Showing posts with label Price Hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Price Hill. Show all posts

31 WAYS TO TELL YOU'RE FROM CINCINNATI

CincyWhimsy likes to keep things positive. However, after reading today's dismal article on Buzzfeed: "31 Ways To Tell You're From Cincinnati," we decided to issue a cheeky, more accurate portrayal of Queen City natives.

The author, Paul Franke, a Twitter-proclaimed Cincinnatian, provided dated observances that echoed of someone who visited their cousin here. Once. In 2001. His credentials of "sitting by the pool and looking hot" as well as "joker/writer" have garnered him a low-ranking on Buzzfeed's funny scale. The user rating system, which is based on internet cat memes, ranked Franke a Grumpy Cat "NO."  We couldn't agree more.



31 WAYS TO TELL YOU'RE FROM CINCINNATI
(AN IMPROVED VERSION)


1.) You know how to correctly spell Servatii and Procter & Gamble.
 




2.) No matter how early you plan ahead, you never call quick enough to reserve one of the 250 spaces to annually tour the Cincinnati Subway.



 

3.) You get excited about giving blood at Great American Ball Park during Hoxworth's Reds Week.






4.) Goettafest is a four-day holiday weekend.






5.) The only reason you avoided driving through Over The Rhine was because the swell of 20,000 visitors to Washington Park spilled out onto four adjacent streets.






6.) You can't wait for Coffee Emporium to open an outpost in your part of town.






7.) You know that Smale Park rhymes with snail and is not pronounced smally.

 


8.) You wish Putz's Creamy Whip or The Cone stayed open year-round.





9.) You outgrew eating at Buffalo Wild Wings in college and now get scrumptious, award-winning wings at Knockback Nat's.




10.) You eat with your family at Montgomery Inn. You eat with your friends at Eli's BBQ.




11.) You don't think twice about driving from Ohio to Kentucky, then back to Ohio, then to Kentucky.




12.) You're a fan of the Reds not only because they play good baseball, but because they were the first professional baseball team in U.S. history. 



13.)  KungFood Chu's Amerasia has blown your mind with their quality Chinese food.





14.) It will all get better if you can make it past the Norwood Lateral during rush hour.




15.) Midpoint Music Festival is your Woodstock.







16.) Skyline is good, but your neighborhood mom-and-pop chili parlor is better.




17.) You're waiting for the East Side to come up with a catchy phrase to compete with "West Side is the Best Side."






18.) Belgian waffles are considered local fare.






19.) Crosstown rival games now encompass both basketball and roller derby.




20.) You know someone who's moved away to New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles only to return to Cincinnati for its livability and entrepreneurial opportunities.





21.) You know someone on a waiting list to get an apartment in Over The Rhine.




22.) A new microbrewery opens up every Friday.





23.) You go to The Banks to watch the Reds' Friday Night Fireworks in comfort and style.





24.) During Paddlefest, the Cardboard Boat Race, and Jimmy Buffett concerts, there are more people in the Ohio river than fish. 




25.) You visit the "Indian Strip" on Ludlow Avenue in Clifton for the area's largest concentration of curry options.




26.) You refer to Hamilton Avenue in Northside as the "Northside Taco District."





27.) You have a difficult time choosing which of the dozen Thai restaurants in Oakley to eat at.






28.) It's hard to describe 21C to visitors. Are you going to a hotel, contemporary art gallery, or swanky rooftop bar?






29.) You excitedly watch the redevelopment of Walnut Hills and Price Hill. 






30.) Artworks Murals are your personal game of Where's Waldo.








31.) You have to schedule yourself some alone time. Every weekend you're either at NOM, City Flea, Second Sunday on Main, Final Friday, First Friday, Second Saturday in Northside, or one of the countless other activities popping up in the tri-state.



MT. AUBURN INCLINE CLIMB

East of Christ Hospital resides remote park, perhaps the most inaccessible piece of pubic space in the city. Surrounded by the twists and turns of dead end streets, Jackson Park once hosted the beginnings of suburban public transit in Cincinnati. In addition to its electric street railway, Mt. Auburn was home to the Queen City's very first incline.

Mt. Auburn Incline construction via CincinnatiViews.net


Mount Auburn Street Railway rain from Fifth and Main Streets Downtown to Auburn Avenue on top of the hill. The difficulties of mounting Jackson Hill, particularly in the winter, led the electric street  to adapt an incline system, inspired by Pittsburgh's Monongahela Incline which was erected in 1870. Two years later, Cincinnati opened Mt. Auburn Incline.

via CincinnatiViews.net


via CincinnatiViews.net


Like other inclines, Mt. Auburn built an entertainment establishment at the top of the hill: Lookout House. Six hundred passengers a day and a million persons each year rode the incline and likely patronized the resort. Sunday became their busiest day, as the Lookout House boldly ignored liquor laws and served beer and wine on the Sabbath.

Lookout House via CincinnatiViews.net


A series of untimely events led to Mt. Auburn Incline's demise. In October 1889, eight passengers were aboard the car when a mechanical error launched it full speed from the bottom of the hill, sending it crashing into the top station. After a moment of dangling, the car broke loose and plummeted back to the bottom where it collided with a grocery store and sent the roof cascading 100 feet down Main Street. Three days after Mt. Auburn Incline reopened from the horrific accident, then-judge William Howard Taft ruled against the incline in a court case regarding vehicular interference with telephone lines. It closed permanently in 1898.

Our journey to the top of Cincinnati's steepest incline began in an inconspicuous vacant lot at the corner of 8th Street and Glenway Avenue. Marked only with a billboard, it was hard to imagine the site once being a bustling venue of commerce and transportation on the West Side. Along the way, we snapped pictures of the remnants, including stone walls, wooden stringers, concrete with structural imprints, sheave wheels, and even old rail! - See more at: http://www.cincywhimsy.com/2013/07/price-hill-incline-climb.html#sthash.8fstqzqR.dpuf
Mt. Auburn Incline Wreck via CincinnatiViews.net




As part of the Cincinnati Incline Climb, our journey to the top of Cincinnati's first incline began at a stairwell at Main and Mulberry Street.  Now known as the Main Street Mosaic Steps, this quiet area was once one of the main transit arteries of Cincinnati. Remnants of the incline can still be viewed from the foundation, a reminder of the bygone era when the Queen City was once called "The Paris of America."




MT. AUBURN INCLINE

Hike Difficulty Level: ★  
Length: 960 feet
Height: 312 feet
Steepness / Grade:
35% and 25%




Cat of the Mt. Auburn Incline

Medical bracelet found on the stairwell



Jackson Park, at the top of the former incline.

Jackson Park: great views for photography