Academic literature on the topic 'Warren County Home (Ohio)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Warren County Home (Ohio)"

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Babcock, Loren E. "Biostratigraphic significance and paleogeographic implications of Cambrian fossils from a deep core, Warren County, Ohio." Journal of Paleontology 68, no. 1 (1994): 24–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000025579.

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A deep core from Warren County, Ohio, has yielded numerous fossils of Cambrian age. The specimens, which are among the first recorded from Cambrian rocks of Ohio, suggest revisions in the inferred ages of the Eau Claire and Mount Simon Formations in the Cincinnati Arch region. Trilobites indicative of Dresbachian (late Middle Cambrian to early Late Cambrian) and possibly Franconian (Late Cambrian) age are present in the upper Eau Claire Formation. By implication, the underlying Mount Simon Formation must be of earlier Dresbachian age or perhaps older. Identified trilobites from the Eau Claire
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Nelson, Matt, and Dr Heather Menne. "IDENTIFYING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE PREVALENCE AND CURRENT SERVICE USE IN OHIO’S 88 COUNTIES." Innovation in Aging 7, Supplement_1 (2023): 1061. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igad104.3409.

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Abstract Recently released data reveals that over 235,000 people over the age of 65 have Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia (ADRD) in Ohio. Using 2020 data from the National Center for Health Statistics, county-level specific ADRD prevalence estimates for Ohio’s 88 counties were also prepared (Range: 9.4-13.4 per 1000 individuals 65+). Researchers, practitioners, and policy-makers can use these estimates to better understand the reach and impact of ADRD in local communities. Nationally and in Ohio, care and support for older adults and specifically older adults with ADRD typically falls
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Patton, Paul E., and Sabrina Curran. "Archaic Period Domesticated Plants in the Mid-Ohio Valley." Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 41, no. 2 (2016): 127–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/26599933.

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Abstract Late Archaic archaeobotanical remains from the County Home site (33AT40), southeastern Ohio, are described. Measurements of chenopod (Chenopodium berlandieri) seed-coat thicknesses and marshelder (Iva annua) achene and kernel lengths from the site are indicative of domesticated types (ssp. jonesianum and var. macrocarpa, respectively) dating to ca. 3000 B.P. to 3600 B.P. Together, these specimens represent some of the earliest evidence of plant domestication outside the oak-hickory and oak-savannah forests of eastern North America. The recovery of these plants with other cultigens in
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White, John R. "The Kern Effigy: Evidence for a Prehistoric fort Ancient Summer Solstice Marker." North American Archaeologist 7, no. 2 (1986): 137–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/wlf7-5drf-nu10-dqll.

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Recent excavations in Warren County, Ohio, within the shadow of monumental Fort Ancient have brought to light a large prehistoric alignment of limestone flagstones forming an effigy of a serpent. Radiocarbon dates indicate that this effigy was constructed in 1200 A.D. presumably by local peoples archaeologically designated as being of the Anderson focus (or phase) of the Fort Ancient aspect. Strong evidence indicates that this large “artifact” may have seen use as an astronomical ground marker for determining the summer solstice and important dates related thereto. A set of general and site sp
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Freiermuth, Caroline E., Rachel M. Ancona, Jennifer L. Brown, et al. "Evaluation of a large-scale health department naloxone distribution program: Per capita naloxone distribution and overdose morality." PLOS ONE 18, no. 8 (2023): e0289959. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0289959.

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Objectives To report per-capita distribution of take-home naloxone to lay bystanders and evaluate changes in opioid overdose mortality in the county over time. Methods Hamilton County Public Health in southwestern Ohio led the program from Oct 2017-Dec 2019. Analyses included all cartons distributed within Hamilton County or in surrounding counties to people who reported a home address within Hamilton County. Per capita distribution was estimated using publicly available census data. Opioid overdose mortality was compared between the period before (Oct 2015-Sep 2017) and during (Oct 2017-Sep 2
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Labus, Janet G., and Faye H. Dambrot. "A Comparative Study of Terminally Ill Hospice and Hospital Patients." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 16, no. 3 (1986): 225–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/bqwl-b4y8-e1yx-4a12.

