THE EUCLID CREEK ESTUARY Nature, Industry, Ursuline Sisters, Lacustrine Refuge

Several thousand years ago, a rising Lake Erie invaded Euclid Creek’s final meanders. The result was a “drowned-valley estuary” a great place for early industry. From 1818 to the Civil War, the lake level meanders fostered the county’s first stoneware kiln, a shipyard, and small port facilities. After the war, the Ursuline Sisters maintained the estuary as a nature park. 

Dr. Roy Larick will illustrate the estuary’s natural history, early industry and Ursuline preservation. He will also show how the current Lower Euclid Creek Lacustrine Refuge project impacts the estuary’s final meander. Possibilities now exist to serve the needs of nature, historical preservation, and recreational access equitably.

An Evening with

Dr. Roy Larick

Euclid Public Library                                                                    

631 East 222 Street                                                                

October 20, 2011

Showcase 6:30 PM  /  Program at 7:00 PM

by Collinwood Nottingham Historical Society, Euclid Historical Society, Euclid Public Library, Bluestone Heights, and the Cuyahoga Soil & Water Conservation District

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Volume 3, Issue 8, Posted 10:05 PM, 10.05.2011