| 1892 Perron map SANDUSKY, OHIO, #104 |
Nice map titled Sandusky, from wood engraving with fine detail and clear impression. Overall size approx. 17 x 16.5 cm, image size approx. 10 x 7 cm. From: Les Etats Unis, volume no. 16 of La Nouvelle Géographie universelle, la terre et les hommes, 19 volumes (1875-94), great work of Elisee Reclus. Cartographer is Charles Perron.
Sandusky
city, seat (1838) of Erie county, northern Ohio, U.S. It lies
along Sandusky Bay (Lake Erie's largest natural harbour [there bridged to Port
Clinton]), about 60 miles (100 km) west of Cleveland. In the 18th century the
French and British established trading posts in the area, and Fort Sandusky,
which was built by the British in 1745, was burned in May 1763 during Pontiac's
War (a Native American uprising). Sandusky was a supply depot during the War of
1812; Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry's naval victory (Sept. 10, 1813) over the
British occurred about 25 miles (40 km) northwest, near Put-in-Bay. Previously
known as Ogontz Place, named for an Ottawa Indian chief, the site was settled
(1816) by Connecticut residents who had been awarded the land for losses
suffered from British raids during the American Revolution. It was also briefly
known as Portland. The present name (from a Wyandot [Wendat] Indian word meaning
“cold water” or “pure water”) was adopted in 1818. The first railroad arrived in
1835. In the 1850s Sandusky was a terminus of the Underground Railroad, an
escape route for slaves. Johnson's Island in Sandusky Bay was a prison for
Confederate officers during the American Civil War.
Its harbour location south of Marblehead Peninsula and a cluster of offshore
islands (notably Kelleys Island) has made Sandusky a focal point for a popular
summer recreation area, and tourism is a major economic asset. Basic to the
economy are fish markets, the lake trade (especially coal shipping), wineries,
and industry (notably the manufacture of food processing equipment, steel, iron
castings, automotive parts, chemicals and plastic, and paper products). The
Firelands campus (1967) of Bowling Green State University is in Huron, 10 miles
(16 km) east. Inc. town, 1824; city, 1845. Pop. (2000) 27,844; Sandusky Metro
Area, 79,551; (2010) 25,793; Sandusky Metro Area, 77,079.