The Flying Pizza which is a New York-style pizza chain.[45], and Fricker's which specializes in chicken wings.[46]

Museums and historical parks

The National Museum of the United States Air Force is at nearby Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and is the largest and oldest military aviation museum in the world. [47] The museum draws over 1.3 million visitors per year and is the single most visited tourist attraction in Ohio.[48][49] The museum houses the National Aviation Hall of Fame.

Dayton is home to the Dayton Art Institute, a museum of fine arts that has collections containing more than 20,000 objects spanning 5,000 years.[50]. The Dayton Art Institute was rated one of the top 10 best art museums in the United States for kids. [51].

The Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park commemorates the lives and achievements of Dayton natives Orville and Wilbur Wright and Paul Laurence Dunbar.

America's Packard Museum is the world's only restored Packard Dealership operating as a museum. The museum contains over 50 restored Packard vehicles, and in addition, significant artifacts from the Packard Motor Car Company are on display. [52].

SunWatch Indian Village/Archaeological Park is located on the south end of Dayton. SunWatch is the location of a 12th century American Indian village that has been partially reconstructed and includes a museum where visitors can learn about the Indian history of the Miami Valley.[53]

The Boonshoft Museum of Discovery is a local children's museum of science with numerous exhibits, one of which includes an indoor zoo.[54]

Entertainment

South of Dayton in Kettering is the Fraze Pavilion which hosts many nationally and internationally known musicians for concerts.

South of downtown, on the banks of the Great Miami River, is the University of Dayton Arena, home venue for the University of Dayton Flyers basketball teams and the location of various other events and concerts.

North of Dayton is the Hara Arena that frequently hosts expo events and concerts.

The Nutter Center, which is east of Dayton in the suburb of Fairborn is the home arena for athletics of Wright State University and the Dayton Bombers hockey team. This venue is also used for many concerts and community events.

From 1996 to 1998, Dayton hosted the National Folk Festival. Since then, the annual Cityfolk Festival has continued to bring the best in folk, ethnic and world music and arts to Dayton.

The Dayton Amateur Radio Association annually hosts North America's largest hamfest at Hara Arena in Trotwood,[55] a neighboring suburb. Amateur radio operators are commonly referred to as "hams" with as many as 25,000 traveling from around the world to attend this convention.

Dayton hosts the Winter Guard International championships, at which hundreds of percussion and color guard ensembles compete from around the world.[56]

The Dayton area is served by Five Rivers Metroparks, encompassing 11,500 acres over 23 facilities for year-round recreation, education and conservation.[57]

Located in the nearby suburb of Moraine is an outdoor waterpark known as Splash Moraine. The park is best known for it's large wave pool.[58]

The Oregon District is a historic residential and commercial district in southeast downtown Dayton. The district is populated with art galleries, specialty shops, pubs, nightclubs, and coffee houses.[59]

Notable people

The Dayton area has been home to many famous persons ranging from actors to athletes. Some of the most notable are:

Sports

Club League Venue Established Championships
Dayton Dragons MWL, Baseball Fifth Third Field 1998 0
Dayton Bombers (inactive) ECHL, Ice hockey Ervin J. Nutter Center 1991 0
Dayton Gems IHL, Ice hockey Hara Arena 2009 0
Dayton Diamonds WFA, Women's football Chester A. Roush Stadium, Fairmont High School 2008 0
Dayton Flyers NCAA basketball & football UD Arena (basketball), Welcome Stadium (football) 1995 0,0
Ohio Xtreme Fighting MMA, Professional and Amateur Mixed Martial Arts Coliseum Building, Montgomery County Fairgrounds 2006
Wright State Raiders NCAA Men's and Women's Basketball, Baseball, Softball, & Men's and Women's Soccer Ervin J. Nutter Center (Basketball), Nischwitz Field (Baseball), Alumni Field (Soccer) 1990 (Nutter Center), 2000 (Nischwitz Field), 1999 (Alumni Field) 1 (Men's Basketball, 1983 D-II), 0, 0
University of Dayton Arena during Dayton Flyers game
Baseball
The Dayton Dragons is Dayton's only professional baseball team and is the minor league affiliate for the Cincinnati Reds. The Dayton Dragons are the first (and only) team in minor league baseball history to sell out an entire season before it began and was voted as one of the top ten hottest tickets to get in all of professional sports by Sports Illustrated.[60]
Collegiate
The University of Dayton and Wright State University both host NCAA basketball. The University of Dayton Arena hosted 82 games in the NCAA men's basketball tournament over its history, the second most prolific venue in NCAA history and the most prolific among active venues,[61] with the most recent being first and second round games of the 2009 tournament. Wright State University's NCAA mens basketball is the Wright State Raiders and the University of Dayton's NCAA men's basketball team is the Dayton Flyers.
Hockey
The Dayton Bombers are an ECHL ice hockey team that most recently played the North Division of the ECHL's American Conference. On March 30, 2009, it was announced that the Bombers would not be playing during the 2009-2010 season due to low ticket sales. [62] However, hockey will remain in Dayton for the 2009-10 season as the Dayton Gems of the International Hockey League will begin play in the fall of 2009 at Hara Arena. [63] Despite the Gems' arrival, the Bombers have not folded nor plan to relocate, and continue to aim towards securing additional investors and season-ticket holders to play in Dayton once again for 2010-11 [64].
Football
Football teams in the Dayton area are the Dayton Flyers Football and the Dayton Diamonds women's football. Dayton hosted the first American Professional Football Association game (precursor to the NFL). The game was played at Triangle Park between the Dayton Triangles and the Columbus Panhandles on October 3, 1920.[65]
Mixed Martial Arts
Ohio Xtreme Fighting is Dayton's only professional and amateur mixed martial arts circuit. OXF is rated as one of the top MMA circuits in Ohio.[citation needed]

