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Cleveland[a] is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Cuyahoga County. Located along the southern shore of Lake Erie, it is situated across the Canadian border and approximately 60 mi (97 km) west of the Ohio–Pennsylvania state line. Cleveland is the most populous city on Lake Erie and second-most populous city in Ohio, with a population of 372,624 at the 2020 census.[6] The Cleveland metropolitan area, with an estimated 2.17 million residents, is the 34th-largest metropolitan area in the United States.[10]

Key Information

Cleveland was founded in 1796 near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River as part of the Connecticut Western Reserve in modern-day Northeast Ohio by General Moses Cleaveland, after whom the city was named. The city's location on the river and the lake shore allowed it to grow into a major commercial and industrial metropolis by the late 19th century, attracting large numbers of immigrants and migrants.[11] It was among the top 10 largest U.S. cities by population for much of the 20th century, a period that saw the development of the city's cultural institutions.[12] By the 1960s, Cleveland's economy began to slow down as manufacturing declined and suburbanization occurred.

Cleveland is a port city, connected to the Atlantic Ocean via the St. Lawrence Seaway. Its economy relies on diverse sectors that include higher education, manufacturing, financial services, healthcare, and biomedicals.[13] The city serves as the headquarters of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, as well as several major companies. The GDP for Greater Cleveland was US$138.3 billion in 2022.[8] Combined with the Akron metropolitan area, the eight-county Cleveland–Akron metropolitan economy was $176 billion in 2022, the largest in Ohio.[14]

Designated as a global city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network,[15] Cleveland is home to several major cultural institutions, including the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, the Cleveland Orchestra, the Cleveland Public Library, Playhouse Square, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as well as Case Western Reserve University. Known as "The Forest City" among many other nicknames, Cleveland serves as the center of the Cleveland Metroparks nature reserve system.[1] The city's major league professional sports teams include the Cleveland Browns (football; NFL), the Cleveland Cavaliers (basketball; NBA), and the Cleveland Guardians (baseball; MLB).

History

[edit]

Founding

[edit]
City founder General Moses Cleaveland. Statue by James G. C. Hamilton (1888)

Cleveland was established on July 22, 1796, by surveyors of the Connecticut Land Company when they laid out Connecticut's Western Reserve into townships and a capital city. They named the settlement "Cleaveland" after their leader, General Moses Cleaveland, a veteran of the American Revolutionary War.[16] Cleaveland oversaw the New England–style design of the plan for what would become the modern downtown area, centered on Public Square, before returning to Connecticut, never again to visit Ohio.[16] The town's name was often shortened to "Cleveland", even by Cleaveland's original surveyors. A common myth emerged that the spelling was altered by The Cleveland Advertiser in order to fit the name on the newspaper's masthead.[17][18]

The first permanent European settler in Cleveland was Lorenzo Carter, who arrived in May 1797 and built a cabin on the banks of the Cuyahoga River.[19] The emerging community served as an important supply post for the U.S. during the Battle of Lake Erie in the War of 1812.[20] Locals adopted war hero Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry as a civic icon and erected a monument in his honor decades later.[21] Largely through the efforts of the settlement's first lawyer, Alfred Kelley, the village of Cleveland was incorporated on December 23, 1814.[22]

Despite the nearby swampy lowlands and harsh winters, the town's waterfront on Lake Erie proved advantageous, giving it access to Great Lakes trade. It grew rapidly after the 1832 completion of the Ohio and Erie Canal,[23] which linked the Ohio River and the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean via the Erie Canal and Hudson River, and later via the Saint Lawrence Seaway.[13] The town's growth continued with added railroad links.[24] In 1836, Cleveland, then only on the eastern banks of the Cuyahoga, was officially incorporated as a city, and John W. Willey was elected its first mayor.[25] That same year, it nearly erupted into open warfare with neighboring Ohio City over a bridge connecting the two communities.[26] Ohio City remained an independent municipality until its annexation by Cleveland in 1854.[25]

A center of abolitionist activity,[27][28] Cleveland (code-named "Station Hope") was a major stop on the Underground Railroad for escaped African American slaves en route to Canada.[29] The city also served as an important center for the Union during the American Civil War.[30][31] The wartime contributions of those serving the Union from Cleveland and Cuyahoga County was honored with the July 1894 erection of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument on Public Square.[32]

Growth and expansion

[edit]

The Civil War vaulted Cleveland into the first rank of American manufacturing cities and fueled unprecedented growth.[33] Its prime geographic location as a transportation hub on the Great Lakes played an important role in its development as an industrial and commercial center. In 1870, John D. Rockefeller founded Standard Oil in Cleveland,[34] and in 1885, he moved its headquarters to New York City, which had become a center of finance and business.[35]

Bird's-eye view of Cleveland in 1877

Cleveland's economic growth and industrial jobs attracted large waves of immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe, as well as Ireland.[11] Urban growth was accompanied by significant strikes and labor unrest, as workers demanded better wages and working conditions.[36] Between 1881 and 1886, 70 to 80% of strikes were successful in improving labor conditions in Cleveland.[37] The Cleveland Streetcar Strike of 1899 was one of the more violent instances of labor strife in the city during this period.[38]

By 1910, Cleveland had become known as the "Sixth City" due to its status at the time as the sixth-largest U.S. city.[39] Its automotive companies included Peerless, Chandler, and Winton, maker of the first car driven across the U.S. Other manufacturing industries in Cleveland included steam cars produced by White and electric cars produced by Baker.[40] The city counted major Progressive Era politicians among its leaders, most prominently the populist Mayor Tom L. Johnson, who was responsible for the development of the Cleveland Mall Plan.[41] The era of the City Beautiful movement in Cleveland architecture saw wealthy patrons support the establishment of the city's major cultural institutions. The most prominent among them were the Cleveland Museum of Art, which opened in 1916,[42] and the Cleveland Orchestra, established in 1918.[43]

1917 multilingual poster in English, Italian, Hungarian, Slovene, Polish, and Yiddish, advertising English classes for immigrants in Cleveland

In addition to the large immigrant population, African American migrants from the rural South arrived in Cleveland (among other Northeastern and Midwestern cities) as part of the Great Migration for jobs, constitutional rights, and relief from racial discrimination.[44] By 1920, the year in which the Cleveland Indians won their first World Series championship, Cleveland had grown into a densely populated metropolis of 796,841, making it the fifth-largest city in the nation,[12] with a foreign-born population of 30%.[45]

At this time, Cleveland saw the rise of radical labor movements, most prominently the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), in response to the conditions of the largely immigrant and migrant workers. In 1919, the city attracted national attention amid the First Red Scare for the Cleveland May Day Riots, in which local socialist and IWW demonstrators clashed with anti-socialists.[46][47] The riots occurred during the broader strike wave that swept the U.S. that year.[48]

Cleveland's population continued to grow throughout the Roaring Twenties.[49] The decade saw the establishment of the city's Playhouse Square,[50] and the rise of the risqué Short Vincent.[51][52] The Bal-Masque balls of the avant-garde Kokoon Arts Club scandalized the city.[53][54] Jazz came to prominence in Cleveland during this period.[55][56] Prohibition first took effect in Ohio in May 1919 (although it was not well-enforced in Cleveland), became law with the Volstead Act in 1920, and was eventually repealed nationally by Congress in 1933.[57] The ban on alcohol led to the rise of speakeasies throughout the city and organized crime gangs, such as the Mayfield Road Mob, who smuggled bootleg liquor across Lake Erie from Canada into Cleveland.[57][58]

Euclid Avenue and East 9th Street with the Hickox Building in 1918

The era of the flapper marked the beginning of the golden age in Downtown Cleveland retail, centered on major department stores Higbee's, Bailey's, the May Company, Taylor's, Halle's, and Sterling Lindner Davis, which collectively represented one of the largest and most fashionable shopping districts in the country, often compared to New York's Fifth Avenue.[59] In 1929, Cleveland hosted the first of many National Air Races, and Amelia Earhart flew to the city from Santa Monica, California in the Women's Air Derby.[60][61] The Van Sweringen brothers commenced construction of the Terminal Tower skyscraper in 1926 and oversaw it to completion in 1927.[62] By the time the building was dedicated as part of Cleveland Union Terminal in 1930, the city had a population of over 900,000.[25]

Cleveland was hit hard by the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the subsequent Great Depression.[63] A center of union activity, the city saw significant labor struggles in this period, including strikes by workers against Fisher Body in 1936 and against Republic Steel in 1937.[37] The city was also aided by major federal works projects sponsored by President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal.[64] In commemoration of the centennial of Cleveland's incorporation as a city, the Great Lakes Exposition debuted in June 1936 at the city's North Coast Harbor, along the Lake Erie shore north of downtown.[65] Conceived by Cleveland's business leaders as a way to revitalize the city during the Depression, it drew four million visitors in its first season, and seven million by the end of its second and final season in September 1937.[66]

Postcard of Public Square and the then-new Cleveland Union Terminal in 1930

On December 7, 1941, Imperial Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and declared war on the U.S. Two of the victims of the attack were Cleveland natives – Rear Admiral Isaac C. Kidd and ensign William Halloran.[67] The attack signaled America's entry into World War II. A major hub of the "Arsenal of Democracy", Cleveland under Mayor Frank Lausche contributed massively to the U.S. war effort as the fifth largest manufacturing center in the nation.[68] During his tenure, Lausche also oversaw the establishment of the Cleveland Transit System, the predecessor to the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority.[69]

Late 20th and early 21st centuries

[edit]

After the war, Cleveland initially experienced an economic boom, and businesses declared the city to be the "best location in the nation".[39][70] In 1949, the city was named an All-America City for the first time, and in 1950, its population reached 914,808.[25] In sports, the Indians won the 1948 World Series, the hockey team, the Barons, became champions of the American Hockey League, and the Browns dominated professional football in the 1950s. As a result, along with track and boxing champions produced, Cleveland was declared the "City of Champions" in sports at this time.[71] Additionally, the 1950s saw the rising popularity of a new music genre that local WJW (AM) disc jockey Alan Freed dubbed "rock and roll".[72]

Key Tower and the Fountain of Eternal Life by Marshall Fredericks

However, by the 1960s, Cleveland's economy began to slow down, and residents increasingly sought new housing in the suburbs, reflecting the national trends of suburban growth following federally subsidized highways.[73] Industrial restructuring, particularly in the steel and automotive industries, resulted in the loss of numerous jobs in Cleveland and the region, and the city suffered economically.[74] The burning of the Cuyahoga River in June 1969 brought national attention to the issue of industrial pollution in Cleveland and served as a catalyst for the American environmental movement.[75]

Housing discrimination and redlining against African Americans led to racial unrest in Cleveland and numerous other Northern U.S. cities.[76][77] In Cleveland, the Hough riots erupted from July 18 to 24, 1966,[78] and the Glenville Shootout took place on July 23, 1968.[79] In November 1967, Cleveland became the first major American city to elect an African American mayor, Carl B. Stokes, who served from 1968 to 1971 and played an instrumental role in restoring the Cuyahoga River.[80][81]

During the 1970s, Cleveland became known as "Bomb City U.S.A." due to several bombings that shook the city, mostly due to organized crime rivalries.[82] In December 1978, during the turbulent tenure of Dennis Kucinich as mayor, Cleveland became the first major American city since the Great Depression to enter into a financial default on federal loans.[83] The national recession of the early 1980s "further eroded the city's traditional economic base."[74] While unemployment during the period peaked in 1983, Cleveland's rate of 13.8% was higher than the national average due to the closure of several steel production centers.[84][85]

The city began a gradual economic recovery under Mayor George V. Voinovich in the 1980s. Downtown saw the construction of the Key Tower and 200 Public Square skyscrapers, as well as the development of the Gateway Sports and Entertainment Complex – consisting of Progressive Field and Rocket Arena – and North Coast Harbor, including the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Cleveland Browns Stadium, and the Great Lakes Science Center.[86] Although the city emerged from default in 1987,[25] it later suffered from the impact of the subprime mortgage crisis and the Great Recession.[87]

Nevertheless, by the turn of the 21st century, Cleveland succeeded in developing a more diversified economy and gained a national reputation as a center for healthcare and the arts.[88] The city's downtown and several neighborhoods have experienced significant population growth since 2010, while overall population decline has slowed.[89] Challenges remain for the city, with improvement of city schools,[90] economic development of neighborhoods, and continued efforts to tackle poverty, homelessness, and urban blight being top municipal priorities.[91][92]

Geography

[edit]
NASA satellite photograph of Cleveland at night

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 82.47 square miles (213.60 km2), of which 77.70 square miles (201.24 km2) is land and 4.77 square miles (12.35 km2) is water.[93] The shore of Lake Erie is 569 feet (173 m) above sea level; however, the city lies on a series of irregular bluffs lying roughly parallel to the lake. In Cleveland these bluffs are cut principally by the Cuyahoga River, Big Creek, and Euclid Creek.

The land rises quickly from the lake shore elevation of 569 feet. Public Square, less than one mile (1.6 km) inland, sits at an elevation of 650 feet (198 m), and Hopkins Airport, 5 miles (8 km) inland from the lake, is at an elevation of 791 feet (241 m).[94]

Cleveland borders several inner-ring and streetcar suburbs.[73] To the west, it borders Lakewood, Rocky River, and Fairview Park, and to the east, it borders Shaker Heights, Cleveland Heights, South Euclid, and East Cleveland. To the southwest, it borders Linndale, Brooklyn, Parma, and Brook Park. To the south, the city borders Newburgh Heights, Cuyahoga Heights, and Brooklyn Heights and to the southeast, it borders Warrensville Heights, Maple Heights, and Garfield Heights. To the northeast, along the shore of Lake Erie, Cleveland borders Bratenahl and Euclid.

