Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Blooming Grove is an unincorporated community in northeastern North Bloomfield Township, Morrow County, Ohio, United States. [1] The community is located at the junction of State Route 97 and Morrow County Road 20. The nearest city is Galion, Ohio, located to the northwest.

  2. Jun 4, 2019 · The End of the World in Blooming Grove: 1874. On the edge of Richland County, coming in from western Ohio, there is a small ripple of hills in the landscape where the flat terrain of the great plains makes its first tentative rise above the horizon, and the land begins its slow ascent in small rolling hills.

  3. Blooming Grove Township is one of the eighteen townships of Richland County, Ohio, United States. It is a part of the Mansfield Metropolitan Statistical Area. The 2020 census found 1,295 people in the township.

    • Lived in The Rural Parts of Ohio
    • His Family Were Abolitionists
    • He Owned The Marion Star
    • Harding Married Florence Kling
    • His African American Lineage Rumor
    • He Briefly Spent Time at The Battle Creek Sanitorium
    • Spent Four Years in The Ohio State Senate
    • Used Front Porch Campaign
    • President Harding Died of A Sudden Heart Attack
    • His Presidency Was Rife with Corrupt Cabinet Members

    Had it not been his political ambitions, Warren G. Harding would most likely have spent all his years in Blooming Grove, Ohio. Born on a farm, nothing pleased Harding – who was nicknamed “Winnie” – more than the times he spent in his hometown, Marion – a small city in the rural parts of Ohio. The future president of the U.S. absolutely loved the fa...

    Harding was the oldest of eight children born to parents Tryon Harding and Phoebe Dickerson Harding. His father was a physician while his mother was state-licensed midwife. The Hardings were staunch abolitionists and were quick to back the Republican Party once it fully formed in the 1850s.

    To this day, President Harding is considered the only U.S. president to have under his belt experience in journalism. In the early 1870s, his father, Tryon Harding, owned The Argus – a weekly newspaper in Caledonia, Ohio. Harding spent his pre-teenage years at the newspaper, building the experience that he would later use to run his own newspaper –...

    On July 8, 1891, Harding married Florence Kling DeWolfe, a divorce who was five years his senior. Florence was a very intelligent woman and the daughter of an influential banker called Amos Kling. Historians claim that most of Florence’s business and organization skills were picked up during her childhood. After eloping with Pete deWolfe, Florence ...

    After entering the political arena in Ohio, Harding’s purported African lineage came to the fore in many of his dealings. Surprisingly, his father-in-law was actively involved in spreading the rumor that one of Harding’s great-grandmothers was an African American. Over the years, Amos Harding – Harding’s great-great grandfather – came out to dispel...

    It has been stated that Harding visited the Battle Creek Sanitorium on two occasions- 1889 and 1901. His visits were necessitated by the enormous stress he had to grapple with during his political campaigns. Doctors stated that it mainly had to do with fatigue and nervous illness. Perhaps those symptoms were early signs of cardiac arrest that he wo...

    Harding, an extremely good looking, enthusiastic and well-spoken man, used his vast networks in Ohio to his advantage and run for a seat in the Ohio Senate. From January 1900 to January 1904, Harding represented the good people of the 13th District in the state. His time in the Ohio Senate proved to be a huge learning experience for the future 29th...

    With ample experiences from the time he spent campaigning for William McKinley(25th President of the U.S.), Harding opted to adopt a similar campaign approach – a front porch campaign. Harding was selected by the Republican National Convention in 1920 as a compromise candidate after leading runners failed to secure any majority. Under a campaign th...

    After returning from very exhausting western trips to Alaska, Canada and other places, Harding succumbed to the stress associated with the presidency. He was also very worried about the impending corruption allegations against some members of his cabinet. On August 2, 1923, President Warren G. Harding, 57, passed away in San Francisco. The cause of...

    There was some level of excitement about Harding’s promise to restore the U.S. back to normalcy. The nation was still trying to put the pieces back after World War I, which had killed over 100,000 brave American service men as well as claiming over $30 billion. Harding and his Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes were able to get some of the wor...

  4. Sep 1, 2017 · Most famous for being the birthplace of future President Warren G. Harding on Nov. 2, 1865, the burg is nestled in the northeast corner of Morrow County, just inside the Richland County border and not far from the Crawford County line. Some residents carry a Galion mailing address.

  5. The 29th President of the United States of America, Warren G. Harding, was born on November 02, 1865, in a humble cottage at Blooming Grove, Ohio. His birthplace home site was removed in 1896 and a memorial plaque is placed.

  6. People also ask

  7. Early Years and the Newspaper. Born on November 2, 1865, Warren Gamaliel Harding was the oldest of eight children born to Dr. George Tryon Harding and Phoebe Dickerson Harding in Blooming Grove, Ohio. Early in Warren’s childhood, his family moved to the small town of Caledonia, Ohio, where Dr. Harding established a medical practice.