Counties

Below is a complete listing of all Ohio Historical Markers. To find a detailed marker listing including text, photographs, and locations, click on a county below. Our listing is updated by the markers program as new markers are installed and older markers are reported damaged or missing.

ALERT (April 2026) Marker delivered. Installation and dedication TBD.

38-22 Sandusky “Color Capital of the World”

Side A: Marcellus F. Cowdery, Sandusky’s first Public School superintendent, encouraged William D. Curtis to formulate a chalk that did not break easily or scratch chalkboards. Curtis conducted experiments in his kitchen and, using gypsum and limestone deposits from Sandusky Bay, created sticks of pure white, processed chalk. In the late 1860s, he and his brothers-in-law, Marcellus and John S. Cowdery, began producing the chalk from their family home. In 1890, John Whitworth, Curtis’s son-in-law, helped finance the incorporation of The American Crayon Company. The company pioneered high quality art supplies, including wax color crayons and Prang watercolors, used in schoolrooms around the globe. Sandusky’s American Crayon factory that stood at 1706 Hayes Avenue for more than a century, closed production in 2002 and was later demolished.
Side B: Same
Sponsors: The Old House Guild of Sandusky, Ohio History Connection
Address: 1706 Hayes Avenue, 
Sandusky, 
Ohio, 
44870