Architecture

[edit]
Skyline of Cleveland at night in January 2025

Cleveland's downtown architecture is diverse. Many of the city's government and civic buildings, including City Hall, the Cuyahoga County Courthouse, the Cleveland Public Library, and Public Auditorium, are clustered around the open Cleveland Mall and share a common neoclassical architecture. They were built in the early 20th century as the result of the 1903 Group Plan. They constitute one of the most complete examples of City Beautiful design in the U.S.[95][96]

Completed in 1927 and dedicated in 1930 as part of the Cleveland Union Terminal complex, the Terminal Tower is a prototypical Beaux-Arts skyscraper. It was the tallest building in North America outside New York City until 1964 and the tallest in the city until 1991.[97] Key Tower (the tallest building in Ohio) and 200 Public Square combine elements of Art Deco architecture with postmodern designs.[98][99] The city's latest major skyscraper – the Sherwin-Williams Headquarters – was completed in 2024.[100]

Running east from Public Square through University Circle is Euclid Avenue, which was known as "Millionaires' Row" for its prestige and elegance as a residential street.[101][102] In the late 1880s, writer Bayard Taylor described it as "the most beautiful street in the world."[103]

Nicknamed Cleveland's "Crystal Palace", the five-story Cleveland Arcade (also known as the Old Arcade) was built in 1890 and renovated in 2001 as a Hyatt Regency Hotel.[104] Another major architectural landmark, the Cleveland Trust Company Building, was completed in 1907 and renovated in 2015 as a downtown Heinen's supermarket.[105] Cleveland's historic ecclesiastical architecture includes the Presbyterian Old Stone Church,[106] the onion-domed St. Theodosius Russian Orthodox Cathedral,[107] and the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist along with several other ethnically inspired Catholic churches.[108]

Neighborhoods

[edit]
The Ohio City neighborhood at night

The Cleveland City Planning Commission has officially designated 34 neighborhoods in Cleveland.[109] Centered on Public Square, Downtown Cleveland is the city's central business district, encompassing a wide range of subdistricts, such as the Nine-Twelve District, the Campus District, the Civic Center, East 4th Street, and Playhouse Square. It also historically included the lively Short Vincent entertainment district.[110][111] Mixed-use areas, such as the Warehouse District and the Superior Arts District, are occupied by industrial and office buildings as well as restaurants, cafes, and bars.[88] The number of condominiums, lofts, and apartments has been on the increase since 2000 and especially 2010, reflecting downtown's growing population.[112]

Neighborhoods of Cleveland

Clevelanders geographically define themselves in terms of whether they live on the east or west side of the Cuyahoga River.[113] The East Side includes the neighborhoods of Buckeye–Shaker, Buckeye–Woodhill, Central, Collinwood (including Nottingham), Euclid–Green, Fairfax, Glenville, Goodrich–Kirtland Park (including Asiatown), Hough, Kinsman, Lee–Miles (including Lee–Harvard and Lee–Seville), Mount Pleasant, St. Clair–Superior, Union–Miles Park, and University Circle (including Little Italy).[114] The West Side includes the neighborhoods of Brooklyn Centre, Clark–Fulton, Cudell, Detroit–Shoreway, Edgewater, Ohio City, Old Brooklyn, Stockyards, Tremont (including Duck Island), West Boulevard, and the four neighborhoods colloquially known as West Park: Kamm's Corners, Jefferson, Bellaire–Puritas, and Hopkins.[115] The Cuyahoga Valley neighborhood (including Whiskey Island and the Flats) is situated between the East and West Sides, while Broadway–Slavic Village is sometimes referred to as the South Side.[116]

Several neighborhoods have begun to attract the return of the middle class that left the city for the suburbs in the 1960s and 1970s. These neighborhoods are on both the West Side (Ohio City, Tremont, Detroit–Shoreway, and Edgewater) and the East Side (Collinwood, Hough, Fairfax, and Little Italy). Much of the growth has been spurred on by attracting creative class members, which has facilitated new residential development and the transformation of old industrial buildings into loft spaces for artists.[88][117]

Climate

[edit]
Cleveland
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
3
 
 
36
22
 
 
2.5
 
 
39
24
 
 
3.1
 
 
47
31
 
 
3.8
 
 
60
41
 
 
3.8
 
 
71
51
 
 
3.8
 
 
80
61
 
 
3.7
 
 
84
66
 
 
3.6
 
 
82
64
 
 
3.9
 
 
76
57
 
 
3.6
 
 
64
47
 
 
3.4
 
 
51
37
 
 
3
 
 
40
28
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Metric conversion
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
76
 
 
2
−5
 
 
63
 
 
4
−5
 
 
78
 
 
8
−1
 
 
95
 
 
16
5
 
 
96
 
 
22
11
 
 
97
 
 
27
16
 
 
93
 
 
29
19
 
 
90
 
 
28
18
 
 
100
 
 
24
14
 
 
91
 
 
18
8
 
 
86
 
 
11
3
 
 
76
 
 
5
−2
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm

Typical of the Great Lakes Region, Cleveland exhibits a continental climate with four distinct seasons, which lies in the humid continental (Köppen Dfa)[118] zone. The climate is transitional with the Cfa humid subtropical climate. Summers are hot and humid, while winters are cold and snowy. Due to its proximity to Lake Erie, Cleveland experiences milder temperatures than much of Ohio, with relatively cooler summers and warmer winters.[119] East of the mouth of the Cuyahoga, the land elevation rises rapidly in the south. Together with the prevailing winds off Lake Erie, this feature is the principal contributor to the lake-effect snow that is typical in Cleveland (especially on the city's East Side) from mid-November until the surface of the lake freezes, usually in late January or early February. The lake effect causes a relative differential in geographical snowfall totals across the city. On the city's far West Side, the Hopkins neighborhood only reached 100 inches (254 cm) of snowfall in a season three times since record-keeping for snow began in 1893.[120] By contrast, seasonal totals approaching or exceeding 100 inches (254 cm) are not uncommon as the city ascends into the Heights on the east, where the region known as the "Snow Belt" begins. Extending from the city's East Side and its suburbs, the Snow Belt reaches up the Lake Erie shore as far as Buffalo.[121]

The all-time record high in Cleveland of 104 °F (40 °C) was established on June 25, 1988,[122] and the all-time record low of −20 °F (−29 °C) was set on January 19, 1994.[123] On average, July is the warmest month with a mean temperature of 74.5 °F (23.6 °C), and January, with a mean temperature of 29.1 °F (−1.6 °C), is the coldest. Normal yearly precipitation based on the 30-year average from 1991 to 2020 is 41.03 inches (1,042 mm).[124] The least precipitation occurs on the western side and directly along the lake, and the most occurs in the eastern suburbs. Parts of Geauga County to the east receive over 44 inches (1,100 mm) of liquid precipitation annually.[125]

Climate data for Cleveland (Hopkins Airport), 1991–2020 normals,[b] extremes 1871–present[c]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 73
(23)
77
(25)
83
(28)
88
(31)
93
(34)
104
(40)
103
(39)
102
(39)
101
(38)
93
(34)
82
(28)
77
(25)
104
(40)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 58.9
(14.9)
60.8
(16.0)
70.8
(21.6)
80.3
(26.8)
86.7
(30.4)
91.8
(33.2)
92.7
(33.7)
91.3
(32.9)
88.8
(31.6)
80.5
(26.9)
68.9
(20.5)
60.0
(15.6)
93.9
(34.4)
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 35.8
(2.1)
38.5
(3.6)
47.1
(8.4)
60.1
(15.6)
71.1
(21.7)
79.8
(26.6)
83.7
(28.7)
82.0
(27.8)
75.6
(24.2)
63.7
(17.6)
51.3
(10.7)
40.4
(4.7)
60.8
(16.0)
Daily mean °F (°C) 29.1
(−1.6)
31.1
(−0.5)
38.9
(3.8)
50.4
(10.2)
61.2
(16.2)
70.4
(21.3)
74.5
(23.6)
73.0
(22.8)
66.4
(19.1)
55.1
(12.8)
44.0
(6.7)
34.3
(1.3)
52.4
(11.3)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 22.3
(−5.4)
23.7
(−4.6)
30.7
(−0.7)
40.8
(4.9)
51.4
(10.8)
61.1
(16.2)
65.3
(18.5)
63.9
(17.7)
57.1
(13.9)
46.5
(8.1)
36.7
(2.6)
28.2
(−2.1)
44.0
(6.7)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 1.3
(−17.1)
4.0
(−15.6)
12.2
(−11.0)
25.9
(−3.4)
36.2
(2.3)
45.9
(7.7)
53.3
(11.8)
51.6
(10.9)
43.0
(6.1)
32.1
(0.1)
20.8
(−6.2)
9.8
(−12.3)
−2.2
(−19.0)
Record low °F (°C) −20
(−29)
−17
(−27)
−5
(−21)
10
(−12)
25
(−4)
31
(−1)
41
(5)
38
(3)
32
(0)
19
(−7)
0
(−18)
−15
(−26)
−20
(−29)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.99
(76)
2.49
(63)
3.06
(78)
3.75
(95)
3.79
(96)
3.83
(97)
3.67
(93)
3.56
(90)
3.93
(100)
3.60
(91)
3.37
(86)
2.99
(76)
41.03
(1,042)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 18.4
(47)
15.1
(38)
10.8
(27)
2.7
(6.9)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.25)
4.5
(11)
12.2
(31)
63.8
(162)
Average extreme snow depth inches (cm) 7.5
(19)
7.5
(19)
5.3
(13)
1.1
(2.8)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
1.5
(3.8)
4.5
(11)
10.8
(27)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 17.7 14.6 14.6 14.8 13.4 11.5 10.7 10.3 10.1 12.1 13.1 15.6 158.5
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 13.5 10.5 7.2 2.1 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 3.8 8.4 45.8
Average relative humidity (%) 73.3 73.0 70.4 66.1 67.3 69.0 69.8 73.1 73.7 70.8 71.9 74.1 71.0
Mean monthly sunshine hours 101.0 122.3 167.0 216.0 263.6 294.6 307.2 262.2 219.0 169.5 89.8 67.8 2,280
Percentage possible sunshine 34 41 45 54 59 65 67 61 59 49 30 24 51
Average ultraviolet index 2 2 4 6 7 9 9 8 6 4 2 1 5
Source 1: NOAA (relative humidity and sun 1961–1990)[126][127][128]
Source 2: Weather Atlas[129] (sunshine data)
Climate data for Cleveland
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average sea temperature °F (°C) 34.0
(1.1)
33.2
(0.6)
33.5
(0.8)
40.6
(4.8)
50.5
(10.3)
66.5
(19.2)
76.2
(24.5)
76.3
(24.6)
71.2
(21.8)
62.0
(16.7)
50.5
(10.3)
39.3
(4.1)
52.8
(11.6)
Mean daily daylight hours 10.0 11.0 12.0 13.0 15.0 15.0 15.0 14.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 9.0 12.3
Source: Weather Atlas[129]

Environment

[edit]
The west bank of the Flats and the Cuyahoga River in Downtown Cleveland, with Jacobs Pavilion, Cleveland's amphitheater

With its extensive cleanup of its Lake Erie shore and the Cuyahoga River, Cleveland has been recognized by national media as an environmental success story and a national leader in environmental protection.[75] Since the city's industrialization, the Cuyahoga River had become so affected by industrial pollution that it "caught fire" a total of 13 times beginning in 1868.[130] It was the river fire of June 1969 that spurred the city to action under Mayor Carl B. Stokes, and played a key role in the passage of the Clean Water Act in 1972 and the National Environmental Policy Act later that year.[81][130] Since that time, the Cuyahoga has been extensively cleaned up through the efforts of the city and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (OEPA).[75][131]

In addition to continued efforts to improve freshwater and air quality, Cleveland is now exploring renewable energy. The city's two main electrical utilities are FirstEnergy and Cleveland Public Power. Its climate action plan, updated in December 2018, has a 2050 target of 100% renewable power, along with reduction of greenhouse gases to 80% below the 2010 level.[132] In recent decades, Cleveland has been working to address the issue of harmful algal blooms on Lake Erie, fed primarily by agricultural runoff, which have presented new environmental challenges for the city and for northern Ohio.[133]

Demographics

[edit]
Historical population
CensusPop.Note
1820606
18301,07577.4%
18406,071464.7%
185017,034180.6%
186043,417154.9%
187092,829113.8%
1880160,14672.5%
1890261,35363.2%
1900381,76846.1%
1910560,66346.9%
1920796,84142.1%
1930900,42913.0%
1940878,336−2.5%
1950914,8084.2%
1960876,050−4.2%
1970750,903−14.3%
1980573,822−23.6%
1990505,616−11.9%
2000478,403−5.4%
2010396,815−17.1%
2020372,624−6.1%
2024 (est.)365,379[6]−1.9%
U.S. Decennial Census[12][134]
Historical racial/ethnic composition
Race/ethnicity 2020[89] 2010[134] 1990[135] 1970[135] 1940[135]
White (non-Hispanic) 32.1% 33.4% 47.8% 59.4%[d] 90.2%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 47.5% 52.4% 46.6% 38.3% 9.6%
Hispanic or Latino 13.1% 10.0% 4.6% 1.9%[d] 0.1%
Asian (non-Hispanic)[e] 2.8% 1.8% 1.0% 0.6% -
Native American (non-Hispanic) 0.2% 0.2% 0.3% 0.2%
Two or more races (non-Hispanic) 3.8% 1.8%

At the 2020 census, there were 372,624 people and 170,549 households in Cleveland. The population density was 4,901.51 inhabitants per square mile (1,892.5/km2). The median household income was $30,907 and the per capita income was $21,223. 32.7% of the population was living below the poverty line. Of the city's population over the age of 25, 17.5% held a bachelor's degree or higher, and 80.8% had a high school diploma or equivalent.[6] The median age was 36.6 years.[136]

As of 2020, the racial and ethnic composition of the city was 47.5% African American, 32.1% non-Hispanic white, 13.1% Hispanic or Latino, 2.8% Asian, 0% Pacific Islander, 0.2% Native American, and 3.8% from two or more races.[89] 85.3% of Clevelanders age five and older spoke only English at home, while 14.7% spoke a language other than English, including Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, Hungarian, Albanian, and various Slavic languages (Russian, Polish, Serbian, Croatian, and Slovene).[6] The city's spoken accent is an advanced form of Inland Northern American English, similar to other Great Lakes cities, but distinctive from the rest of Ohio.[137][138]

Ethnicity

[edit]
Originally built in 1905 as the Jewish Temple B'nai Jeshurun, this building on Cleveland's East Side, today known as the Shiloh Baptist Church, now serves an African American congregation.

