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.

Marker dedication Friday, February 28, 2025 (10 a.m.)

105-31 The Dunbar Community: Acting as One Family for A Century

Side A: Dunbar, or Corsica Hollow, was an African American neighborhood on the western edge of Madisonville. Its streets and lots were laid out in 1886 after Mahlon and Anna Leonard subdivided their 10-acre tract near Duck Creek and sold lots to African Americans. Many early Dunbar residents were from the South; some born there prior to emancipation. Prominent early citizens included Harriet Deatherage, Elihu Parks, Gandison Embry, Thomas Duett, and James Murphy. Dunbar was home to the New Mission Missionary Baptist Church, founded in 1907. Originally meeting in a one-room building, the extant congregation relocated to Ravenna Street in 1963. By the late 1920s, Dunbar had about forty houses, a grocery run by Henry Lowman, and a hair salon run by Flora Hector. (Continued on other side)
Side B: (Continued from other side) Throughout its existence, institutional and environmental racism impacted the Dunbar Community. Cordelia Rollins waged a thirty-year campaign to have a city water main installed in Corsica Place, finally winning in 1940. Residents protested soot and ash from the Dunbar garbage incinerator, demanding the same pollution controls given to white neighborhoods. During the early 1970s, construction of the Red Bank Expressway isolated the community and resulted in the demolition of about ten Dunbar homes. In 1992, the City of Cincinnati used eminent domain to acquire and demolish the remaining houses, relocate the residents, and re-zone the area. While many original Dunbar families remain in Madisonville, the last remnant of the once-thriving community disappeared when the New Mission Church was demolished in 1995.
Sponsors: William G. Pomeroy Foundation, New Mission Baptist Church, City of Cincinnati, Madisonville Community Council, Ohio History Connection
Address: 4550 Red Bank Expy, 
Cincinnati, 
Ohio, 
45227
Latitude: 39.155225
Longitude: -84.405276