January 30, 2008

Birth of a City



I was remiss yesterday in not noting the birthday of the founder of my fair city, Moses Cleaveland. On a fateful day in 1796, Mr. Cleaveland arrived on the banks of the Cuyahoga River (which at that time was not burning) and pronounced it a lovely spot on which to build a city. Then he promptly left and never returned.


But not before leaving in his stead four hearty souls who managed to drum up enough enthusiasm (despite, as Wiki says, "the insalubrity of the locality") for the newly formed village that in a mere 24 years the population had veritably exploded to 150. Hmmm.


Thirty-four years after its founding, the city's name changed from Cleaveland to Cleveland because --wait for it-- the full spelling wouldn't fit on the masthead of the first local newspaper (The Cleveland Advertiser) so the editor just decided to drop the "A." And we think the press nowadays takes liberties.


4 comments:

Jim Donahue said...

Didn't you get the memo? I've banned "wait for it."

punkinsmom said...

I was so hoping you would stop by!! That's just for you, you know!
:)

Jim Donahue said...

Gifts of dark chocolate are preferred.

Jim Donahue said...

Oh, you linked over to me! How sweet. I didn't notice till now.

But I was serious about the dark chocolate.