Entrance to the Worthington Hills Neighborhood, 1969

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Entrance to the Worthington Hills Neighborhood, 1969 is a picture, with genre photograph. Its dimensions are 3.5 in x 3.5 in.

It was created in 1969.

Worthington Hills Garden Club is the Contributor.

This photograph shows the entrance to the Worthington Hills neighborhood, at the intersection of Clubview Boulevard S and Olentangy River Road/315, as it appeared in 1969. Two cars are visible leaving the neighborhood, one waiting at a stop sign at Olentangy River Road. Visible in the background are several homes, including those that might be 776 and 777 Clubview Boulevard S.

The neighborhood that would become Worthington Hills was purchased by Christopher Tone from Eri Bristol in 1841, according to the book "Worthington Neighborhoods" by Jennie McCormick. The Tone family moved from New Hampshire to Ohio, with Minor P. Tone continuing to farm on the land following his father Christopher's death in 1850. In the 1950s, Raymond E. Mason began purchasing the land that would form the neighborhood, transferring it in 1960 to "Olentangy Country Club Estates" to launch the concept of a neighborhood build around a golf course.

The neighborhood was platted between 1963 and 1968, and according to McCormick, offered "resort living around its own golf course and amenities for family living for which most homeowners in 1966 could only dream." Homes were typically larger than average, and more than half were totally air-conditioned. Some homes were "quiet conditioned," which featured insulated plumbing, noise-reducing baffles on heating systems and sound-proofed family rooms.

This photo is from the collection of the Worthington Hills Garden Club (WHGC), which was formed in 1967. Active from the beginning, the club held flower shows and home and garden tours, as well as sponsored planting events at nursing homes and schools. Today, WHGC membership is open to residents and non-residents of Worthington Hills, and the club sponsors tours of central Ohio sites, promotes conservation and a love of gardening, supports charitable causes and invests in natural areas such as the Sawmill Wetlands.

It covers the topics neighborhoods and streets and roads.

It covers the city Worthington. It covers the area Worthington Hills.

The original is in a private collection.

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

The Worthington Memory identification code is whg0006.

This metadata record was human prepared by Worthington Libraries on June 17, 2025. It was last updated June 24, 2025.