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Cleveland saw a massive influx of immigrants from Ireland, Italy, and the Austro-Hungarian, German, Russian, and Ottoman empires, most of whom were attracted by manufacturing jobs.[11] As a result, Cleveland and Cuyahoga County today have substantial communities of Irish (especially in West Park), Italians (especially in Little Italy), Germans, and several Central-Eastern European ethnicities, including Czechs, Hungarians, Lithuanians, Poles, Romanians, Russians, Rusyns, Slovaks, Ukrainians, and ex-Yugoslav groups, such as Slovenes, Croats and Serbs.[11] The presence of Hungarians within Cleveland proper was, at one time, so great that the city boasted the highest concentration of Hungarians in the world outside of Budapest.[139] Cleveland has a long-established Jewish community, historically centered on the East Side neighborhoods of Glenville and Kinsman, but now mostly concentrated in East Side suburbs such as Cleveland Heights and Beachwood, location of the Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage.[140]

The availability of jobs attracted African Americans from the South. Between 1910 and 1970, the black population of Cleveland, largely concentrated on the city's East Side, increased significantly as a result of the First and Second Great Migrations.[44] Cleveland's Latino community consists primarily of Puerto Ricans, as well as smaller numbers of immigrants from Mexico, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, South and Central America, and Spain.[141] The city's Asian community, centered on historical Asiatown, consists of Chinese, Koreans, Vietnamese, and other groups.[142] Additionally, the city and the county have significant communities of Albanians,[143] Arabs (especially Lebanese, Syrians, and Palestinians),[144] Armenians,[145] French,[146] Greeks,[147] Iranians,[148] Scots,[11] Turks,[149] and West Indians.[11] A 2020 analysis found Cleveland to be the most ethnically and racially diverse major city in Ohio.[150]

Religion

[edit]

The influx of immigrants in the 19th and early 20th centuries drastically transformed Cleveland's religious landscape. From a homogeneous settlement of New England Protestants, it evolved into a city with a diverse religious composition. The predominant faith among Clevelanders today is Christianity, with Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, and Buddhist minorities.[151]

Immigration

[edit]

Within Cleveland, the neighborhoods with the highest foreign-born populations are Asiatown/Goodrich–Kirtland Park (32.7%), Clark–Fulton (26.7%), West Boulevard (18.5%), Brooklyn Centre (17.3%), Downtown (17.2%), University Circle (15.9%, with 20% in Little Italy), and Jefferson (14.3%).[152] Recent waves of immigration have brought new groups to Cleveland, including Ethiopians and South Asians,[153][154] as well as immigrants from Russia and the former USSR,[155][156] Southeast Europe (especially Albania),[143] the Middle East, East Asia, and Latin America.[11] In the 2010s, the immigrant population of Cleveland and Cuyahoga County began to see significant growth.[157] A 2019 study found Cleveland to be the city with the shortest average processing time in the nation for immigrants to become U.S. citizens.[158] The city's annual One World Day in Rockefeller Park includes a naturalization ceremony of new immigrants.[159]

Economy

[edit]
Entrance of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland on East 6th Street

Cleveland's location on the Cuyahoga River and Lake Erie has been key to its growth as a major commercial center.[13] Steel and many other manufactured goods emerged as leading industries.[160][37] The city has since diversified its economy in addition to its manufacturing sector.[13]

Established in 1914, the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland is one of 12 U.S. Federal Reserve Banks.[161] Its downtown building, located on East 6th Street and Superior Avenue, was completed in 1923 by the Cleveland architectural firm Walker and Weeks.[162][163] The headquarters of the Federal Reserve System's Fourth District, the bank employs 1,000 people and maintains branch offices in Cincinnati and Pittsburgh.[161]

Commerce by Daniel Chester French at the Metzenbaum U.S. Courthouse on Superior Avenue

Cleveland and Cuyahoga County are home to Fortune 500 companies Cleveland-Cliffs, Progressive, Sherwin-Williams, Parker-Hannifin, KeyCorp, and Travel Centers of America. Other large companies based in the city and the county include Aleris, American Greetings, Applied Industrial Technologies, Eaton, Forest City Realty Trust, Heinen's Fine Foods, Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Lincoln Electric, Medical Mutual of Ohio, Moen Incorporated, NACCO Industries, Nordson Corporation, OM Group, Swagelok, Kirby Company, Things Remembered, Third Federal S&L, TransDigm Group, and Vitamix. NASA maintains the Glenn Research Center in Cleveland. Jones Day, one of the largest law firms in the U.S., was founded in Cleveland in 1893.[164]

Healthcare

[edit]

Healthcare plays a major role in Cleveland's economy. The city's "Big Three" hospital systems are the Cleveland Clinic, University Hospitals, and MetroHealth.[165] The Cleveland Clinic is the largest private employer in the state of Ohio, with a workforce of over 55,000 as of 2022.[166] It carries the distinction of being one of the best hospital systems in the world.[167] The clinic is led by Croatian-born president and CEO Tomislav Mihaljevic and it is affiliated with Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine.[168]

University Hospitals includes the University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center and its Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital. Cliff Megerian serves as that system's CEO.[169] MetroHealth on the city's west side is led by president and CEO Christine Alexander-Rager.[170] Formerly known as City Hospital, it operates one of two Level I trauma centers in the city, and has various locations throughout Greater Cleveland.[171][172]

In 2013, Cleveland's Global Center for Health Innovation opened with 235,000 square feet (21,800 m2) of display space for healthcare companies across the world.[173] To take advantage of the proximity of universities and other medical centers in Cleveland, the Veterans Administration moved the region's VA hospital from suburban Brecksville to a new facility in University Circle.[174]

Cleveland's "Big Three" hospitals – The Cleveland Clinic, University Hospitals, and MetroHealth

Arts and culture

[edit]

Theater and performing arts

[edit]
Playhouse Square

Cleveland's Playhouse Square is the second largest performing arts center in the U.S. behind New York City's Lincoln Center.[175] It includes the State, Palace, Allen, Hanna, and Ohio theaters.[50] The theaters host Broadway musicals, special concerts, speaking engagements, and other events throughout the year. Playhouse Square's resident performing arts companies include Cleveland Ballet, the Cleveland International Film Festival, the Cleveland Play House, Cleveland State University Department of Theatre and Dance, DANCECleveland, the Great Lakes Theater Festival, and the Tri-C Jazz Fest.[176] A city with strong traditions in theater and vaudeville, Cleveland has produced many renowned performers, most prominently comedian Bob Hope.[177]

Outside Playhouse Square is Karamu House, the oldest African American theater in the nation, established in 1915.[178] On the West Side, the Gordon Square Arts District in the Detroit–Shoreway neighborhood is the location of the Capitol Theatre, the Near West Theatre, and an Off-Off-Broadway playhouse, the Cleveland Public Theatre.[117] The Dobama Theatre and the Beck Center for the Arts are based in Cleveland's streetcar suburbs of Cleveland Heights and Lakewood respectively.[179]

Music

[edit]
The Cleveland Orchestra performing at Severance Hall

The Cleveland Orchestra is widely considered one of the world's finest orchestras, and often referred to as the finest in the nation.[180] It is one of the "Big Five" major orchestras in the U.S.[181] The orchestra plays at Severance Hall in University Circle during the winter and at Blossom Music Center in Cuyahoga Falls during the summer.[182] The city is also home to the Cleveland Pops Orchestra, Apollo's Fire Baroque Orchestra, the Cleveland Youth Orchestra, the Contemporary Youth Orchestra, the Cleveland Youth Wind Symphony, and the biennial Cleveland International Piano Competition which has, in the past, often featured the Cleveland Orchestra.[183]

One Playhouse Square, now the headquarters for Cleveland's public broadcasters, was initially used as the broadcast studios of WJW (AM), where disc jockey Alan Freed first popularized the term "rock and roll".[72] Beginning in the 1950s, Cleveland gained a strong reputation as a key breakout market for rock music.[184] Its popularity in the city was so great that Billy Bass, the program director at the WMMS radio station, referred to Cleveland as "The Rock and Roll Capital of the World".[184] The Cleveland Agora Theatre and Ballroom has served as a major venue for rock concerts in the city since the 1960s.[185] From 1974 through 1980, the city hosted the World Series of Rock at Cleveland Municipal Stadium.[186]

Jazz and R&B have a long history in Cleveland. Many major figures in jazz performed in the city, including Louis Armstrong, Cab Calloway, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, and Billie Holiday.[187][188] Legendary pianist Art Tatum regularly played in Cleveland clubs in the 1930s,[187] and gypsy jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt gave his U.S. debut performance in Cleveland in 1946.[189] Prominent jazz artist Noble Sissle was a graduate of Cleveland Central High School, and Artie Shaw worked and performed in Cleveland early in his career.[187] The Tri-C Jazz Fest has been held annually in Cleveland at Playhouse Square since 1980, and the Cleveland Jazz Orchestra was established in 1984.[190]

The city has a history of polka music being popular both past and present and is the location of the Polka Hall of Fame. There is even a subgenre called Cleveland-style polka, named after the city. The music's popularity is due in part to the success of Frankie Yankovic, a Cleveland native who was considered "America's Polka King".[191]

There is a significant hip hop music scene in Cleveland. In 1997, the Cleveland hip hop group Bone Thugs-n-Harmony won a Grammy for their song "Tha Crossroads".[192]

Film and television

[edit]
Cleveland Fire Department (1900) by the Edison Company, one of the first films made in Cleveland

The first film shot in Cleveland was in 1897 by the company of Ohioan Thomas Edison.[193] Before Hollywood became the center for American cinema, filmmaker Samuel Brodsky and playwright Robert McLaughlin operated a film studio at the Andrews mansion on Euclid Avenue (now the WEWS-TV studio).[194] There they produced major silent-era features, such as Dangerous Toys (1921), which are now considered lost. Brodsky also directed the weekly Plain Dealer Screen Magazine that ran in theaters in Cleveland and Ohio from 1917 to 1924.[193] In addition, Cleveland hosted over a dozen sponsored film studios, including Cinécraft Productions, which still operates in Ohio City.[193][195]

In the "talkie" era, Cleveland featured in several major studio films, such as Michael Curtiz's pre-Code classic Goodbye Again (1933) with Warren William and Joan Blondell. Players from the 1948 Cleveland Indians appeared in The Kid from Cleveland (1949). Billy Wilder's The Fortune Cookie (1966) was set and filmed in the city and marked the first onscreen pairing of Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon. Labor struggles in Cleveland were depicted in Native Land (1942), narrated by Paul Robeson, and in Norman Jewison's F.I.S.T. (1978) with Sylvester Stallone. Clevelander Jim Jarmusch's Stranger Than Paradise (1984) – a deadpan comedy about two New Yorkers who travel to Florida by way of Cleveland – was a favorite of the Cannes Film Festival. Major League (1989) reflected the perennial struggles of the Cleveland Indians, while American Splendor (2003) reflected the life of Cleveland graphic novelist Harvey Pekar. Kill the Irishman (2011) depicted the 1970s turf war between Danny Greene and the Cleveland crime family.[193]

Cleveland has doubled for other locations in films. The wedding and reception scenes in The Deer Hunter (1978), while set in suburban Pittsburgh, were shot in Cleveland's Tremont neighborhood. A Christmas Story (1983) was set in Indiana, but drew many external shots from Cleveland. The opening shots of Air Force One (1997) were filmed in and above Severance Hall, and Judas and the Black Messiah (2021) was filmed in Cleveland, although set in Chicago. Downtown Cleveland doubled for Manhattan in Spider-Man 3 (2007), The Avengers (2012), and The Fate of the Furious (2017), and for Metropolis in James Gunn's Superman (2025). Future productions are handled by the Greater Cleveland Film Commission at the Leader Building on Superior Avenue.[193][196]

In television, the city is the setting for the popular network sitcom The Drew Carey Show, starring Cleveland native Drew Carey.[197] Hot in Cleveland, a comedy that aired on TV Land, premiered on June 16, 2010, and ran for six seasons until its finale on June 3, 2015.[198][199] Cleveland Hustles, the CNBC reality show co-created by LeBron James, was filmed in the city.[117]

Literature

[edit]
Jazz poet and resident Clevelander Langston Hughes

Cleveland has a thriving literary and poetry community, with regular poetry readings at bookstores, coffee shops, and various other venues.[200] In 1925, Russian Futurist poet Vladimir Mayakovsky came to Cleveland and gave a poetry recitation to the city's ethnic working class, as part of his trip to America.[201][202] The Cleveland State University Poetry Center serves as an academic center for poetry in the city.[203]

Langston Hughes, preeminent poet of the Harlem Renaissance and child of an itinerant couple, lived in Cleveland as a teenager and attended Central High School in Cleveland in the 1910s.[204] At Central High, the young writer was taught by Helen Maria Chesnutt, daughter of Cleveland-born African American novelist Charles W. Chesnutt.[205] Hughes authored some of his earliest poems, plays, and short stories in Cleveland and contributed to the school newspaper.[206] The African American avant-garde poet Russell Atkins lived in the city as well.[207]

The American modernist poet Hart Crane was born in nearby Garrettsville, Ohio in 1899. His adolescence was divided between Cleveland and Akron before he moved to New York City in 1916.[208] Cleveland was the home of Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel, who created the comic book character Superman in 1933.[209][210] Harlan Ellison, noted author of speculative fiction, was born in Cleveland in 1934. As a young man, he published a series of short stories appearing in the Cleveland News, and performed in a number of productions for the Cleveland Play House.[211]

Cleveland is the site of the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award, which recognizes books that have contributed to the understanding of racism and human diversity.[212] Presented by the Cleveland Foundation, it remains the only American book prize focusing on works that address racism and diversity.[213]

Museums and galleries

[edit]
The Cleveland Museum of Art lies at the edge of Wade Lagoon in University Circle.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on the shores of Lake Erie

Cleveland has two main art museums. The Cleveland Museum of Art is a major American art museum, with a collection that includes more than 60,000 works of art.[214] The Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland showcases established and emerging artists, particularly from the Cleveland area, through hosting and producing temporary exhibitions.[215] Both museums offer free admission to visitors.[216][215]

The two museums are part of Cleveland's University Circle, a 550-acre (2.2 km2) concentration of cultural, educational, and medical institutions located 5 miles (8.0 km) east of downtown. In addition to the art museums, the neighborhood includes the Cleveland Botanical Garden, Case Western Reserve University, University Hospitals, Severance Hall, the Maltz Performing Arts Center, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, and the Western Reserve Historical Society. Also located at University Circle is the Cleveland Cinematheque at the Cleveland Institute of Art.[217]

The I. M. Pei-designed Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is located on Cleveland's Lake Erie waterfront at North Coast Harbor downtown. Neighboring attractions include Cleveland Browns Stadium, the Great Lakes Science Center, the Steamship Mather Museum, the International Women's Air & Space Museum, and the USS Cod, a World War II submarine. Designed by architect Levi T. Scofield, the Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument at Public Square is Cleveland's major Civil War memorial and a major attraction in the city.[32] Other city attractions include Grays Armory,[218] the Cleveland Masonic Temple,[219] and the Children's Museum of Cleveland.[220] A Cleveland holiday attraction, especially for fans of Jean Shepherd's A Christmas Story, is the Christmas Story House and Museum in Tremont.[221]

Annual events

[edit]
The Feast of the Assumption in Cleveland's Little Italy

Cleveland hosts the WinterLand holiday display lighting festival annually at Public Square.[222] The Cleveland International Film Festival has been held in the city since 1977,[223] and the Cleveland Silent Film Festival has been held since 2022.[224] The Cleveland National Air Show, an indirect successor to the National Air Races, has been held at the city's Burke Lakefront Airport since 1964.[225] The Great Lakes Burning River Fest, a two-night music and beer festival at Whiskey Island, has been sponsored by the Great Lakes Brewing Company since 2001.[226]

Many ethnic festivals are held in Cleveland throughout the year. These include the annual Feast of the Assumption in Little Italy,[227] Russian Maslenitsa in Rockefeller Park,[228] the Puerto Rican Parade and Cultural Festival in Clark–Fulton,[229] the Cleveland Asian Festival in Asiatown,[230] the Tremont Greek Fest,[231] and the St. Mary Romanian Festival in West Park.[232] Cleveland also hosts annual Polish Dyngus Day and Slovene Kurentovanje celebrations.[233][234] The city's annual Saint Patrick's Day parade brings hundreds of thousands to the streets of Downtown.[235] The Cleveland Thyagaraja Festival held each spring at Cleveland State University is the largest Indian classical music and dance festival in the world outside of India.[236] Since 1946, the city has annually marked One World Day in the Cleveland Cultural Gardens in Rockefeller Park, celebrating all of its ethnic communities.[159]

Cuisine

[edit]
The historic West Side Market in Cleveland's Ohio City neighborhood

Cleveland's mosaic of ethnic communities and their various culinary traditions have long played an important role in defining the city's cuisine. Local mainstays include an abundance of Slavic, Hungarian, and Central-Eastern European contributions, such as kielbasa, stuffed cabbage, pierogies, goulash, and chicken paprikash.[237] Italian, German, Irish, and Jewish cuisines are also prominent in Cleveland, as are Lebanese, Greek, Chinese, Puerto Rican, Mexican, and numerous other ethnic cuisines. Vendors at the West Side Market in Ohio City offer many ethnic foods for sale.[238] In addition, the city boasts a vibrant barbecue and soul food scene.[239]