Media

The sculpture Flyover (David Evans Black, 1996) on Main Street downtown. The sculpture tracks the path of the Wright Brothers' first powered aircraft flight.

Newspapers

The principal general-circulation daily newspaper in the region is the Dayton Daily News, which is owned by Cox Enterprises. Christian Citizen USA (currently doing business as Citizen USA), which claims to uphold traditional values and distances itself from secular media,[66] is a newspaper with circulation in greater Dayton and its surrounding suburban communities. The Dayton City Paper is a free weekly circulation newspaper formerly known as the Impact Weekly. The Kettering-Oakwood Times, part of the Brown Publishing family, is a weekly with circulation primarily in the south suburban communities. Brown weeklies have a circulation of over 100,000 in the Metro-Dayton area. Community Xpress is a weekly publication distributed in several Miami Valley communities. Flyer News is the semiweekly student newspaper at the University of Dayton and serves the campus community. The Guardian is the weekly student newspaper at Wright State University. And, the Clarion is the student newspaper of Sinclair Community College.

Television

The Dayton metro area's broadcast television stations are:

The Dayton television market is ranked #62[67] in the United States.

The nationally syndicated morning talk show The Daily Buzz originated from WBDT-TV, the Acme property in Miamisburg, Ohio, before moving to its current home in Florida.

Radio

AM format

FM format

Transportation

Public transit

The Greater Dayton Regional Transit Authority (RTA) operates public bus routes in the Dayton metro area. In addition to routes covered by traditional diesel-powered buses, RTA has a number of electric trolley bus routes. In continuous operation since 1888 with some form of electric transit, Dayton is the second longest-running of the five remaining trolleybus systems in the U.S., having started them in 1933. They are behind Philadelphia, which started trolleybuses in 1923[68] There is currently no RTA bus route serving the Dayton International Airport.

Dayton also operates a Greyhound Lines bus station located downtown near the Dayton Convention Center. This provides national inter-city scheduled bus service to and from the Dayton area. [69]

Airports

Air transportation is available via the Dayton International Airport, in nearby Vandalia, just north of Dayton proper. People from nearby cities such as Cincinnati, Columbus, and Indianapolis travel and fly out of Dayton due to lower costs. The Dayton International Airport, ranking among the nation's busiest air-freight facilities, is the midwestern hub for Emery Worldwide, a CF company. Dayton's central location means that the Airport is within 90 minutes by air from 55 percent of the nation's population.[70] The Dayton International Airport is also a significant regional air freight hub hosting FedEx Express, UPS Airlines, United States Postal Service, and major commercial freight carriers.[71]

The Dayton-Wright Brothers Airport is a general aviation airport that is owned and operated by the City of Dayton and serves as the reliever airport for Dayton International Airport. The airport primarily serves corporate and personal aircraft users.[72]

