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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.

14-31 The Irish in Cincinnati

Side A: In memory of the Irish people who left a country where only their rivers run free. The Irish came to Cincinnati where they contributed to housing, education, employment, religious freedom, medical care and recreation, and embraced all aspects of life in the city. The descendants of Irish immigrants hope that our hands will ever be extended in friendship and never in want.
Side B: Flatboats on the Ohio River brought many of the first Irish, some with land grants received after the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, to the Cincinnati area. In 1789, Francis Kennedy arrived in Losantiville, where he operated the first ferry service across the Ohio to the mouth of the Licking River. In 1791, Irishman Joseph Lloyd managed the first one-room schoolhouse on the riverbank west of Sycamore Street. A soapmaker whose family had immigrated from Ireland, James Gamble, and a candlemaker from England, William Procter, joined together to form the Procter & Gamble Co. in 1837. Thousands of Irish came to Cincinnati during the 1840s and 1850s as a result of Ireland’s “Great Hunger,” when millions of people died or emigrated to avoid starvation. During the Civil War, hospital ships staffed by Irish nuns traveled the Ohio River caring for and transporting wounded soldiers to Cincinnati.
Sponsors: Irish of the Cincinnati Area in Commemoration of the Great Hunger in Ireland (An Gorta Mor) 1845-1850 and The Ohio Historical Society
Address: 801 E. Pete Rose Way, Bicentennial Commons at Sawyer Point, 
Cincinnati, 
OH, 
45202
Location: Sawyer Point Park, Ohio River Front, just E (upriver) of the pedestrian bridge over the Ohio River
Latitude: 39.1001831
Longitude: -84.4988152