Slyman's Deli on Cleveland's near East Side is notable for its corned beef sandwich, with patrons including former US Presidents George W. Bush and Joe Biden.[240] Another celebrated sandwich, the Polish Boy, is a popular street food and Cleveland original frequently sold at downtown hot dog carts and stadium concession stands.[241] Brown stadium mustard is synonymous with Cleveland, especially Bertman Original Ballpark Mustard.[242] Another notable local food item with Depression-era roots is city chicken.[243]

With its blue-collar roots well intact, and plenty of Lake Erie perch and walleye available, the tradition of Friday night fish fries remains alive and thriving in Cleveland, particularly in ethnic parish-based settings, especially during the season of Lent.[244] Clambakes are likewise embedded into the city's culinary culture.[245][246] For dessert, the Cleveland Cassata Cake is a unique treat invented in the local Italian community and served in Italian establishments throughout the city.[247] Another popular dessert, the locally crafted Russian Tea Biscuit, is common in many Jewish bakeries in Cleveland.[248]

Cleveland is noted in the world of celebrity food culture. Famous local figures include chef Michael Symon and food writer Michael Ruhlman, both of whom achieved local and national attention for their contributions to the culinary world. In 2007, Symon helped gain the spotlight when he was named "The Next Iron Chef" on the Food Network. That same year, Ruhlman collaborated with Anthony Bourdain, to do an episode of his Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations focusing on Cleveland's restaurant scene.[249]

Breweries

[edit]

Ohio produces the fifth most beer in the U.S., with its largest brewery being Cleveland's Great Lakes Brewing Company.[250] Cleveland has had a long history of brewing, tied to many of its ethnic immigrants, and has reemerged as a regional leader in production.[251] Dozens of breweries exist within city limits, including large producers such as Market Garden Brewery and Platform Beer Company. Although breweries can be found throughout the city, the highest concentration is in the Ohio City neighborhood.[252] Cleveland hosts expansions from other countries as well, including the Scottish BrewDog and German Hofbrauhaus.[253][254]

Sports

[edit]
Progressive Field has served as home to the Cleveland Guardians since 1994.
Cleveland Browns games attract large crowds to Huntington Bank Field.
Cleveland Cavaliers pregame festivities at Rocket Arena

Cleveland's major professional sports teams are the Cleveland Guardians (Major League Baseball), the Cleveland Browns (National Football League), and the Cleveland Cavaliers (National Basketball Association). Other professional teams include the Cleveland Monsters (American Hockey League), the Cleveland Charge (NBA G League), the Cleveland Crunch (Major League Indoor Soccer), Cleveland SC (National Premier Soccer League), and the Cleveland Fusion (Women's Football Alliance). Local sporting venues include Progressive Field, Huntington Bank Field, Rocket Arena, the Wolstein Center, and Public Auditorium.

Professional

[edit]

Major League

Club Sport League Venue Est. in CLE Championships
(in Cleveland)
Cleveland Browns Football National Football League Huntington Bank Field 1946 8
(4 AAFC, 4 NFL)
Cleveland Cavaliers Basketball National Basketball Association Rocket Arena 1970 1
Cleveland WNBA team Basketball Women's National Basketball Association Rocket Arena 2028 0
Cleveland Guardians Baseball Major League Baseball Progressive Field 1901 2

Minor League

Club Sport League Venue Est. in CLE Championships
(in Cleveland)
Cleveland Charge Basketball NBA G League Public Auditorium 2021 0
Cleveland Monsters Ice hockey American Hockey League Rocket Arena 2007 1
Cleveland Crunch Indoor Soccer Major League Indoor Soccer Wolstein Center 1989 5
(3 NPSL, 1 M2, 1 MLIS)
Cleveland Pro Soccer Soccer MLS Next Pro TBA 2022 0

The Cleveland Guardians – known as the Indians from 1915 to 2021 – won the World Series in 1920 and 1948. They also won the American League pennant, making the World Series in the 1954, 1995, 1997, and 2016 seasons. Between 1995 and 2001, the team sold out 455 consecutive games, a Major League Baseball record that stood until 2008.[255]

Historically, the Browns have been among the most successful franchises in American football history, winning eight titles during a short period of time – 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1954, 1955, and 1964. The Browns have never played in a Super Bowl, getting close five times by making it to the NFL/AFC Championship Game in 1968, 1969, 1986, 1987, and 1989. Former owner Art Modell's relocation of the Browns after the 1995 season caused tremendous heartbreak and resentment among local fans.[256] After a series of lawsuits, a compromise was reached between Modell, Cleveland mayor Michael R. White, and NFL and Commissioner Paul Tagliabue to bring back the Browns beginning in the 1999 season, retaining all team history.[257] In Cleveland's earlier football history, the Cleveland Bulldogs won the NFL Championship in 1924,[258] and the Cleveland Rams won the NFL Championship in 1945 before relocating to Los Angeles.[259]

The Cavaliers won the Eastern Conference in 2007, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 but were defeated in the NBA Finals by the San Antonio Spurs and then by the Golden State Warriors, respectively. The Cavs won the Conference again in 2016 and won their first NBA Championship coming back from a 3–1 deficit, finally defeating the Golden State Warriors. Afterwards, over 1.3 million people attended a parade held in the Cavs' honor on June 22, 2016, in downtown Cleveland.[260] Previously, the Cleveland Rosenblums dominated the original American Basketball League,[261] and the Cleveland Pipers, owned by George Steinbrenner, won the American Basketball League championship in 1962.[262]

The Cleveland Monsters of the American Hockey League won the 2016 Calder Cup. They were the first Cleveland AHL team to do so since the 1964 Barons.[263]

College

[edit]
Club Sport League Venue
Cleveland State Vikings 19 Varsity
(8 men's, 10 women's, 1 co-ed)
NCAA Division I
(Horizon League)
various – including:
Krenzler Field (soccer)
Wolstein Center (men's and women's basketball)
Woodling Gym (wrestling and volleyball)
Case Western Reserve Spartans 17 Varsity
(9 men's, 8 women's)
NCAA Division III
(University Athletic Association)
various – including:
DiSanto Field (football, soccer)
Veale Athletic Center (men's and women's basketball)

Collegiately, NCAA Division I Cleveland State Vikings have 19 varsity sports, nationally known for their Cleveland State Vikings men's basketball team.[264] NCAA Division III Case Western Reserve Spartans have 17 varsity sports, most known for their Case Western Reserve Spartans football team.[265] The headquarters of the Mid-American Conference (MAC) are in Cleveland. The conference stages both its men's and women's basketball tournaments at Rocket Arena.[266]

Annual and special events

[edit]

The Cleveland Marathon has been hosted annually since 1978,[267] and a monument commemorating one of Cleveland's most prominent track and field athletes, Jesse Owens, stands at the city's Fort Huntington Park.[268] The second American Chess Congress, a predecessor to the U.S. Championship, was held in Cleveland in 1871, and won by George Henry Mackenzie.[269] The 1921 and 1957 U.S. Open Chess Championships took place in the city, and were won by Edward Lasker and Bobby Fischer, respectively. The Cleveland Open is held annually.[270] In 2014, Cleveland hosted the ninth official Gay Games ceremony.[271] In July 2024, the city hosted the Pan American Masters Games.[272]

Parks and recreation

[edit]
Cleveland and Lake Erie in winter from Edgewater Park

Known locally as the "Emerald Necklace", the Olmsted-inspired Cleveland Metroparks encircle Cleveland and Cuyahoga County. The city proper encompasses the Metroparks' Brookside and Lakefront Reservations, as well as significant parts of the Rocky River, Washington, and Euclid Creek Reservations. The Lakefront Reservation, which provides public access to Lake Erie, consists of four parks: Edgewater Park, Whiskey Island–Wendy Park, East 55th Street Marina, and Gordon Park.[273]

Three more parks fall under the jurisdiction of the Euclid Creek Reservation: Euclid Beach, Villa Angela, and Wildwood Marina.[274] Further south, bike and hiking trails in the Brecksville and Bedford Reservations, along with Garfield Park, provide access to trails in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park.[275] Also included in the Metroparks system is the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, established in 1882. Located in Big Creek Valley, the zoo has one of the largest collections of primates in North America.[276]

In addition to the Metroparks, the Cleveland Public Parks District oversees the city's neighborhood parks, the largest of which is the historic Rockefeller Park. The latter is notable for its late 19th century landmark bridges, the Rockefeller Park Greenhouse, and the Cleveland Cultural Gardens, which celebrate the city's ethnic diversity.[277][159] Just outside of Rockefeller Park, the Cleveland Botanical Garden in University Circle, established in 1930, is the oldest civic garden center in the nation.[278] In addition, the Greater Cleveland Aquarium, located in the historic FirstEnergy Powerhouse in the Flats, is the only independent, free-standing aquarium in the state of Ohio.[279]

Government and politics

[edit]
Cleveland City Hall

Government and courts

[edit]

Cleveland operates on a mayor–council (strong mayor) form of government, in which the mayor is the chief executive and the city council serves as the legislative branch. City council members are elected from 17 wards to four-year terms. From 1924 to 1931, the city briefly experimented with a council–manager government under William R. Hopkins and Daniel E. Morgan before returning to the mayor–council system.[280]

Cleveland is served by Cleveland Municipal Court, the first municipal court in the state.[281] The city also anchors the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, based at the Carl B. Stokes U.S. Courthouse and the historic Howard M. Metzenbaum U.S. Courthouse. The Chief Judge for the Northern District is Sara Elizabeth Lioi and the Clerk of Court is Sandy Opacich.[282] The U.S. Attorney is Carol Skutnik and the U.S. Marshal is Peter Elliott.[283][284]

Politics

[edit]

The office of the mayor has been held by Justin Bibb since 2022.[285] Previous mayors include progressive Democrat Tom L. Johnson, World War I-era War Secretary and BakerHostetler founder Newton D. Baker, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harold Hitz Burton, two-term Ohio Governor and Senator Frank J. Lausche, former U.S. Health, Education, and Welfare Secretary Anthony J. Celebrezze, two-term Ohio Governor and Senator George V. Voinovich, former U.S. Congressman Dennis Kucinich, and Carl B. Stokes, the first African American mayor of a major U.S. city. Frank G. Jackson was the city's longest-serving mayor.[286]

The President of Cleveland City Council is Blaine Griffin, the council Majority Leader is Kerry McCormack, and the Majority Whip is Jasmin Santana.[287] Patricia Britt serves as the Clerk of Council.[288]

Historically, from the Civil War era to the 1940s, Cleveland had been dominated by the Republican Party, with the notable exceptions of the Johnson and Baker mayoral administrations.[280] Businessman and Senator Mark Hanna was among Cleveland's most influential Republican figures, both locally and nationally.[289] Another nationally prominent Ohio Republican, former U.S. President James A. Garfield, was born in Cuyahoga County's Orange Township (today the Cleveland suburb of Moreland Hills). His resting place is the James A. Garfield Memorial in Cleveland's Lake View Cemetery.[290]

Today Cleveland is a major stronghold for the Democratic Party in Ohio. Although local elections are nonpartisan, Democrats still dominate every level of government.[280] Politically, Cleveland and several of its neighboring suburbs comprise Ohio's 11th congressional district. The district is represented by Shontel Brown, one of five Democrats representing the state of Ohio in the U.S. House of Representatives.[291]

Cleveland has hosted three Republican national conventions, in 1924, 1936, and 2016.[292] Additionally, the city hosted the 1864 Radical Democratic National Convention.[293] Although Cleveland has not hosted a national convention for the Democrats, it has hosted several national election debates, including the second 1980 U.S. presidential debate, the 2004 U.S. vice presidential debate, one 2008 Democratic primary debate, and the first 2020 U.S. presidential debate.[294] Founded in 1912, the City Club of Cleveland provides a platform for national and local debates and discussions. Known as Cleveland's "Citadel of Free Speech", it is one of the oldest continuous independent free speech and debate forums in the country.[295][296]

Public safety

[edit]
Cleveland Police utility vehicle
Cleveland EMS ambulance

Police and law enforcement

[edit]

Like in other major American cities, crime in Cleveland is concentrated in areas with higher rates of poverty and lower access to jobs.[297][298] In recent decades, the rate of crime in the city, although higher than the national average, experienced a significant decline, following a nationwide trend in falling crime rates.[297][299] However, as in other major U.S. cities, crime in Cleveland saw an abrupt rise in 2020–21.[300]

Cleveland's law enforcement agency is the Cleveland Division of Police, established in 1866.[301] The division had roughly 1,100 sworn officers as of 2024, covering five police districts.[302] The district system was introduced in the 1930s by Cleveland Public Safety Director Eliot Ness (of the Untouchables), who later ran for mayor of Cleveland in 1947.[301][303] The Chief of Police is Dorothy A. Todd.[304] In addition, the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Office is based in Downtown Cleveland at the Justice Center Complex.[305]

Fire department

[edit]

Cleveland is served by the firefighters of the Cleveland Division of Fire, established in 1863.[306] The fire department operates out of 22 active fire stations throughout the city in five battalions. Each Battalion is commanded by a Battalion Chief, who reports to an on-duty Assistant Chief.[307][308]

The Division of Fire operates a fire apparatus fleet of twenty-two engine companies, eight ladder companies, three tower companies, two task force rescue squad companies, hazardous materials ("haz-mat") unit, and numerous other special, support, and reserve units. The Chief of Department is Anthony Luke.[309]

Emergency medical services

[edit]

Cleveland EMS is operated by the city as its own municipal third-service EMS division. Cleveland EMS is the primary provider of Advanced Life Support and ambulance transport within the city of Cleveland, while Cleveland Fire assists by providing fire response medical care.[310] Although a merger between the fire and EMS departments was proposed in the past, the idea was subsequently abandoned.[311]

Military

[edit]

Cleveland serves as headquarters to Coast Guard District 9 and is responsible for all U.S. Coast Guard operations on the five Great Lakes, the Saint Lawrence Seaway, and surrounding states accumulating 6,700 miles of shoreline and 1,500 miles of international shoreline with Canada. It reports up through the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Station Cleveland Harbor, located in North Coast Harbor, has a responsibility covering about 550 square miles of the federally navigable waters of Lake Erie, including the Cuyahoga and Rocky rivers, as well as a number of their tributaries.[312]

Education

[edit]
Interior of the 1925 main building of the Cleveland Public Library

Primary and secondary

[edit]

Cleveland is served by the Cleveland Metropolitan School District. It is the only K–12 district in Ohio under the direct control of the mayor, who appoints a school board.[313] Approximately 1 square mile (2.6 km2) of Cleveland's Buckeye–Shaker neighborhood is part of the Shaker Heights City School District. The area, which has been a part of the Shaker school district since the 1920s, permits these Cleveland residents to pay the same school taxes as the Shaker residents, as well as vote in the Shaker school board elections.[314]

There are several private and parochial schools in Cleveland.[315] These include Benedictine High School, Cleveland Central Catholic High School, Eleanor Gerson School, St. Ignatius High School, St. Joseph Academy, Villa Angela-St. Joseph High School, and St. Martin de Porres.