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This study investigated differences between twenty-eight hospice and twenty-eight hospital patients who died within a specified time period in one county of Northeastern Ohio. The comparison found that hospice patients were younger, had more people living in the home, and had a shorter disease history. Age, the number of people living in the home, and primary cancer site significantly discriminated between the hospice and hospital patients and predicted group membership with a 76.8 percent overall accuracy rate.
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Patton, Paul E., and Sabrina Curran. "Archaic Period Domesticated Plants in the Mid-Ohio Valley: Archaeobotanical Remains from the County Home Site (33at40), Southeastern Ohio." Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 41, no. 2 (2016): 127–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01461109.2016.1153180.

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Shihab, Mason Alexander, and Brittany Shoots-Reinhard. "Ironic effects of political ideology and increased risk-taking in Ohio drivers during COVID-19 shutdown." PLOS ONE 17, no. 12 (2022): e0279160. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279160.

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In March 2020, Ohio, along with many other states, enacted a stay-at-home order (i.e., “shutdown”) to limit the spread of COVID-19. As a result of lower traffic, crashes should also have declined. We investigated whether crash rates declined in Ohio during the stay-at-home order and explore possible predictors for the decrease, such as reduced travel in compliance with the order, along with speeding, alcohol, and drug use. In addition, we examined whether support for President Trump would relate to greater travel and greater crashes (particularly during the stay-at-home order, when greater tra
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Never, Brent, and Drew Westberg. "Place Matters: The Spatial Effects of Human Service Expenditures." Nonprofit Policy Forum 7, no. 3 (2016): 369–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/npf-2015-0025.

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AbstractPlace matters in human services. Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) devolves spending to services, most often provided by nonprofit organizations. We argue that this devolution allows for people to “vote with their feet” (Ostrom, Tiebout, and Warren 1961: “The organization of government in metropolitan areas: A theoretical inquiry.”AmericanPolitical Science Review 55:831–42) in seeking jurisdictions where there will be more spending on human services. This paper considers the spatial patterns of human service expenditures, arguing that people of lower Socio-Economic Status
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Gao, Gary. "382 The Southwest Ohio Fruit and Vegetable School—A Successful Multi-county Program." HortScience 35, no. 3 (2000): 458D—458. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.35.3.458d.

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Southwest Ohio Fruit and Vegetable School is a regional training program for both commercial growers and amateur gardeners. The program has been sponsored by four county Extension offices in Southwest Ohio and has attracted a total attendance of 571 since 1995. We have offered two concurrent sessions, one for commercial fruit and vegetable growers, and one for amateur gardeners. This combination has proven to be the key factor in the success of the program. Attendees are allowed to move between the commercial and amateur sessions. Many commercial growers brought their spouses along since there
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Warren County Home (Ohio)"

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Weisser, Jennifer Anne. "MICRO SACRED SITES: THE SPATIAL PATTERN OF ROADSIDE MEMORIALS IN WARREN COUNTY, OHIO." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2004. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1085506011.

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Weisser, Jennifer. "Micro sacred sites the spatial pattern of roadside memorials in Warren County, Ohio /." Cincinnati, Ohio : University of Cincinnati, 2004. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=ucin1085506011.

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Anthony, Douglas Richard. "Faith of Our Fathers? Musical Function, Appropriation and Change among the Christian Churches of Allen County, Ohio." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2001. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1630334753148594.

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Wallace, Peggy. "Earth Sheltered Housing in Warren County, Kentucky: Description of Housing Units & Determinants of Residents' Satisfaction." TopSCHOLAR®, 1988. https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/2944.

