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7 nearby places to lose yourself in amazing history and beautiful art
Treasures from the National Afro-American Museum & Cultural Center
Credit: Lisa Powell
Credit: Lisa Powell
Hartman Rock Garden, Springfield
Harry George “Ben” Hartman spent 12 years arranging hundreds of thousands of individual stones into a folk art treasure, Springfield’s Hartman Rock Garden.
His project began in 1932 during the midst of the Great Depression when he built a small fishing pond lined with pink granite in his backyard. From there he built more than 50 stone structures following historical, religious and patriotic themes.
The masterwork of the garden is a 14-foot-tall cathedral made of concrete, dolostone and chert.
Maid-Rite Sandwich Shoppe, Greenville
Blobs of chewing gum cover the brick exterior of the Maid-Rite Sandwich Shoppe in Greenville.
The gum-sticking tradition has taken place at the restaurant, a popular spot for loose-meat sandwiches, since 1934.
According to its website, couples have declared their love “spelling out one another’s initials separated by an arrow-pierced heart in strategically placed wads of gum.”
Credit: ERIC ALBRECHT
Credit: ERIC ALBRECHT
Temple of Tolerance, Wapakoneta
The Temple of Tolerance, a sprawling garden collection of rocks and boulders dotted with unique objects, is a hidden gem in Wapakoneta.
The “master” of the temple, Jim Bowsher, has worked on the garden for more than two decades, according to the website RoadsideAmerica.com. He occasionally will give visitors a personal tour.
Among the gems within the garden are a piece of a bank counter gangster John Dillinger jumped over and the front step of the former Ku Klux Klan headquarters in Wapakaneta.
Field of Corn (with Osage Oranges), Dublin
“Cornhenge” is the tongue-in-cheek nickname is for an art installation completed in 1994 in a grassy field in Dublin.
The 109 concrete ears of corn, each 6 feet, 3 inches tall, were created by artist Malcolm Cochran and honor the role Franklin County played in corn production.
The installation is located on a field once farmed by man who specialized in hybridized corn.
Credit: MIKE CARDEW
Credit: MIKE CARDEW
Feline Historical Museum, Alliance
A museum dedicated to our feline friends opened in 2010 on the ground floor of The Cat Fancier’s Association Foundation headquarters in Alliance.
Among the collection is a cat house designed by renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright, a wooden cat carrier from the 1900s and more than 160 Maneki Neko, or “Japanese Welcoming Cats.”
The museum also houses a non-lending library of 1,400 cat related books.
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