Colleges and universities

[edit]

Cleveland is home to a number of colleges and universities. Most prominent among them is Case Western Reserve University (CWRU), a widely recognized research and teaching institution based in University Circle with several major graduate programs.[316]

University Circle also contains the Cleveland Institute of Art and the Cleveland Institute of Music. Downtown Cleveland is home to Cleveland State University, a public research university with eight constituent colleges, and the metropolitan campus of Cuyahoga Community College.[316] Ohio Technical College is also based in Cleveland.[317] Cleveland's suburban universities and colleges include Baldwin Wallace University in Berea, John Carroll University in University Heights, and Ursuline College in Pepper Pike.[316]

Public library system

[edit]

Established in 1869,[318] the Cleveland Public Library is one of the largest public libraries in the nation with a collection of over 13 million materials in 2023.[319] It holds the Northeast Ohio Broadcast Archives,[320] and the John G. White Special Collection, with the largest chess library in the world and a rare collection of folklore and books on the Middle East and Eurasia.[321][322] The library's main building was designed by Walker and Weeks and dedicated in 1925,[323] under head librarian Linda Eastman, the first woman to lead a major library system in the U.S.[324] Between 1904 and 1920, 15 libraries built with funds from Andrew Carnegie were opened in the city.[325] Known as the "People's University", the library presently maintains 27 branches.[326] It serves as the headquarters for the CLEVNET library consortium, which includes 47 public library systems in Northeast Ohio.[327]

Media

[edit]

Print

[edit]

Cleveland's primary daily newspaper is The Plain Dealer and its associated online publication, Cleveland.com.[328] Defunct major newspapers include the Cleveland Press and the Cleveland News.[329][330] Additional publications include Cleveland Magazine, a regional culture magazine published monthly;[331] Crain's Cleveland Business, a weekly business newspaper;[332] and Cleveland Scene, a free alternative weekly paper which absorbed its competitor, the Cleveland Free Times, in 2008.[333] The digital Belt Magazine was founded in Cleveland in 2013.[334] Time magazine was published in Cleveland from 1925 to 1927.[335]

The Reserve Square building in Downtown Cleveland, home to the studios of Cleveland CBS affiliate WOIO and My Network TV affiliate WUAB
The Six Six Eight Building on Euclid Avenue – home base of iHeart Media's Cleveland radio stations, including WTAM, WARF, WAKS, WGAR, WMMS, WMJI, and WHLK

Several ethnic publications are based in Cleveland. These include the Call and Post, a weekly newspaper that primarily serves the city's African American community;[336] the Cleveland Jewish News, a weekly Jewish newspaper;[337] the bi-weekly Russian-language Cleveland Russian Magazine;[338] the Mandarin Erie Chinese Journal;[339] La Gazzetta Italiana in English and Italian;[340] the Ohio Irish American News;[341] and the Spanish language Vocero Latino News.[342]

TV

[edit]

The Cleveland-area television market is served by 11 full power stations, including WKYC (NBC), WEWS-TV (ABC), WJW (Fox), WDLI-TV (Bounce), WOIO (CBS), WVPX-TV (Ion), WVIZ (PBS), WUAB (MyNetworkTV), WRLM (TCT), WBNX-TV (CW), and WQHS-DT (Univision). As of 2021, the market, which includes the Akron and Canton areas, was the 19th-largest in the country, as measured by Nielsen Media Research.[343]

The Mike Douglas Show, a nationally syndicated daytime talk show, began in Cleveland in 1961 on KYW-TV (now WKYC),[344] while The Morning Exchange on WEWS-TV served as the model for Good Morning America.[345] Tim Conway and Ernie Anderson first established themselves in Cleveland while working together at KYW-TV and later WJW-TV (now WJW). Anderson both created and performed as the immensely popular Cleveland horror host Ghoulardi on WJW-TV's Shock Theater, and was later succeeded by the long-running late night duo Big Chuck and Lil' John.[346] Another Anderson protégé – Ron Sweed – would become a popular Cleveland late night movie host in his own right as "The Ghoul".[347]

Radio

[edit]

Cleveland is directly served by 29 full power AM and FM radio stations, 21 of which are licensed to the city. Music stations – which are frequently the highest-rated in the market – include WQAL (hot adult contemporary), WDOK (adult contemporary), WKLV-FM (Christian contemporary - K-Love), WAKS (contemporary hits), WHLK (adult hits), WMJI (classic hits), WMMS (active rock/hot talk), WNCX (classic rock), WNWV (alternative rock), WGAR-FM (country), WZAK (urban adult contemporary), WENZ (mainstream urban), WCSB (jazz), WCLV (classical), WABQ (urban gospel), and WJMO (Spanish/Tropical).[348][349][350] WMMS also serves as the FM flagship for the Cleveland Cavaliers and the Cleveland Guardians, WNCX is an FM flagship for the Cleveland Browns, and WJMO is the Browns' Spanish flagship.

News/talk stations include WHK, WTAM, and WERE. During the Golden Age of Radio, WHK was the first radio station to broadcast in Ohio, and one of the first in the country.[351][352] WTAM is the AM flagship for both the Cleveland Cavaliers and the Cleveland Guardians.[353][354] Sports stations include WKNR (ESPN), WARF (Fox) and WKRK-FM (Infinity), with WKNR and WKRK-FM serving as co-flagship stations for the Cleveland Browns, and WARF airing the Cleveland Monsters and – though primarily an English language station – Spanish broadcasts of Cleveland Guardians home games.[355][356][357] Religious stations include WHKW, WCCR, and WCRF.

As the regional NPR affiliate, WKSU serves all of Northeast Ohio (including both the Cleveland and Akron markets).[358] College stations include WBWC (Baldwin Wallace), WJCU (John Carroll), and WRUW-FM (Case Western Reserve).[349]

Transportation

[edit]

Transit

[edit]
An RTA train approaches Settlers Landing station on the Waterfront Line

Cleveland has a bus and rail mass transit system operated by the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority (RTA). The rail portion is officially called the RTA Rapid Transit, but local residents refer to it as The Rapid. It consists of three light rail lines, known as the Blue, Green, and Waterfront Lines, and a heavy rail line, the Red Line. In 2008, RTA completed the HealthLine, a bus rapid transit line, for which naming rights were purchased by the Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals. It runs along Euclid Avenue from downtown through University Circle, ending at the Louis Stokes Station at Windermere in East Cleveland.[359] In 1968, Cleveland became the first city in the nation to have a direct rail transit connection linking the city's downtown to its major airport.[69]

Walkability

[edit]

In 2021, Walk Score ranked Cleveland the 17th most walkable of the 50 largest cities in the U.S., with a Walk Score of 57, a Transit Score of 45, and a Bike Score of 55 (out of a maximum of 100). Cleveland's most walkable areas can be found in the Downtown, Ohio City, Detroit–Shoreway, University Circle, and Buckeye–Shaker neighborhoods.[360] Like other major cities, the urban density of Cleveland reduces the need for private vehicle ownership. In 2016, 23.7% of Cleveland households lacked a car, while the national average was 8.7%. Cleveland averaged 1.19 cars per household in 2016, compared to a national average of 1.8.[361]

Roads

[edit]
One of the "Guardians of Traffic" at the Hope Memorial Bridge

Cleveland's road system consists of numbered streets running roughly north–south, and named avenues, which run roughly east–west. The numbered streets are designated "east" or "west", depending on where they lie in relation to Ontario Street, which bisects Public Square.[362] The two downtown avenues which span the Cuyahoga change names on the west side of the river. Superior Avenue becomes Detroit Avenue on the West Side, and Carnegie Avenue becomes Lorain Avenue. The bridges that make these connections are the Hope Memorial (Lorain–Carnegie) Bridge and the Veterans Memorial (Detroit–Superior) Bridge.[363][364]

Freeways

[edit]

Cleveland is served by three two-digit interstate highwaysI-71, I-77, and I-90 – and by two three-digit interstates – I-480 and I-490. Running due east–west through the West Side suburbs, I-90 turns northeast at the junction with I-490, and is known as the Cleveland Inner Belt.[365] The Cleveland Memorial Shoreway carries SR 2 along its length, and at varying points carries US 6, US 20 and I-90.[366] At the junction with the Shoreway, I-90 makes a 90-degree turn in the area known as Dead Man's Curve, then continues northeast.[367] The Jennings Freeway (SR 176) connects I-71 just south of I-90 to I-480.[365] A third highway, the Berea Freeway (SR 237 in part), connects I-71 to the airport and forms part of the boundary between Brook Park and Cleveland's Hopkins neighborhood.[368]

Airports

[edit]

Cleveland is a major North American air market, serving 4.93 million people.[369] Cleveland Hopkins International Airport is the city's primary major airport and an international airport that serves the broader region. Originally known as Cleveland Municipal Airport, it was the first municipally owned airport in the country.[370] Cleveland Hopkins is a significant regional air freight hub hosting FedEx Express, UPS Airlines, U.S. Postal Service, and major commercial freight carriers. In addition to Hopkins, Cleveland is served by Burke Lakefront Airport, on the north shore of downtown between Lake Erie and the Shoreway. Burke is primarily a commuter and business airport.[371]

Seaport

[edit]
Shipping containers at the Port of Cleveland as seen from Lake Erie

The Port of Cleveland, at the Cuyahoga River's mouth, is a major bulk freight and container terminal on Lake Erie, receiving much of the raw materials used by the region's manufacturing industries.[372] The Port of Cleveland is the only container port on the Great Lakes with bi-weekly container service between Cleveland and the Port of Antwerp in Belgium on a Dutch service called the Cleveland-Europe Express.[373] In addition to freight, the Port of Cleveland welcomes regional and international tourists who pass through the city on Great Lakes cruises.[374]

Intercity rail and bus

[edit]

Cleveland has a long history as a major railroad hub in North America. Today, Amtrak provides service to Cleveland, via the Capitol Limited and Lake Shore Limited routes, which stop at Cleveland Lakefront Station. Additionally, Cleveland hosts several inter-modal freight railroad terminals, for Norfolk Southern, CSX and several smaller companies.[375][376]

National intercity bus service is provided by Greyhound from its downtown bus station.[377] Akron Metro, Brunswick Transit Alternative, Laketran, Lorain County Transit, and Medina County Transit provide connecting bus service to the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority. Geauga County Transit and Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority (PARTA) also offer connecting bus service in their neighboring areas.[378]

International relations

[edit]
Cyrus S. Eaton and his wife Anne in Leipzig, East Germany in 1960

Cleveland maintains cultural, economic, and educational ties with 27 sister cities around the world. It concluded its first sister city partnership with Lima, Peru, in 1964.[379] In addition, Cleveland hosts the Consulate General of the Republic of Slovenia, which, until Slovene independence in 1991, served as an official consulate for Tito's Yugoslavia.[380] The Cleveland Clinic operates the Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi hospital, two outpatient clinics in Toronto, and a hospital campus in London.[381] The Cleveland Council on World Affairs was established in 1923.[382]

Historically, Cleveland industrialist Cyrus S. Eaton, an apprentice of John D. Rockefeller, played a significant role in promoting dialogue between the U.S. and the Soviet Union during the Cold War.[383] In October 1915 at Cleveland's Bohemian National Hall, Czech American and Slovak American representatives signed the Cleveland Agreement, calling for the formation of a joint Czech and Slovak state.[384]

Sister cities of Cleveland[379]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Works cited

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Cleveland is a major city in northeastern Ohio, United States, situated on the southern shore of Lake Erie at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River and functioning as the county seat of Cuyahoga County.[1] Established in 1796 through a survey by the Connecticut Land Company led by General Moses Cleaveland, the settlement was incorporated as a village in 1814 and as a city in 1836.[1] As of 2024 estimates, the city proper has a population of 365,379, positioning it as the second-most populous municipality in Ohio behind Columbus, with its metropolitan statistical area encompassing roughly 2.17 million residents.[2][3] During the 19th and early 20th centuries, Cleveland emerged as a pivotal industrial center, particularly in iron ore processing, steel manufacturing, and related sectors, fueled by its strategic Lake Erie location and railroad connectivity, which once made it the nation's sixth-largest city by population.[1][4] Post-World War II deindustrialization led to substantial economic contraction, population exodus, and urban challenges, as heavy industry declined amid global competition and technological shifts.[5] In recent decades, the economy has diversified into healthcare, advanced manufacturing, and biotechnology, anchored by world-class institutions like the Cleveland Clinic and bolstered by ongoing revitalization efforts in downtown areas and innovation districts.[6][7] Culturally, Cleveland hosts prominent attractions including the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Severance Hall home to the Cleveland Orchestra, and professional sports teams such as the NBA's Cavaliers, MLB's Guardians, and NFL's Browns, contributing to its identity as a resilient Rust Belt hub with significant contributions to American music, medicine, and engineering.[1]

History

Founding and Early Settlement

The territory encompassing modern Cleveland formed part of the Connecticut Western Reserve, a 3.3 million-acre tract retained by Connecticut following the American Revolutionary War due to its colonial charter extending westward to the Pacific. In September 1795, Connecticut transferred its claims to the Connecticut Land Company, a syndicate of 35 investors organized to survey, subdivide, and sell the lands for profit. This speculative enterprise aimed to establish settlements in the region, then part of the Northwest Territory and sparsely populated by Native American tribes such as the Wyandot and Ottawa, following the 1795 Treaty of Greenville which ceded significant lands to the United States.[8][9] On July 22, 1796, General Moses Cleaveland, a Revolutionary War veteran and lawyer born in 1754 in Canterbury, Connecticut, led a 52-man surveying party dispatched by the Connecticut Land Company to the mouth of the Cuyahoga River. Cleaveland's group selected a site on the eastern bank for the principal town plat, envisioning it as the Reserve's capital under the name "New Connecticut." The settlement was named Cleveland in Cleaveland's honor, though the spelling later simplified by omitting the second "e" for typographical reasons in local printing. The surveyors laid out a grid of 100 blocks, each 10 acres, centered on a public square, but Cleaveland departed shortly after, leaving a small crew to complete the work amid encounters with local Massasauga bands.[10][11][12] Permanent settlement proceeded slowly due to the site's isolation—over 100 miles from the nearest established communities—dense forests, and endemic malaria from swampy lowlands along the river, which deterred many prospective buyers. Lorenzo Carter became the first enduring resident in May 1797, erecting a log cabin on the east bank and engaging in hunting, trapping, and rudimentary farming to sustain the outpost. By 1800, fewer than a dozen families had arrived, relying on subsistence agriculture and trade with Native Americans and passing boatmen on Lake Erie. The population reached about 57 by 1810, bolstered slightly by the 1807 completion of basic infrastructure like a lighthouse and dock, though high mortality from disease persisted, with early censuses recording Cuyahoga County at 306 inhabitants overall.[13][14]