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The known population of earth sheltered houses in Warren County, Kentucky were studied (a) to document building materials and techniques utilized, (b) to describe the residents demographically and document their attitudes regarding satisfaction with earth sheltered housing, and (c) to determine reasons for building and resources utilized in financing and planning, as well as problems encountered in regard to the earth sheltered house. Data on 21 housing units were collected through personal interviews. Data analysis was accomplished using contingency tables, chi-squares, Pearson's product-mome
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Blount, LaVerne. "Evaluation attitudes and practices of Ohio Cooperative Extension Service county-level home economists /." The Ohio State University, 1988. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487588249823772.

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Keeling, Kristina L. "A Spatial Distribution Analysis of Lithic Artifacts from a Late Archaic-Middle Woodland Site, The County Home Site (33AT40), Athens County, Ohio." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1343758431.

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Patterson, Cassie Rosita. "Reflections from Elsewhere: Ambivalence, Recuperation, and Empathy in Moral Geographies of Appalachian Ohio." The Ohio State University, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1437567890.

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Wallace, Bethany F. "Coyote Spatial and Temporal Use of Recreational Parklands as a Function of Human Activity within the Cuyahoga Valley, Ohio." University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1374515496.

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Books on the topic "Warren County Home (Ohio)"

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Florence, Cole, ed. Warren County, Ohio Children's Home, 1874-1913. Cardinal Research, 1998.

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Trelvik, Arne H. Warren County, Ohio, funeral records: Volume 7 : Stine Kilburn Funeral Home, Lebanon, Ohio. Edited by Warren Co Genealogical Society. Warren County Genealogical Society, 2014.

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Trelvik, Arne H. Warren County, Ohio, funeral records: Volume 6 : A.L. Hannah Funeral Home, Blanchester, Ohio. Edited by Warren Co Genealogical Society. Warren County Genealogical Society, 2014.

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Trelvik, Arne H. Warren County, Ohio, funeral records: Volume 4 : Hoskins funeral homes. Edited by Warren Co Genealogical Society. Warren County Genealogical Society, 2013.

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Florence, Cole, ed. Warren Co., OH infirmary records. Cardinal Research, 1999.

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Trelvik, Arne H. Warren County, Ohio, funeral records: Volume 3 : Waynesville area funeral homes. Edited by Warren Co Genealogical Society. Warren County Genealogical Society, 2008.

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Trelvik, Arne H. Warren County, Ohio, funeral records: Volume 5 : Mason area funeral homes. Edited by Warren Co Genealogical Society. Warren County Genealogical Society, 2013.

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Trelvik, Arne H. Warren County, Ohio funeral record master index. Edited by Warren Co Genealogical Society. Warren County Genealogical Society, 2014.

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Dunn, Chester L. Oswald's Funeral Home records, Lebanon, Ohio, 1890-1907. [Warren County Genealogical Society, 1999.

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Dunn, Chester L. Oswald's Funeral Home records, Lebanon, Ohio: Volume 1 : 1867-1890. Warren County Genealogical Society, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Warren County Home (Ohio)"

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"Diane Gilliam Fisher." In Writing Appalachia, edited by Katherine Ledford and Theresa Lloyd. University Press of Kentucky, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178790.003.0074.

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Although Diane Gilliam Fisher’s family migrated after World War II from the Appalachian Mountains to Columbus, Ohio, where she was born and reared, they maintained strong ties to Mingo County, West Virginia, and Johnson County, Kentucky. Fisher earned a PhD in Romance languages and literature from Ohio State University and an MFA from Warren Wilson College in Swannanoa, North Carolina, before settling into her professional life as a poet....
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Steinglass, Steven H., and Gino J. Scarselli. "County and Township Organizations." In The Ohio State Constitution, 2nd ed. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197619728.003.0012.