Major highways

  • Interstate 75 runs north to south though the city of Dayton and many of Dayton's north and south suburbs.
  • Interstate 70 is a major east-west insterstate that runs through many of Dayton's east and west suburbs and intersects with I-75 in Vandalia, Ohio just north of the city. This intersection is also known as "Freedom Veterans Crossroads." I-70 is the major route to the airport.
  • Interstate 675 is a partial interstate ring along the eastern suburbs of Dayton. It runs north to south and connects I-70 to the north and I-75 to the south.
  • Route 4 runs through downtown Dayton and connects at I-70. The intersection of Route 4 and I-75 is also known to locals as Malfunction Junction, because of the sharp turn in the Northbound lanes of I-75 that causes heavy traffic delays during rush hour. That section of interstate is also known for traffic accidents.
  • US 35 is also a major east-west highway passing through downtown Dayton. It intersects with I-75 in downtown Dayton. US 35 carries commuters east to Xenia, Ohio or west to the Ohio-Indiana border. The stretch of US 35 through downtown just recently underwent major reconstruction, extending the third lane past Steve Whalen Blvd to the east.
  • Route 49 is another major by-way for Dayton. It begins on the west side of the city at US 35 and ends at M-49 in Michigan. The most widely used portion of this route for the Dayton area is from US 35 north to I-70. Route 49 is also known as the Trotwood Connector in the Dayton area.

The Ohio Department of Transportation is currently in the process of $533 million worth of construction to modify and reconstruct I-75 through downtown Dayton. ODOT will be reconstructing OH-4 and I-75, US 35 and I-75, and 12 other interchanges along I-75 in Dayton.

In 2009, Dayton was rated first in the state and 12th in the nation on Allstate Insurance company’s 2009 best drivers list. In the study, Dayton has consistently been one of the safest cities in the nation every year Allstate has released the report.[73]

Rail freight

Dayton has been identified as a hub in the proposed Ohio Hub project, which would bring high-speed rail to Ohio.[74] Dayton also hosts several inter-modal freight railroad terminals. Three Class I railroads both CSX, Norfolk Southern Railway, and Conrail operate switching yards in the city. Because of its transportation system, which affords direct access to major markets, Dayton has become an important warehouse and distribution center.[75]

Education

Public schools

The Dayton Public High Schools operates 34 schools that serve 16,855 students.[76]

Private schools

The city of Dayton has 35 private schools located within the city.[77]

St. Mary's Hall and the Immaculate Conception Chapel at the University of Dayton

Charter schools

Dayton is the nation's top charter school district. The city of Dayton operates 33 charter schools.[78]

Colleges and universities

Dayton is home to two major universities: the University of Dayton, a private, Catholic institution founded in 1850 by the Marianist order and the public Wright State University, which became a state university in 1967. Wright State University has the only medical school in the Dayton area. The University of Dayton has the only American Bar Association (ABA) approved law school in the Dayton area.[79] The University of Dayton is also Ohio's largest private University and is one of the top 10 Catholic Universities in the United States. Dayton is also home to Sinclair Community College one of the largest community colleges in the nation.[80] Sinclair is also one of the country's leading community colleges.[81] Sinclair was originally founded as the YMCA college in 1887. Dayton is also home to Miami-Jacob's College, the International School of Broadcasting, and the Dayton School of Medical Massage. Other schools just outside of Dayton that shape the educational landscape are Kettering College of Medical Arts in Kettering, DeVry University in Beavercreek (Dayton), and Clark State Community College in Springfield. Also just outside of Dayton proper is the public Air Force Institute of Technology, which was founded in 1919 and serves as a graduate school for the United States Air Force. The Air Force Institute of Technology is located at the near by Wright Patterson Airforce Base.

Public safety

Dayton has experienced an improving public safety environment since 2003, with crime declining in key categories according to FBI Uniform Crime Reports and Dayton Police Department data.[82] City officials reported in January 2008 a decline of 6.1 percent in crime for 2007 when compared to 2006. From 2003 to 2007, crime decreased by 10.7 percent. Among violent crimes (homicide, rape, robbery and aggravated assault), Dayton saw a decline of 17.3 percent over the five years ending December 31, 2007. Targeted crimes in Dayton declined 39 percent over the five-year period.[83] Despite these statiscal gains, Dayton is the 19th most violent according to the FBI.[84] A new police chief, Richard S. Biehl, joined the Dayton Police Department in January 2008. Biehl brought more than 25 years of law enforcement experience (with expertise in prevention and community policing) to Dayton following a career with the Cincinnati Police Department and the Community Police Partnering Center (where he served as Executive Director), also in Cincinnati.

Mayor Rhine McLin is a member of the Mayors Against Illegal Guns Coalition,[85] a bi-partisan group with a stated goal of "making the public safer by getting illegal guns off the streets." The Coalition is co-chaired by Boston, Massachusetts Mayor Thomas Menino and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Points of interest

Sister cities

Dayton has five sister cities, as designated by Sister Cities International:

Dayton City Seal in sister city Holon, Israel (4th from the left)

See also

References

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