Industrial Expansion and Peak Prosperity

Cleveland's industrial expansion accelerated in the mid-19th century, driven by its strategic location on Lake Erie and the Ohio and Erie Canal, which facilitated trade and transportation. The arrival of railroads in the 1850s transformed the city into a major hub for iron production and manufacturing, with early forges and foundries supporting railroad construction. By the Civil War era, Cleveland emerged as a key supplier of iron products, including cannons and munitions, boosting its economy through wartime demand. Population growth reflected this surge: from 6,071 residents in 1840 to 92,829 by 1870, fueled by European immigrants providing labor for emerging factories.[5][15][16] The late 19th and early 20th centuries marked Cleveland's rise as an industrial powerhouse, particularly in steel, oil refining, and machinery. John D. Rockefeller established Standard Oil in Cleveland in 1870, capitalizing on lake shipping and rail links to dominate petroleum refining, which accounted for significant economic output. Steel production expanded with companies like American Steel & Wire, employing thousands and producing materials for Great Lakes shipping and national infrastructure; by 1900, iron and steel formed the backbone of the city's manufacturing, alongside machine tools and chemicals. Euclid Avenue, dubbed "Millionaires' Row," symbolized this prosperity, lined with opulent mansions of tycoons like Rockefeller and Mark Hanna from the 1860s to 1920s, showcasing Gilded Age wealth derived from industry.[5][17][18] Peak prosperity arrived in the early 20th century, with Cleveland ranking as the fifth-largest U.S. city by 1920, its population reaching 796,841 amid waves of immigration and natural increase. The city's economy diversified into automobiles, electrical equipment, and aviation, supported by over 1,000 manufacturing firms by the 1920s; steel employment alone approached 30,000 workers post-World War II. Architectural landmarks like the Cleveland Trust Company Building (1907) and the Arcade (1890) reflected accumulated capital, while cultural institutions flourished amid high wages and low unemployment. This era's growth stemmed causally from resource access, transportation networks, and entrepreneurial innovation, though vulnerabilities to global competition loomed. Population peaked at 914,808 in 1950, capping decades of expansion before deindustrialization pressures emerged.[5][19][20]

Deindustrialization and Mid-20th Century Decline

Cleveland's manufacturing sector, which had propelled the city's growth through heavy industries like steel, automobiles, and machinery, peaked in the late 1960s before entering a prolonged downturn. Manufacturing employment reached its zenith in 1969, after which it declined precipitously, with approximately one-third of jobs eliminated by the early 1980s due to plant closures, layoffs, and relocations.[5] This deindustrialization was driven by multiple factors, including intensified foreign competition from rebuilt postwar economies in Japan and Europe, which offered lower-cost steel imports, and domestic automation that reduced labor requirements in aging facilities.[21][22] High labor costs, amplified by strong union contracts that prioritized wage increases and job protections over productivity enhancements, further eroded competitiveness, as U.S. producers struggled against global market shifts favoring more efficient foreign mills.[23] The steel industry, a cornerstone of Cleveland's economy employing around 30,000 workers immediately after World War II, bore the brunt of these pressures. By the late 1960s, steelmakers faced import surges and technological obsolescence in Cleveland's integrated mills, leading to initial cutbacks.[21] Key facilities operated by Republic Steel and Jones & Laughlin saw production curtailed amid the 1970s recession and oil crises, which spiked energy costs for energy-intensive operations; U.S. Steel shuttered its Cleveland plant in 1979, while Republic and Jones & Laughlin merged into LTV Steel in 1984 amid ongoing downsizing.[24][25] Ohio's steel output and employment halved from their 1970s peaks by the 1980s, reflecting broader Rust Belt trends where outdated infrastructure and rigid labor practices hindered adaptation to minimill technologies and global trade dynamics.[26] Population exodus mirrored these economic reversals, as job losses prompted out-migration to suburbs and beyond. Cleveland's population, at its historical high of 914,808 in 1950 per U.S. Census data, dropped to 876,050 by 1960 and 750,903 by 1970, with accelerated losses tied to factory shutdowns and white-collar suburbanization.[19] By 1980, it had fallen to 573,822, eroding the municipal tax base and straining public services amid rising unemployment rates that exceeded 10% in the late 1970s.[16] This demographic contraction, coupled with reduced manufacturing payrolls, precipitated fiscal insolvency; on December 15, 1978, Cleveland defaulted on $14 million in short-term loans to local banks, becoming the first major U.S. city to do so since the Great Depression, as revenues failed to cover expenditures amid outdated budgeting and lost industrial revenue.[27][28] The default stemmed directly from deindustrialization's erosion of employment and residency, which diminished property and income tax collections while demands for welfare and infrastructure maintenance surged.[29]

Late 20th and 21st Century Recovery Attempts

In the aftermath of Cleveland's 1978 municipal default—the first by a major U.S. city since the Great Depression—recovery efforts in the late 1970s and 1980s focused on fiscal stabilization amid ongoing manufacturing job losses, which reduced employment by one-third from 1969 peaks by the early 1980s.[5][28] State intervention via the Ohio Basic Building Code and federal aid helped avert deeper collapse, but broad economic revival stalled as population declined and suburban flight accelerated.[30] The 1990s marked a pivot under Mayor Michael R. White (1990–2001), emphasizing downtown redevelopment to attract visitors and investment rather than reversing industrial exodus. The Gateway Sports and Entertainment Complex, approved by Cuyahoga County voters in May 1990 via Issue 2 (51.7% in favor), opened in 1994 with Jacobs Field (now Progressive Field) for the Cleveland Indians and Gund Arena (now Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse) for the Cavaliers, funded by a 15-year sin tax on alcohol and cigarettes generating over $100 million annually.[31][32] This $400 million public-private project catalyzed adjacent private developments, including the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame's 1995 opening on the waterfront, boosting tourism to 5 million visitors yearly by decade's end and increasing downtown occupancy rates.[33] White also enforced Community Reinvestment Act compliance from banks, funding neighborhood homesteading programs that sold vacant homes for $1 to encourage rehabilitation, though citywide population fell 5.4% in the 1990s to 478,403.[34][35] Into the 21st century, under Mayor Frank G. Jackson (2006–2022), initiatives targeted healthcare expansion—leveraging Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals as anchors—and waterfront remediation, including the 2010s Opportunity Corridor project to reconnect east side neighborhoods severed by highways.[34] These efforts stabilized metro employment growth at over 20% from 1969–2016, shifting toward services, but lagged national peers amid recessions, with city population dropping to 372,624 by 2020.[36] Mayor Justin Bibb (2022–present) has pursued the Cleveland ERA for housing via modular construction and zoning reforms, alongside a proposed Center for Economic Recovery to allocate $500 million in federal ARPA funds for job training and infrastructure, aiming to reverse 6% population loss from 2010–2020 while addressing persistent socioeconomic gaps.[37][38][39] Despite these, metro population projections for 2025 hover at 1.78 million, reflecting partial success in niche sectors like biotech but limited broad reversal of deindustrialization's structural impacts.[40]

Geography

Topography and Layout

Cleveland lies on the southern shore of Lake Erie in northeastern Ohio, at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River, within Cuyahoga County. The terrain consists primarily of flat to gently rolling lowlands near the lakefront, shaped by glacial activity on the Allegheny Plateau. Elevations start at 569 feet (173 meters) along the shoreline and average 705 feet (215 meters) citywide, with downtown at 653 feet (199 meters) above sea level.[41][42][43] To the southeast, the land rises along the Portage Escarpment toward higher ridges of the glaciated plateau, reaching over 1,050 feet (320 meters) at the city's highest point. The Cuyahoga River carves a valley through the central area, forming the distinctive Flats region of low-lying, flood-prone terrain that contrasts with the surrounding plain and historically supported heavy industry due to access to water and flat ground.[44][45][46] The city's layout stems from the 1796 survey by Moses Cleaveland's party, which plotted a grid patterned after New England towns, centered on Public Square as a public green. From this hub, major east-west avenues like Euclid and Superior extend, crossed by numbered north-south streets in a rectilinear system that defines downtown and much of the urban core.[47][48][49] This orthogonal plan accommodated early expansion but adapted to topography in peripheral areas, where radial roads and elevations introduced deviations from the strict grid.[50]

Climate Patterns

Cleveland exhibits a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfa), marked by distinct seasonal variations, with cold, snowy winters and warm, humid summers moderated somewhat by its proximity to Lake Erie.[51] The lake's influence tempers extreme temperature swings compared to inland areas but generates significant lake-effect snowfall during winter, as cold air masses traverse the relatively warm lake waters, leading to enhanced precipitation in narrow bands downwind.[52] Annual average temperature stands at 51.5°F, with approximately 8.9 days exceeding 90°F and 103.7 days below freezing.[53] Mean annual precipitation totals 41.0 inches, distributed relatively evenly but with peaks in spring and late summer; snowfall averages around 54 inches per year, concentrated from November through March due to lake-effect events.[53][54] Winters (December–February) feature average highs of 35–40°F and lows in the low 20s°F, with frequent overcast skies and wind chills amplified by lake breezes. Lake-effect snow events can deposit 20–60 inches in short periods, as seen in the November 1996 storm that yielded 68 inches in nearby Chardon and more recent episodes in late 2024 exceeding 50 inches in parts of Cuyahoga County.[55] Summers (JuneAugust) bring average highs of 80–84°F and lows around 60–65°F, with humidity fostering occasional thunderstorms; July records the highest mean high at 83.7°F.[56] Precipitation patterns show monthly averages ranging from 2.99 inches in January to 3.93 inches in September, with spring often wettest due to frontal systems.[56][57] Extreme records underscore variability: the highest temperature reached 104°F on June 25, 1988, while the lowest was -20°F on January 19, 1994, both at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport.[51] Recent trends indicate slightly warmer winters and increased heavy precipitation events, with Cuyahoga County receiving about 4 inches above normal through June 2025, attributed to intensified convective activity.[58] For example, on March 7, 2026, afternoon conditions included temperatures of 67°F (feels like 62–67°F) with partly cloudy to cloudy skies, winds from the south-southwest/southwest at 17–21 mph (gusts up to 32 mph), humidity 67–72%, dew point 56–57°F, pressure around 29.71–29.73 in (falling), visibility 10 miles, sunrise around 6:51–6:52 AM, sunset around 6:24 PM, and no active weather alerts.[59]
MonthAvg High (°F)Avg Low (°F)Avg Precip (in)Avg Snowfall (in)
Jan35.823.52.9914.0
Feb39.225.12.6010.5
Mar48.432.03.038.0
Apr60.142.63.431.5
May70.552.73.660.0
Jun79.562.13.740.0
Jul83.766.43.740.0
Aug82.065.33.350.0
Sep75.758.63.930.0
Oct63.947.83.270.5
Nov52.538.13.436.0
Dec40.928.63.2313.5
Annual61.045.240.454.0
Data based on 1991–2020 normals for Cleveland Hopkins International Airport.[56][54]

Environmental Degradation and Remediation

Cleveland's industrial expansion in the late 19th and early 20th centuries led to severe environmental degradation, particularly in its waterways and air. The Cuyahoga River, flowing through the city into Lake Erie, became emblematic of this pollution due to unchecked discharges from steel mills, chemical plants, and other factories, which released oils, chemicals, and untreated sewage. The river ignited in flames at least 13 times between 1868 and 1969, with a notable incident on June 22, 1969, when an oil slick near the Republic Steel mill burned for about 20 minutes, highlighting decades of accumulated industrial waste.[60][61] This pollution extended to Lake Erie, where Cleveland's shoreline industries contributed to phosphorus loading, eutrophication, and massive algal blooms by the 1960s, rendering parts of the lake biologically dead and impairing water quality for surrounding communities.[62] Air pollution from factory smokestacks and furnaces, recognized as a health hazard since the 1850s, exacerbated respiratory issues amid the city's manufacturing boom, while soil contamination from waste disposal created persistent brownfields.[63] The 1969 Cuyahoga fire catalyzed national environmental policy, contributing to the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1970 and the passage of the Clean Water Act in 1972, which imposed federal regulations on industrial discharges.[64] In Cleveland, remediation efforts intensified with the designation of the Cuyahoga River as an EPA Area of Concern (AOC) under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement, targeting impairments like degraded fish populations, sediment contamination, and habitat loss. Key projects included the removal of the Canal Diversion Dam in 2014, which restored natural flow and fish migration over 5,000 linear feet of river and 60 acres of floodplain, alongside sediment dredging and wetland reconstruction funded through Great Lakes Restoration Initiative grants.[65][66] By 2023, these interventions had addressed multiple beneficial use impairments, bringing the AOC closer to delisting, though challenges like legacy toxins persist.[67] Soil and groundwater remediation has focused on Superfund sites, such as the 41.5-acre Tremont Field Site, a former barrel dump cleaned up through EPA-led excavation and capping to mitigate heavy metals and volatile organics, transforming it into a public park. Similarly, the 1-acre Chemical & Minerals Reclamation site underwent hazardous waste removal to prevent leaching into local aquifers. Air quality improvements, enforced by the Cleveland Division of Air Quality since 1882, have reduced emissions via industrial controls, but the metro area ranked 9th worst nationally for year-round particle pollution in 2025, reflecting ongoing sources like traffic and residual industry. Lake Erie efforts, including phosphorus reduction programs, have curbed some eutrophication, yet algal blooms recur, impacting Cleveland's water intake and recreation.[68][69][70] Overall, while federal and local actions have reversed acute degradation, full restoration demands continued enforcement against diffuse pollution sources.[71]

Demographics

Cleveland's population reached its historical peak of 914,808 residents in the 1950 United States Census, driven by industrial expansion that attracted waves of European immigrants and internal migrants seeking manufacturing employment.[72] By the 1960 Census, the figure had fallen to approximately 876,050, initiating a sustained decline attributed primarily to out-migration amid deindustrialization, as manufacturing jobs evaporated due to industry restructuring, automation, and competition from lower-cost regions.[35][73] This trend accelerated in the 1970s and 1980s, with the population dropping to 573,822 by 1980, reflecting not only job losses in steel, auto, and rail sectors but also suburbanization, where residents relocated to surrounding Cuyahoga County suburbs for better housing, schools, and lower crime.[73][74]
DecadeCity Population (Census)Change from Prior Decade
1950914,808-4% from 1940
1960876,050-4%
1970750,879-14%
1980573,822-24%
1990505,616-12%
2000478,403-5%
2010396,815-17%
2020372,624-6%
The city's population loss totaled over 60% from 1950 to 2020, with net domestic out-migration as the dominant factor, often exceeding natural population change (births minus deaths), which turned negative in later decades due to an aging demographic and low fertility rates.[35][75] Economic analyses link the exodus to the hollowing out of blue-collar jobs, as firms relocated southward for cheaper labor and fewer regulations, leaving behind concentrated poverty and elevated crime rates that further deterred retention and in-migration.[74][76] In contrast, the broader Cleveland-Elyria metropolitan area experienced slower decline, stabilizing around 2 million residents by the 2020s, buoyed by suburban growth and some regional retention.[40] Post-2020 estimates indicate tentative stabilization in the city proper, with U.S. Census Bureau figures showing a 2024 population of 365,379—down from 372,624 in the 2020 Census but marking consecutive annual increases from a 2022 low, potentially signaling reduced out-migration amid affordability drawing "boomerang" returnees and remote workers.[77][78] However, projections for 2025 suggest continued modest decline to around 356,000 absent structural economic gains, as persistent challenges like underperforming schools and public safety issues limit broader reversal.[39] Metro-area growth remains anemic at 0.5% annually, underscoring that city recovery hinges on addressing root causes of hollowing out rather than cosmetic revitalization.[40]

