Drawing by Cornelia Vest Corbin of Southwest Village Green

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Drawing by Cornelia Vest Corbin of Southwest Village Green from the collections of the Worthington Historical Society (WHS) may be used for educational purposes as long as it is not altered in any way and proper credit is given: "Courtesy of the Worthington Historical Society, Worthington, OH." Prior written permission of the WHS is required for any other use of Drawing by Cornelia Vest Corbin of Southwest Village Green. Contact WHS at info@worthingtonhistory.org to request permission.

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Drawing by Cornelia Vest Corbin of Southwest Village Green is an art original, with genre drawing. Its dimensions are 15.13 in. x 23.38 in..

It was created sometime around 1900-1978.

Worthington Historical Society is the Contributor. Cornelia Corbin (née Vest), 1886-1978 is the Artist.

This charcoal drawing by Cornelia Vest Corbin (b. 1886, d. 1978) depicts the homes bordering the west side of the Southwest Village Green. The home on the far left is 721 High Street known as the Demas Adams or Adams-Bishop-Heath House.

Cornelia Vest Corbin was the daughter of Winfield and Cornelia Vest. Cornelia was married to Samuel Ellis Corbin of the S. E. Corbin and Son Funeral Home and was mother to Frank Corbin. Cornelia was an active member of the Worthington community. She bought the Worthington Inn in 1936 and was a member and former organist of Worthington United Methodist Church as well as a trustee of the Worthington Library.

It covers the topics buildings and historic districts.

It features the person Cornelia Corbin (née Vest), 1886-1978.

It covers the city Worthington. It covers the area Old Worthington.

You can find the original at Worthington Historical Society.

This file was reformatted digital in the format video/jpeg.

The Worthington Historical Society identification code is 86-G-5.

The Worthington Memory identification code is whs1142.

This metadata record was human prepared by Worthington Libraries on September 16, 2020. It was last updated September 22, 2020.