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Following the rise and fall of America’s Defund the Police movement, Antoine Tolbert embodies its lingering ripple in Cleveland.
The CLEVELAND ENGINEERING SOCIETY, founded in 1880 as the Civil Engineers' Club, soon broadened both the membership and the goals of the organization to include representation from all branches of ...
News Take a tour of Cleveland’s new African American Civil Rights Trail, from Carl Stokes to the Ludlow Community Association Published: Feb. 03, 2023, 9:16 a.m.
The Sherwin-Williams Company is facing criticism from a civil rights organization representing Black contractors over how the Cleveland-based business hired workers for a new headquarters ...
CIVIL DEFENSE IN GREATER CLEVELAND can be divided into two distinct periods. It was first activated after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941 to protect the local area from enemy air raids, ...
There's uncertainty about Cleveland's federal consent decree after the U.S. Department of Justice ended civil rights investigations into a number of police departments, and some worry about what ...
The officers were arrested on misdemeanor charges of dereliction of duty, obstruction of official business, and civil rights violations, according to a City of Cleveland press release.
Harvey, the beloved canine mascot of the 104th Ohio Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War, will be commemorated with a statue on Public Square in Cleveland.
Now, Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson will hold an afternoon press conference Thursday to offer an update connected to the May 30 violence, which resulted in a city-wide curfew that lasted for ...
Southland Engineering has opened a new office — its seventh overall — in downtown Cleveland. The engineering firm's new Midwestern outpost is located in the Fifth Third Building at 600 Superior Ave.
About 100 people gathered in University Circle in Cleveland over the weekend. They compiled a laundry list of demands for city officials in the wake of the Justice Department’s report on the Cleveland ...
CLEVELAND, Tenn. - More than 70 people gathered at the Museum Center at Five Points this week to share stories of how the civil rights movement played out in Cleveland in the 1960s.
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