Racial and Ethnic Breakdown

As of the 2020 United States Census, Cleveland's population of 372,624 was racially diverse, with Black or African American residents comprising the largest group at 47.5% (176,886 individuals), followed by White residents at 32.1% (119,707 individuals), Hispanic or Latino residents of any race at 13.1% (50,175 individuals), those identifying with two or more races at 3.8% (14,216 individuals), Asian residents at 2.8% (10,426 individuals), and American Indian and Alaska Native residents at 0.6% (2,236 individuals).[79] [80] Non-Hispanic White residents specifically accounted for approximately 30.5% of the population, reflecting a longstanding decline from earlier decades.[80]
Race/EthnicityPercentagePopulation (2020)
Black or African American alone47.5%176,886
White alone32.1%119,707
Hispanic or Latino (any race)13.1%50,175
Two or more races3.8%14,216
Asian alone2.8%10,426
American Indian and Alaska Native alone0.6%2,236
This composition marks a shift from Cleveland's mid-20th-century demographics, when non-Hispanic Whites formed a majority exceeding 70% in 1950, driven by post-World War II industrial prosperity attracting European immigrants but later eroded by suburban migration amid urban decay, elevated crime rates following the 1966 Hough riots and 1968 Glenville riot, and economic dislocation from deindustrialization.[81] By 2023 estimates, the city's population had declined to approximately 367,523, with Black residents holding steady at around 46.8% and non-Hispanic Whites at 36.7%, indicating persistent demographic inertia despite minor multiracial and Asian population gains of several thousand since 2010.[82] [83] Ethnically, Cleveland's Hispanic population, predominantly Puerto Rican since the 1950s labor migrations to factories, has grown to over 13%, concentrated in neighborhoods like Clark-Fulton, while smaller Arab American and Asian Indian communities emerged post-1980s immigration reforms, comprising under 2% combined.[81] Historical European ethnic enclaves—such as Polish in Slavic Village, Hungarian in Old Brooklyn, and Italian in Little Italy—have diminished proportionally due to assimilation and out-migration, now representing fragmented subsets within the broader White category below 5% of the total population.[84] These patterns underscore causal links between policy failures in urban retention, school quality, and public safety, which accelerated White exodus and limited reversal despite recent stabilization efforts.[81]

Socioeconomic Indicators

Cleveland's median household income stood at $39,041 in 2023, significantly below the Ohio state median of approximately $66,000 and the national median of $75,149, reflecting persistent economic challenges tied to deindustrialization and skill mismatches in the local labor market.[80] The city's median family income was $48,917 in the same year, ranking among the lowest for U.S. cities with populations over 50,000 and underscoring disparities exacerbated by high concentrations of single-parent households and limited high-wage job access.[85] The poverty rate in Cleveland reached 30.7% in 2023, more than double the Cleveland metro area's 13.6% and over twice the national average of 12.5%, with child poverty exceeding 50% in some neighborhoods due to factors including welfare dependency cycles and educational deficits.[80] [86] Income inequality, measured by a Gini coefficient of 0.5075, indicates substantial disparities, where the top income quintile earns over five times the bottom quintile, driven by geographic segregation and uneven recovery from manufacturing decline.[87] Educational attainment lags, with 82.5% of adults aged 25 and over holding a high school diploma or higher in recent estimates, compared to 92% in the metro area; bachelor's degree or higher attainment hovers around 16-17%, correlating with lower earnings potential and higher unemployment vulnerability.[80] [88] The city's unemployment rate was 6.3% as of July 2025, elevated relative to the metro area's 4.5% and state average of 5.0%, attributable to structural barriers like skill gaps and geographic immobility in a post-industrial economy.[89] [90] Homeownership stands at 41.2%, far below the national rate of 65.2% and Ohio's 69.6%, reflecting barriers such as low incomes, high property taxes relative to values, and a legacy of foreclosures from the 2008 housing crisis that depressed wealth accumulation.[88] [91]
IndicatorCleveland City (2023-2025)Comparison
Median Household Income$39,041Ohio: ~$66,000; U.S.: $75,149[80]
Poverty Rate30.7%Metro: 13.6%; U.S.: 12.5%[80]
High School or Higher82.5%Metro: 92%[80]
Bachelor's or Higher~16%Ohio: ~30%[88]
Unemployment Rate (Jul 2025)6.3%Metro: 4.5%[89]
Homeownership Rate41.2%U.S.: 65.2%[88]
Gini Coefficient0.5075Indicates high inequality[87]

Economy

Core Industries and Historical Foundations

Cleveland was founded on July 22, 1796, by General Moses Cleaveland, who led a surveying party for the Connecticut Land Company to plat the settlement at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River on Lake Erie.[10] Early economic activity centered on subsistence agriculture, fur trading, and rudimentary shipping via the Great Lakes, with the first permanent settler, Lorenzo Carter, establishing a tavern in 1797.[92] The city's strategic location facilitated initial growth, but population remained under 1,000 until infrastructure improvements catalyzed expansion. The completion of the Ohio & Erie Canal in 1832, following its authorization in 1825, connected Cleveland to interior Ohio markets, boosting trade in grain, lumber, and manufactured goods; canal traffic peaked in the 1850s before railroads supplanted it.[5] Railroads, arriving in the 1850s, further transformed the economy by enabling efficient transport of raw materials like iron ore from Lake Superior and coal from Appalachia, drawing heavy industry to the region.[93] By the mid-19th century, these networks positioned Cleveland as a hub for water and rail freight, underpinning its shift from mercantile outpost to industrial powerhouse. Core industries emerged around manufacturing, leveraging abundant natural resources and transportation advantages. Iron production gained momentum during the Civil War, with Cleveland's foundries supplying munitions and machinery; by 1880, iron and steel accounted for 20% of the city's manufacturing output value.[94] Pioneering steel facilities, such as the Cleveland Rolling Mill and Otis Steel Company's first open-hearth furnace in 1875, adopted innovations like the Bessemer process to produce rails and structural steel for railroads and bridges.[95] Oil refining boomed after the 1859 Titusville discovery, with Cleveland hosting around 50 refineries by 1870 due to proximity to Pennsylvania fields and lake shipping routes; John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company, chartered that year, centralized operations there, dominating refining until antitrust dissolution in 1911.[96] These sectors—steel, oil, and ancillary manufacturing like chemicals and machinery—formed the bedrock of Cleveland's economy, employing thousands and fueling population growth to over 160,000 by 1880.[94]

Deindustrialization's Causal Factors

Cleveland's deindustrialization accelerated in the late 1970s and early 1980s, with manufacturing employment—peaking at approximately 280,000 jobs in the postwar era—declining sharply as core industries like steel, motor vehicles, and metalworking collapsed. By the early 1980s, one-third of these jobs had vanished, driven by a confluence of international, domestic, and macroeconomic pressures that eroded the competitiveness of local producers. Basic steel production, which had anchored the city's economy since the late 19th century, suffered plant idlings and closures, exemplified by the struggles of facilities operated by firms like Jones & Laughlin and Republic Steel, as global overcapacity flooded markets with low-cost imports.[5][97][98] A primary causal factor was intensified foreign competition, particularly in steel, where imports from countries with lower labor costs and state subsidies undercut U.S. producers; this included practices like dumping, where steel was sold below cost in the American market, exacerbating the downturn during the 1973–1975 and early 1980s recessions. Cleveland's outdated facilities and rigid production methods struggled against modernized foreign mills, while the 1982 recession amplified closures by slashing demand. Domestically, high union-negotiated wages and benefits, which had elevated Cleveland to a high-wage manufacturing hub, rendered local firms less price-competitive relative to non-unionized or offshore alternatives, contributing to offshoring and plant relocations.[21][5] Macroeconomic shocks further compounded vulnerabilities: the 1970s energy crises, marked by oil price surges from 1973 onward, inflated operational costs for energy-intensive industries like steelmaking, while double-digit inflation eroded profit margins. Technological shifts, including automation and process innovations, reduced labor requirements across manufacturing, displacing workers even as output per capita rose in surviving sectors; this productivity gain, however, failed to offset job losses in Cleveland's labor-heavy legacy plants. Environmental regulations, spurred by events like the 1969 Cuyahoga River fire, imposed compliance burdens that raised expenses without immediate productivity benefits, though deindustrialization itself later eased some pollution by idling polluters.[26][99][100] These factors interacted causally: global trade liberalization exposed high-cost domestic operations to import pressures, while internal rigidities—such as resistance to modernization amid union protections—delayed adaptation, leading to a feedback loop of declining investment and further job flight. Unlike regions with diversified economies, Cleveland's overreliance on heavy industry amplified the impacts, with per capita income stagnating post-1980s shocks despite some service-sector offsets. Empirical analyses attribute the decline less to singular policy failures than to structural mismatches between Cleveland's 20th-century model and emerging global dynamics.[36][101]

Modern Sectors and Employment

Cleveland's economy has shifted toward service-oriented and knowledge-based industries, with education and health services emerging as the dominant sector, employing 214.3 thousand workers as of July 2025, representing approximately 19% of total nonfarm employment.[102] This sector's growth reflects investments in biomedical research and patient care facilities, anchored by major institutions like the Cleveland Clinic, which employs over 82,000 caregivers system-wide, with a significant portion in the Cleveland metropolitan area.[103] University Hospitals, the second-largest employer in Northeast Ohio, further bolsters this sector through its network of hospitals and research centers.[104] Financial activities constitute another key modern pillar, with 73.5 thousand jobs in banking, insurance, and related fields as of July 2025, driven by headquarters such as Progressive Insurance, a Fortune 500 company with substantial operations in the region.[102] [104] Professional and business services, encompassing legal, consulting, and tech-related roles, support 157.3 thousand positions, signaling diversification into higher-value services amid efforts to attract startups and innovation hubs.[102] [6] Advanced manufacturing and logistics persist as hybrid modern sectors, with manufacturing employment at 128.3 thousand in July 2025, focusing on specialized areas like materials processing and automotive components rather than legacy heavy industry.[102] The Port of Cleveland facilitates logistics growth, integrating with trade and transportation sectors that employ 191.6 thousand workers.[102] Emerging tech and information technology subsectors show incremental gains, though information employment dipped slightly to 14.1 thousand, highlighting uneven progress in digital economy integration.[102] [6]
SectorEmployment (July 2025, in thousands)Year-over-Year Change
Education and Health Services214.3+2.4
Trade, Transportation, and Utilities191.60.0
Professional and Business Services157.3+1.4
Government138.7+2.6
Manufacturing128.3+1.7
Financial Activities73.5+1.6
This table illustrates the Cleveland-Elyria MSA's nonfarm employment distribution, underscoring service sector dominance while retaining industrial capacity.[102] Overall, these sectors have sustained modest employment growth, with total nonfarm jobs reaching 1,112.8 thousand in July 2025, up 0.9% from the prior year, though vulnerabilities in leisure and information sectors persist.[102]

Economic Performance Metrics to 2025

Cleveland's metropolitan statistical area (MSA), encompassing Cleveland-Elyria, recorded a nominal gross domestic product (GDP) of $173.1 billion in 2023, up from $163.9 billion in 2022 and $149.7 billion in 2021, reflecting a recovery from the 2020 pandemic dip to $137.2 billion but growth rates below national averages.[105] In real terms (chained 2017 dollars), GDP reached $139.9 billion in 2023, a modest increase from $129.2 billion in 2020, with annualized growth of approximately 2.7% over that period, lagging the U.S. metro average amid persistent structural challenges from manufacturing decline.[106] Projections for Northeast Ohio, including Cleveland, anticipate GDP expansion of nearly 15% cumulatively from 2018 levels by 2030, driven by healthcare and logistics sectors, though per capita output remains subdued compared to peer Rust Belt metros.[107] Unemployment in the Cleveland-Elyria MSA averaged around 5% through mid-2025, with rates climbing to 6.3% in July 2025 amid seasonal and national slowdowns, higher than the U.S. rate of 4.2% in the same month.[89] [108] Nonfarm payroll employment grew by about 1.7% in Ohio from February 2020 to May 2025, versus 4.8% nationally, with Cleveland's metro adding roughly 12,900 jobs year-over-year to June 2025, reaching 1,082,800 total employed.[109] [110] Leading indicators forecasted annualized employment growth of 3.61% for the subsequent six months from July 2025, signaling potential short-term momentum in services and distribution.[111] Median household income in Cleveland proper stood at $39,187 in 2023, a slight rise from $37,271 in 2022 but far below the national median of $81,604 in 2024 and reflecting entrenched inequality, with Cuyahoga County at $61,912.[88] [112] [113] Poverty rates remained elevated, at 30.8% for the city in 2023—second-highest among large U.S. cities—and 28.3% in 2024, with child poverty exceeding 45% and ranking worst nationally, tied to low-wage sectors and population outflows.[86] [114] [115]
YearNominal GDP (Cleveland-Elyria MSA, $ billions)Unemployment Rate (MSA, %)Median Household Income (City, $)Poverty Rate (City, %)
2020137.2~10 (pandemic peak)N/AN/A
2021149.7~6N/AN/A
2022163.9~4.537,271~31
2023173.1~4.839,18730.8
2024N/A (est. ~180)~5N/A28.3
2025N/A (proj. growth)5-6 (mid-year)N/AN/A
Data compiled from federal sources; 2024-2025 figures incorporate estimates and partial-year observations, with employment recovery uneven across sectors.[105] [88] [114] Overall, Cleveland's metrics indicate stabilization post-2020 but persistent underperformance relative to U.S. benchmarks, with income and poverty gaps widening due to limited high-value job creation.[116]

Government and Politics

Municipal Structure and Administration

Cleveland employs a mayor-council form of government, with the mayor serving as the chief executive and the city council as the legislative body.[117] This structure separates the election of the mayor and council members, enabling independent leadership while requiring collaboration on policy implementation.[118] The mayor enforces the city charter, ordinances, and Ohio state laws, appoints department directors subject to council confirmation, prepares the annual budget, and possesses veto authority over council-passed legislation, which can be overridden by a two-thirds council vote.[119] Justin M. Bibb has served as Cleveland's 58th mayor since January 2, 2022, following his election on November 2, 2021, with his current four-year term concluding on January 5, 2026.[120] Bibb, a Democrat, advanced from the October 5, 2021, nonpartisan primary and defeated Kevin Kelley in the general election by a 55% to 44% margin.[120] He is seeking re-election in the November 4, 2025, nonpartisan general election after securing the September 9, 2025, primary.[121] The Cleveland City Council comprises 17 members, each representing a single ward of approximately 25,000 residents, elected to staggered four-year terms in nonpartisan elections featuring primaries for wards with multiple candidates.[122] Council wards were redrawn prior to the 2025 elections to reflect population shifts from the 2020 census, reducing some multi-candidate fields while maintaining incumbent advantages in most races.[123] The council enacts local ordinances, approves the budget, confirms mayoral appointments, and oversees zoning and land use through committees.[124] As of October 2025, several wards, including Ward 7 and Ward 1, feature contested general election races between incumbents and challengers.[125][126] Administrative operations fall under the mayor's executive authority, organized into departments handling core functions such as public safety, infrastructure, and economic initiatives. Key departments include Public Works (managing streets, sanitation, and utilities), the Division of Police and Fire (under Public Safety), Building and Housing (overseeing permits and code enforcement), Finance (budgeting and taxation), Community Development (housing and neighborhood revitalization), Economic Development, Human Resources, and Law.[127] The 311 call center serves as a centralized hub for resident service requests across departments.[127] Department directors report to the mayor, ensuring alignment with executive priorities like service modernization and fiscal management.[119]