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Abstract Article X, which addresses county and township organization, had its origins in the 1851 Ohio Constitution, but counties and townships existed in Ohio before statehood. The Northwest Ordinance referred to both in directing the territorial governor “to lay out the parts of the district in which the Indian titles shall have been extinguished, into counties and townships, subject, however, to such alterations as may thereafter be made by the legislature.” Unlike municipalities, counties and townships are agencies or administrative arms of the state and have no inherent powers independent of the General Assembly. The 1851 Article was a bare-bones article giving the General Assembly the power to create counties and townships but not defining their powers other than giving them “the power of local taxation for public purposes as may be prescribed by law.” In 1933, however, the voters approved a constitutional amendment, proposed by initiative petition, to restructure this article completely, to repeal all its existing sections, and to give counties (but not townships) the option of adopting home rule. Townships also have the option of adopting limited home rule, which was given to them by the General Assembly and not the constitution.
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Morris, Christopher. "A Cotton County Comes of Age." In Becoming Southern. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195083668.003.0009.

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Abstract sides, a Greek revival guest house and library nearby, all surrounded not by wilderness but by grand lawns and gardens, represented a level of affluence and gentility only just emerging in Warren County. Social distinctions, in other words, while they had always been present in the minds of some, had not been so readily apparent in earlier years. Moreover, economic and social mobility formerly had blurred the relatively small differences between the richer and poorer elements. In the 1790s Don Rapalje, for all his pretentions to the contrary, lived like a simple farmer. By 1860 there could be no mistaking a gentleman planter, owner of a grand home and several hundred slaves, for a simple man who actually dirtied his own hands in the soil. The Natchez Weekly Courier estimated that a 2000-acre plantation capable of producing 1000 bales of cotton annually required a capital investment of nearly $200,000, a sum well out of reach of any small farmer in Warren County.16
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Penn, William A. "Guarding the Railroad." In Kentucky Rebel Town. University Press of Kentucky, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813167718.003.0003.

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This chapter examines the military defenses on the Bluegrass corridor of the Kentucky Central Railroad, which was important for military transportation and communications. State Guards, Home Guards, and Union volunteers encamped in the Cynthiana, Ky., area to guard the railroad, including Camp Bruce. The book describes in detail the establishment and activities of Camp Frazer, one of the first Union camps in Kentucky after neutrality ended. It was organized by Col. Van Derveer’s 35<sup>th</sup> Ohio Voluntary Infantry in September 1861. The reaction of citizens to these troops is explored in the chapter. The book documents other Union regiments who guarded the railroad, including Col. S. R. Mott’s 118<sup>th</sup> Ohio infantry, who built stockades for Union squads to protect railroad bridges. The chapter examines the interaction of Union troops occupying the county with local citizens, and the military arrest of secessionists caught sabotaging bridges.
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Durrill, Wayne K. "Guerrilla War." In War of Another Kind. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195060072.003.0008.

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Abstract Guerrilla war in Washington County began in January 1863. Responding to unionist raids on local plantations, Jasper Spruill, the son of prosperous unionist farmer Ammon Spruill, applied to North Carolina Governor Zebulon Vance for a commission to raise a company of local secessionists. The young man proposed specifically “to kill Buffaloes [unionists].” Governor Vance reportedly replied: “Go ahead and kill the king of them and then I will talk to you about it.” Therefore, sometime in early January, Spruill and two other men, Warren Snell and L. Biggs, went to John Giles’s home, “waylaid” the unfortunate Giles “near his own gate,” and “shot him.”
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Reports on the topic "Warren County Home (Ohio)"

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Klesta, Matthew. Home Lending Trends from Select Counties in Kentucky, Ohio, and Pennsylvania: 2018–2022. Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.26509/frbc-cd-20240418.

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This series of reports examines home mortgages and refinances from 2018 through 2022, a period of great change. The reports look at seven large counties in Kentucky, Ohio, and Pennsylvania: Allegheny County, Pennsylvania (Pittsburgh); Cuyahoga County, Ohio (Cleveland); Fayette County, Kentucky (Lexington); Franklin County, Ohio (Columbus); Hamilton County, Ohio (Cincinnati); Lucas County, Ohio (Toledo); and Montgomery County, Ohio (Dayton).
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