Urbana
Ohio
Urbana: grave of Simon Kenton
newspaper with the portion of Pres. James Monroe's address to Congress on December 2, 1823, in which he presented what was to become known as the Monroe Doctrine
Urbana, city, Champaign county, west-central Ohio, U.S., in a stock-raising and farming area, 40 miles (64 km) northeast of Dayton. Laid out in 1805 by Col. William Ward of Virginia, it became the county seat in the same year and grew after a training camp was established there by Gen. William Hull during the War of 1812. It was called Urbana, meaning “refinement,” or “politeness.” The coming after 1848 of the Pennsylvania, New York Central, and Erie railroads fostered industrial development. Manufactures now include plastic products, polishes, transportation lighting equipment, and farm machinery. Urbana College, based on the theology of Emanuel Swedenborg, was founded in 1850. Frontiersman Simon Kenton is buried in Oakdale Cemetery, and Richard Stanhope, George Washington’s valet (who is believed to have been 114 years old at the time of his death in 1862), is buried in a cemetery at nearby Heathtown. The Indian Hunter of sculptor John Quincy Adams Ward, born in Urbana, marks Ward’s grave in Oakdale Cemetery. The home of the late 19th- and early 20th-century writer and politician Brand Whitlock stands on Main Street. Inc. village, 1816; city, 1868. Pop. (2000) 11,613; (2010) 11,793.
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