- Hawthorn Grill – Comfort Food
– 1222 E Stroop Rd, Kettering
– Stop in for some “Comfort on a Plate” - Olive, An Urban Dive – Paleo, Vegan, Gluten free, and multi-allergy friendly.
– 416 W Third Street, Dayton
– The website recommends calling ahead for reservations - Jay’s Seafood
– 225 E. Sixth Street, Dayton
– The seafood is always fresh! - Coco’s Bistro
– 250 Warren Street, Dayton
– Reservations are not required, but recommended. - Fusian –Sushi
– 1200 Brown Street Ste 125, Dayton
– Make your own sushi! - Amber Rose – Eastern European Cuisine
– 1400 Valley Street, Dayton
– Try the cabbage rolls!
Category Archives: Local History
Dayton Inventions – Part 3
- Stepladder – John Balsley, 1862.
- Ice Cream Cone Dispenser – Alexander McLaren, 1919.
- Electric Furnace for cars – Charles L. Lee, 1923.
- Air Conditioner (window/wall units) – Robert R. Candor, 1943.
Woodland Cemetery Series: Matilda Stanley – Queen of the Gypsies
Matilda married her husband Levi in Berkshire, England and together with their families, moved to the United States in 1856. They chose Dayton as their summer headquarters, heading south every winter to live in warmer weather, the procession down Main street a spectacle.
Because record keeping was not very stringent, Matilda’s exact date of birth can only be guessed as sometime in 1821. Her date of death is more concrete, confirmed as January 15, 1878. Woodland held her body in the receiving vault until September of that year, in order to give friends and family time to travel from all over the world to attend her funeral.
Ermal Fraze
Continue reading
Calvary Cemetery
Dayton Inventions – Part 2
- Electric Cash Register – John H. Patterson, 1906.
- Custer Invalid Chair – Levitt Luzern Custer, battery-powered in 1919, gasoline-powered in 1939.
- Night Photography – Brigadier General George Goddard, 1926.
- Freon Refrigerant – Thomas Midgley Jr., 1928.
CareFlight
In 2003, after a serious car accident, I(Sara) was transported via CareFlight to Miami Valley Hospital. Although I don’t remember the flight or many of the details of that night, I was able to formally meet the pilot, Wade, and the CareFlight Nurse, Cathy at the 20th anniversary celebration of Careflight in September of 2003, just one month after our first encounter.
Sara with CareFlight Nurse, Cathy and Pilot Wyatt.
Fun Facts about Dayton – Part 3
- The Private Fair statue on Main Street just south of Monument Avenue in downtown was almost a statue of the Goddess of Liberty, but ex-Civil War soldiers protested, and requested the goddess instead be a statue of a soldier. Private George Washington Fair of Dayton was the model for the statue, which was erected in 1884 – the original location at the intersection of Main and Monument.
- The statue of President McKinley in Cooper Park (behind the Dayton Library on Third Street and St. Clair) was built from funds raised and donated by local schoolchildren.
Dayton Inventions – Part 1
- Cash Register – James and John Ritty, 1870.
- First Practical Airplane – Wright Brothers, 1903.
- Automobile Self-starter: Charles F. Kettering, 1911.
- Leaded Gasoline – Thomas Midgley Jr., 1921.
- Mae West Life Preserver – Frank G. Manson, 1938.
Tony Stein – Dayton’s Superhero
No greater person could be featured for July 4th.
Corporal Tony Stein
The only Daytonian to receive a Congressional Medal of Honor for WWII and the first recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor for Iwo Jima, Tony Stein still does not get enough credit.

