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  <title type="text">Cleveland Historical</title>
  <updated>2026-04-17T16:21:05+00:00</updated>
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    <name>Cleveland Historical</name>
    <uri>https://clevelandhistorical.org</uri>
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    <title type="html"><![CDATA[Robert Russell Rhodes Mansion]]></title>
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<img src="https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/b5d79b18e5f6c2196a88680527db807e.jpg" alt="Robert Russell Rhodes Mansion" /><br/><p>The Italian Villa style house at 2905 Franklin Boulevard in Ohio City was built in 1874 by a businessman who, according to one local historian, zealously sought to avoid involvement in government--even though his extended family was deeply involved in politics for much of the nineteenth century.  There is some gentle irony then that, for most of the twentieth century and for the first nineteen years of the twentieth first century, the Robert Russell Rhodes mansion was owned by Cuyahoga County, which used it to provide a variety of different government services to the public.    </p><p>Robert Russell Rhodes (1846-1916) was a great-grandson of Josiah Barber, the west side pioneer from Connecticut who arrived in Brooklyn Township in 1818 and settled  and developed 140 acres of land in what became the heart of Ohio City.  In 1836, Barber  served as the new city's first mayor.  Robert Rhodes was also the oldest son of Daniel Pomeroy Rhodes, who, a decade after Josiah Barber settled in what became Ohio City, migrated to the area from Vermont, married Josiah Barber's granddaughter Sophia Russell, and soon became wealthy in the coal and iron industries.  Daniel, a staunch Democrat, was active in local politics his entire adult life.  In 1864, politics in the Rhodes family moved to a new level, when Daniel Rhode's daughter Charlotte Augusta married Republican Marcus Hanna, the man who many contend engineered the first modern day political campaign that put William McKinley in the White House in 1896.  </p><p>Robert Russell Rhodes could never seem to avoid the political influences in his life--even when it came to his own marriage.  In 1868, four years after his sister married Marcus Hanna, Robert married Kate Castle, who was the daughter of William B. Castle, a member of the Whig party and Ohio City's last mayor before its annexation to Cleveland in 1854.  One year later, Castle was elected mayor of Cleveland--the first westsider to hold that office.  </p><p>Robert Rhodes, who was heir to many of his father's business interests, spent much of his life on Franklin Circle.  He grew up on the southeast side of Franklin Circle in the Rhodes family mansion and, following his marriage to Kate Castle, built his own mansion on the southwest side of Franklin Circle.  During these years, Franklin Circle may have seemed to him to be almost like a Rhodes family park.  The land for the circle had been donated by Robert's great-grandfather Josiah Barber, and most of the great homes and estates that surrounded the Circle in the mid- to late nineteenth century were owned by Rhodes family members, in-laws, and business associates.</p><p>In 1888, Robert Rhodes, like a number of other wealthy Franklin Avenue area residents of this era, sold his mansion on Franklin Circle and moved to Rockport Township--to a stretch of land along Lake Erie that later became the suburb of Lakewood.  He died in Lakewood in 1916.</p><p>In 1914, Cuyahoga County purchased the Robert Russell Rhodes house from the heirs of John Meckes, a German immigrant ,who had in 1888 purchased the home from Robert Rhodes.  In the 100 years that have elapsed since that purchase, the house has served the county as a juvenile detention home (1918-1932), a county nursing home (1939-1962), county welfare department (1962-1963), a school for disabled children (1963-1977), and as the county archives (1977-2019).  After the county archives moved from the building, it was sold by the county and is currently being redeveloped as a 33-suite residential apartment building.</p><p><em><strong><a href="https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/536">For more (including 9 images) view the original article</a></strong></em></p>]]></summary>
    <published>2012-08-14T23:22:56+00:00</published>
    <updated>2026-03-04T21:32:01+00:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/536"/>
    <id>https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/536</id>
    <author>
      <name>Jim Dubelko</name>
    </author>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[Franklin Circle: The Centerpiece of Josiah Barber&#039;s Radial Street Plan]]></title>
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<img src="https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/85fab9b62b6651d70d5e498834c5de1c.jpg" alt="Franklin Circle - circa 1920" /><br/><p>Franklin Circle, the centerpiece of one of Cleveland's rare radial street designs, was surveyed in 1836--the same year in which Ohio City became a city and Cleveland's chief commercial competitor across the Cuyahoga River.  The land for the Circle, which lies at what is today the intersection of West 28th Street, Fulton Road, and Franklin Boulevard, was donated to Ohio City by Josiah Barber, a Connecticut pioneer who came to the Western Reserve in 1818 and settled the area just west of the Cuyahoga River and just south of the Lake.  Today this area lies at the heart of the Ohio City neighborhood. </p><p>As originally laid out, the Circle was called Franklin Place or Franklin Square, and was informally utilized for several decades as an open farmers market.  Later, after Ohio City was annexed to the City of Cleveland, Cleveland moved that "west side" market in 1859 to the northwest corner of Pearl (West 25th) Street and Lorain Avenue, and eventually in 1912 to the northeast corner of that same intersection where it has been known ever since as the West Side Market.  The City then built on the Circle the west side's first public park, which featured a water fountain surrounded by an iron fence.  In 1872, Franklin Boulevard was extended through the park as part of a renovation by the City of Cleveland. At about this time, the park was remodeled with a rock garden and, for years thereafter, was  known as Modoc Park.   In 1907, a combination of streetcar tracks and newly constructed apartment buildings contributed to almost destroy the park-like setting of the Circle, which thereafter became known simply as Franklin Circle.</p><p>From the mid-nineteenth century until the early twentieth century, Franklin Circle was surrounded by some of the grandest mansions on the west side of Cleveland, including those of Marcus Hanna, Daniel Pomeroy Rhodes, James Ford Rhodes, and Robert Russell Rhodes. Today, the Circle is still a pleasant area of the near west side with a park-like ambiance.  However, most of the great mansions of the Circle are long gone.   They have been replaced by multifamily and institutional buildings, including Lutheran Hospital and the Masonic Temple, which in the early twentieth century joined Franklin Circle Christian Church as the predominant buildings on the Circle.</p><p><em><strong><a href="https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/535">For more (including 9 images) view the original article</a></strong></em></p>]]></summary>
    <published>2012-08-14T18:04:45+00:00</published>
    <updated>2026-03-04T21:32:01+00:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/535"/>
    <id>https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/535</id>
    <author>
      <name>Jim Dubelko</name>
    </author>
  </entry>
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