Franklin County Ohio (Page 5) has 50 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 3 places of National significance and 11 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Ohio Statehouse, Ohio Theatre, Old Port Columbus Airport Control Tower, New England Lodge and Niles Car & Manufacturing Company Electric Railway Interurban Combine No. 21.
Many famous people are associated with these Franklin County historic places including Elijah Pierce, James Kilbourne, Edward Orton Jr., Charles Sells, Charles Osborn and Jonathan Noble.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Franklin County places including Thomas W. Lamb, Allied Architects Association, Richards,McCarty, & Bulford, Howard Dwight Smith, Frank Packard, Niles Car & Manufacturing Co., Harry Hake, John Snow, Mariot & Allen and Yost & Packard. Prominent architectural styles found in Franklin Country are Italianate, Classical Revival and Greek Revival.
Historic Significance:
Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Multiple
Architectural Style:
Greek Revival
Area of Significance:
Politics/Government, Architecture
Period of Significance:
1850-1874, 1825-1849
Historic Function:
Government
Historic Sub-function:
Capitol
Current Function:
Government
Current Sub-function:
Capitol
The Ohio Statehouse, located in Columbus, is one of the most architecturally significant state capitols in the United States, representing a supreme achievement of the Greek Revival style. Constructed between 1839 and 1861 using locally quarried Columbus limestone, the building was the result of a collaborative and often contentious design process involving prominent architects of the era, including Henry Walter, Alexander Jackson Davis, and Thomas Ustick Walter. Its design departs from traditional European models by omitting a classical pediment in favor of austere, recessed Doric porticoes and a low, drum-like cupola rather than a soaring dome, symbolizing the democratic ideals of ancient Greece translated to the American frontier.
Beyond its architectural mastery, the Statehouse has served as the epicenter of Ohio's political history and played a vital role during the American Civil War as a center for Union mobilization. It is deeply connected to the legacy of Abraham Lincoln, who delivered a landmark speech on its steps in 1859 attacking the expansion of slavery, learned of his official presidential victory while visiting the legislative chambers in 1861, and whose body lay in state in the building's rotunda in April 1865. Formally listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972 and later designated a National Historic Landmark, the Ohio Statehouse stands as a monumental symbol of mid-nineteenth-century civic pride and the enduring democratic governance of the state.
Historic Significance:
Architecture/Engineering, Event
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Lamb,Thomas W.
Architectural Style:
Other, Mission/Spanish Revival
Area of Significance:
Architecture, Performing Arts
Period of Significance:
1925-1949
Historic Function:
Recreation And Culture
Historic Sub-function:
Theater
Current Function:
Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Theater
The Ohio Theatre, designed by the internationally renowned theater architect Thomas W. Lamb, is one of the nation's most spectacular and intact surviving examples of the grand "movie palace" era. Opened in March 1928 as a flagship cinema for the Loew's theater chain, the building is a masterclass in Spanish Baroque Revival architecture, characterized by its opulent and eclectic interior design. Lamb conceived the theater as a "palace for the average man," utilizing lush materials, intricate plasterwork, gilded ornamentation, and hand-woven tapestries to create a sense of royal indulgence. The auditorium features a massive, 21-foot-tall crystal chandelier and houses a historic Robert Morton theater pipe organ, one of the few such instruments still operational in its original setting. The theater's lavish design represents the pinnacle of early 20th-century commercial entertainment architecture, designed to transport patrons into a fantasy world of luxury.
Beyond its architectural grandeur, the Ohio Theatre holds immense historical significance for its pioneering role in the modern historic preservation movement. Facing demolition in 1969 to make way for an office tower, the theater became the focal point of a highly successful grassroots rescue campaign led by the newly formed Columbus Association for the Performing Arts (CAPA). This effort not only saved the landmark from the wrecking ball but also served as a catalyst for Columbus's downtown revitalization and established a national model for the adaptive reuse of historic civic spaces. Formally designated the "Official State Theatre of Ohio" in 1977 and subsequently declared a National Historic Landmark, the Ohio Theatre continues to serve as a vibrant cultural anchor for the city, hosting the symphony, opera, and touring Broadway productions in its meticulously preserved historic environment.
Historic Significance:
Event
Area of Significance:
Transportation
Period of Significance:
1925-1949
Historic Function:
Transportation
Historic Sub-function:
Air-Related
Current Function:
Transportation
Current Sub-function:
Air-Related
The Old Port Columbus Airport Control Tower and Terminal, constructed in 1929, holds immense historical significance as a pioneering monument to the birth of commercial aviation in the United States. The facility served as a key hub for Transcontinental Air Transport (TAT), a groundbreaking coast-to-coast air-rail passenger service designed to transport travelers across the country in just 48 hours. Legendary aviator Charles Lindbergh, who served as the chairman of TAT's technical committee, personally selected the Columbus site for its favorable weather and geographic position. On July 8, 1929, the terminal welcomed its first passengers, marking a watershed moment in the development of scheduled passenger flight and establishing Columbus as a vital link in the nation's burgeoning transportation network.
Architecturally, the building is a striking, highly intact example of late-1920s Art Deco design, characterized by its clean geometric lines, stylized brickwork, and the prominent, cylindrical control tower rising from the roofline. As one of the oldest surviving commercial airport terminal buildings in the United States, it represents a crucial transitional era when aviation infrastructure evolved from makeshift turf airfields into formal, permanent public gateways. Though long since superseded by larger modern facilities at what is now John Glenn Columbus International Airport, the original terminal stands as a rare physical reminder of the Golden Age of Flight, reflecting the optimism and rapid technological advancement of early 20th-century America.