Political Landscape and Party Dominance

Cleveland's municipal elections are officially nonpartisan, yet Democratic-affiliated candidates have overwhelmingly dominated outcomes since the mid-20th century, reflecting the city's urban demographics and historical alignment with New Deal-era coalitions.[128] The last Republican mayor, George Voinovich, served from 1980 to 1990 before transitioning to statewide office; subsequent mayors, including Democrats Michael White (1990–2001), Jane Campbell (2002–2006), Frank G. Jackson (2006–2022), and Justin Bibb (2022–present), have maintained uninterrupted Democratic control.[129] [130] This pattern extends to the 17-member city council, where no Republican has been elected in over 40 years, with all current incumbents identifying as Democrats despite the nonpartisan ballot structure.[131] Voter registration data from Cuyahoga County, which encompasses Cleveland, underscores this imbalance: as of late 2024, Democrats comprised approximately 55-60% of registered voters, compared to 25-30% Republicans and the remainder independents or third-party affiliates, enabling consistent Democratic victories even amid low turnout rates often below 30% in municipal primaries.[132] [133] In the September 9, 2025, primary for city council seats under newly redrawn wards, incumbents—predominantly Democrats—secured advancement with minimal opposition, signaling continuity ahead of the November general election.[134] [123] This dominance persists despite Ohio's broader rightward shift, as evidenced by Republican sweeps in statewide races since 2010, including Donald Trump's 2024 presidential win by 11 points; Cleveland proper, however, delivered margins exceeding 70% for Democratic candidates in recent federal contests.[135] The entrenchment of Democratic control correlates with structural factors, including ward-based council elections that favor localized machine-style organizing in high-density, majority-minority neighborhoods, where turnout hovers around 20-25% in off-year cycles.[131] [136] Independent and Republican challengers occasionally emerge, as in the 2025 mayoral race where Justin Bibb faces scrutiny over public safety and economic policies, but historical precedents suggest limited viability without broader voter mobilization.[137] This one-party dynamic contrasts with earlier eras of bipartisanship, such as the 1960s-1970s when figures like Carl Stokes (Democrat, 1968–1972) and Ralph Perk (Republican, 1972–1976) alternated, driven by ethnic voting blocs and reform movements that have since eroded amid demographic shifts and apathy.[138] Overall, Cleveland's political landscape remains a Democratic stronghold, with governance insulated from state-level Republican influences due to home-rule provisions in Ohio's constitution.[117]

Policy Outcomes and Governance Critiques

Cleveland's municipal governance, characterized by a strong-mayor system established in its 1921 charter, has faced critiques for fostering executive overreach and insufficient checks, potentially exacerbating fiscal mismanagement and policy inertia compared to council-manager alternatives that prioritize administrative expertise over electoral popularity.[139] This structure, while enabling decisive action, has contributed to recurrent budget disputes, as evidenced by 2025 clashes between Mayor Justin Bibb and City Council over allocations for neighborhood projects, where council members redirected funds from executive priorities to district-specific initiatives, delaying implementation and highlighting fragmented decision-making.[140] Fiscal policies under successive Democratic administrations have yielded mixed outcomes, with persistent unfunded pension and retiree health care liabilities totaling over $1.2 billion as of 2019 assessments, compelling high property tax rates—among the highest in Ohio—and constraining investments in core services like infrastructure maintenance.[141] Despite claims of fiscal austerity in the 2025 budget, including balanced operations and a modest surplus of $3.8 million in recent audits, these measures have not stemmed broader structural deficits tied to population decline and revenue shortfalls, with critics attributing ongoing strain to underfunded public pensions across Ohio municipalities, where Cleveland's obligations mirror statewide underfunding exceeding $68 billion.[142][143][144] Public safety policies, including Bibb's youth violence prevention initiatives that engaged over 10,000 participants in summer 2025 programs, correlated with a nearly 50% drop in homicides from 2022 peaks, yet overall crime persistence and the ongoing federal consent decree—stemming from 2014 findings of excessive force—underscore governance shortcomings in police accountability and reform sustainability, with city efforts to exit oversight by late 2025 facing public apathy and operational hurdles.[145][146] Bibb's administration has touted modernization via a 2024 strategic plan emphasizing efficient services, but entrenched poverty rates exceeding 30% in core neighborhoods reflect policy failures in addressing causal factors like concentrated urban decay and job losses, where decades of Democratic dominance have coincided with over 40% population erosion since the 1970s without reversing socioeconomic stagnation.[147][76][148] Governance critiques often center on corruption vulnerabilities in the one-party political landscape, exemplified by 2025 revelations of Councilman Joe Jones's misconduct involving ethics violations and threats, which eroded public trust and prompted calls for structural reforms amid historical patterns of local scandals.[149] Analysts argue that prolonged lack of partisan competition insulates incumbents from accountability, perpetuating reactive policies over proactive causal interventions for issues like blight and segregation, with urban renewal efforts since the mid-20th century yielding uneven revitalization that prioritizes downtown cores while peripheral decay endures.[76][150]

Public Safety

Crime Statistics and Temporal Shifts

Cleveland's crime rates reached their modern peak in the early 1990s, with violent crime exceeding 2,000 incidents per 100,000 residents amid national urban trends driven by factors including gang activity and economic distress, before entering a sustained decline through the 2000s and 2010s as policing strategies and socioeconomic shifts took effect.[151] By 2018, the overall crime rate had fallen to 1,449.57 per 100,000, reflecting a 6.89% drop from 2017, while violent crime specifically trended downward from highs around 1,600-1,800 per 100,000 in the late 1990s to under 1,200 by the mid-2010s.[151] Property crimes, which dominated totals, followed a parallel path, decreasing from over 5,000 per 100,000 in the 1990s to 4,411.62 by 2018, a 10.26% reduction from the prior year.[152] A sharp reversal occurred in 2020, when homicides surged to 180—the highest in decades—amid the COVID-19 pandemic, contributing to a national spike in urban violence, with the city's homicide rate reaching approximately 48 per 100,000 residents given its population of around 372,000.[153] This elevated violent crime levels, though property offenses continued a general downward trajectory into the early 2020s.[152] From 2021 onward, temporal shifts reversed again, with homicides dropping to 143 in 2023 (38.6 per 100,000), reflecting a broader de-escalation in gun violence.[154] By 2024, overall violent crime declined substantially, with homicides falling to 105—a 42% reduction from 2020—positioning the city for its lowest tally in five years, though official FBI reporting understated the figure by at least four cases due to discrepancies in data submission.[153] [155] Summer initiatives correlated with a 37% homicide drop and 13% overall violent crime reduction during that period.[156] Early 2025 data indicated further progress in murders, down 48% in the first quarter and nearly 30% in the first half compared to 2024 equivalents, though non-homicide violent incidents rose 26% in the same interval, potentially signaling shifts in offense types.[157] [158] Property crime, meanwhile, decreased 29% through mid-2025.[159]
YearHomicidesHomicide Rate (per 100,000)Notes
2020180~48Pandemic-era peak[153]
202314338.6Continued decline[154]
2024105~28Lowest in 5 years; underreporting noted[160] [155]
2025 (H1)~ Down 30% from 2024 H1N/APreliminary; full-year projection unavailable[158]
Despite these improvements, Cleveland's rates remain elevated relative to national averages—homicides over six times the U.S. figure of around 5 per 100,000—highlighting persistent challenges despite the post-2020 downward trajectory.[154] Local reporting relies heavily on police-submitted data, which has shown inconsistencies, such as the 2024 FBI undercount, underscoring the need for independent verification in trend analysis.[155]

Law Enforcement Operations

The Cleveland Division of Police (CDP) operates as the primary municipal law enforcement agency, divided into five districts covering the city's approximately 82 square miles, with specialized units including patrol, detective bureaus, SWAT, and a Crisis Intervention Team for mental health responses.[161][162] As of January 2025, CDP maintained 1,137 sworn officers excluding cadets, reflecting a stabilization after prior declines of over 400 officers since 2014, amid recruitment drives yielding the largest academy class in five years with 134 entrants projected for 2025.[163][164] Operations emphasize constitutional enforcement, community guardianship, and inter-agency collaboration, including task forces targeting human trafficking and narcotics via the Northeast Ohio Human Trafficking Task Force and OCDETF Strike Force.[161][165][166] Since 2015, CDP has operated under a federal consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice, imposed following a DOJ investigation documenting a pattern of excessive force and inadequate accountability, exemplified by the 2012 pursuit ending in 137 shots fired at unarmed suspects.[167] The decree mandates reforms in use-of-force policies, training, data collection, and community engagement, with independent monitoring assessing compliance; by October 2025, monitors reported substantial progress across 20 areas, including mental health crisis responses, though full compliance remains incomplete and significant work persists in accountability mechanisms.[168][169] Annual use-of-force reports indicate that over 90% of incidents involve non-lethal bodily force, with 57% in 2021 stemming from service calls rather than proactive policing, though high-profile cases persist, such as the December 2024 shooting of a 14-year-old suspect linked to vehicle break-ins.[170][171] CDP leads or participates in targeted operations against violent crime, such as the 2022 Operation Clean Sweep yielding 50 arrests for offenses including homicide and firearms violations, and the 2025 Operation Summer Heat, a three-month FBI-coordinated effort with state and local agencies to curb summer violence spikes.[172][173] Fugitive apprehension initiatives like Operation TriDENT in 2025 focused on sex offenders and warrants, resulting in multiple captures through U.S. Marshals collaboration.[174] These efforts align with broader strategies to address staffing shortages and crime patterns, supported by pay increases totaling up to 34% since 2023 to retain and attract personnel.[175]

Safety Challenges and Causal Analyses

Cleveland's public safety environment is marked by persistently elevated rates of violent crime, even amid recent declines, with a 2024 violent crime rate of approximately 63.94 incidents per 1,000 residents, the highest among Ohio cities.[176] Homicide rates, while dropping 37% during the summer of 2024 compared to the prior year and nearly 30% in the first half of 2025 versus 2024, remained starkly high at 129 killings for a population of about 365,000 in 2024, equating to 35 per 100,000 residents—far exceeding national averages.[156][158][177] Aggravated assaults and gun-related incidents contribute significantly to this burden, with citywide violent crime outpacing suburban rates by orders of magnitude; for instance, Cleveland's per capita violent offenses dwarf those in surrounding municipalities, highlighting intra-regional disparities tied to urban density and socioeconomic conditions.[178][179] Emerging challenges include surges in targeted property crimes like carjackings, with at least 11 reported in the Ohio City neighborhood over a 30-day period in mid-2025, prompting resident demands for enhanced patrols amid perceptions of inadequate deterrence.[180] Gang activity and retaliatory violence perpetuate cycles of homicide and assault, often concentrated in neighborhoods with histories of disinvestment, where interpersonal disputes escalate via accessible firearms—a pattern observed nationally but acute in Cleveland's context of 64 overall crimes per 1,000 residents.[181] These issues persist despite increased police staffing to 1,137 officers plus 153 recruits by late 2025, suggesting that numerical expansions alone do not fully address operational constraints from prior federal oversight.[182] Causal factors root in intertwined socioeconomic pressures and institutional responses. Deindustrialization-induced poverty, affecting over 30% of residents and correlating strongly with violent crime through reduced economic opportunities and neighborhood segregation, forms a foundational driver; disinvested areas exhibit higher rates of unemployment and family instability, which empirical studies link to elevated youth involvement in crime via weakened social controls.[183][184][185] Family structure disruptions, including high rates of single-parent households, exacerbate risks by limiting supervision and fostering environments conducive to gang recruitment and norm erosion, as noted in analyses of urban Ohio trends where such dynamics amplify poverty's criminogenic effects beyond mere income deficits.[185] Policing efficacy has been hampered by the 2015 Department of Justice consent decree, which imposed reforms following findings of excessive force but coincided with morale declines and slower response times, potentially contributing to crime spikes post-2020 amid national "defund" rhetoric—though recent drops align with decree progress and staffing rebounds rather than broader policy shifts.[184] Broader social determinants, such as educational gaps and housing instability, sustain inequality, yet reports emphasizing racism or zoning as primary causes often overlook verifiable correlations with family cohesion and employment incentives; for instance, while income disparities predict violence, interventions targeting economic mobility yield mixed results without addressing cultural and deterrent failures.[186][187][183] Ultimately, causal realism points to breakdowns in enforcement credibility and community self-regulation as amplifiers, where lax prosecution and welfare dependencies may disincentivize personal accountability, perpetuating cycles evident in Cleveland's divergence from safer suburbs despite shared regional resources.[188]

Education

K-12 Public and Private Systems

The Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD) operates as the primary public K-12 system, serving approximately 33,399 students across 94 schools from pre-kindergarten through grade 12 as of the 2024-25 school year.[189] The district's student body is predominantly minority, with 90% non-white enrollment, and maintains a student-teacher ratio of 16:1.[190] [191] CMSD offers specialized programs including STEM, International Baccalaureate, Montessori, and single-gender options, amid ongoing efforts to address chronic underperformance through reforms initiated since the district's exit from state fiscal oversight in 2016.[192] On the Ohio Department of Education's 2024-25 report card, CMSD received an overall 2.5-star rating, a decline from 3 stars the prior year, reflecting components such as achievement, progress, gap closing, early literacy, and graduation.[193] [194] Despite the overall dip—attributed partly to graduation metrics—the district reported proficiency gains in every tested subject area, including English language arts and mathematics, based on state assessments.[195] [196] The four-year adjusted cohort graduation rate stood at 77% for the class of 2024, exceeding earlier district lows but trailing Ohio's statewide average of around 87%.[197] National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) results underscore persistent gaps, with Cleveland fourth-graders averaging 184 in reading—below the national public school average of 215—and similar deficits in math.[198] CMSD faces structural challenges including enrollment decline from over 70,000 students in 2005 to under 35,000 in 2025, driven by demographic shifts, family out-migration, and competition from charter and private options, which strains per-pupil funding and necessitates school consolidations.[199] Rising operational costs, state and federal funding reductions, and high poverty rates among students—correlating empirically with lower academic outcomes—compound these issues, prompting district leaders to describe a "perfect storm" of fiscal pressures.[200] Ohio's EdChoice voucher program, expanded significantly since 2019, enables over 100,000 statewide scholarships averaging $4,958 in fiscal year 2025, with substantial uptake in Cleveland; empirical analysis shows voucher recipients achieving 64% college enrollment rates versus 48% for public school peers, suggesting competitive pressure on CMSD to improve or risk further exodus.[201] [202] Private K-12 institutions in Cleveland and the metro area number around 50, emphasizing rigorous academics, smaller class sizes, and specialized curricula, often drawing families via vouchers or tuition. Notable examples include University School (grades K-12, all-boys, ranked #1 private K-12 in Ohio with a 7:1 student-teacher ratio), Hawken School (preschool-12, coed day school founded 1915), Hathaway Brown School (girls, pre-K-12), Laurel School (girls, K-12), and Gilmour Academy (Catholic, pre-K-12), which collectively serve thousands and report higher standardized test proficiency and college matriculation than CMSD averages.[203] [204] [205] These schools benefit from endowments and selective admissions, contrasting public sector constraints, though voucher litigation in 2025 challenged program constitutionality without halting expansions.[206]

Higher Education Institutions

Cleveland's higher education landscape features a cluster of institutions, many concentrated in the University Circle district, which serves as a hub for academic, medical, and cultural activities. These include private research universities, public commuter schools, Jesuit liberal arts colleges, and specialized conservatories, collectively enrolling tens of thousands of students and contributing to regional research output in fields like biomedical engineering and arts.[207] Case Western Reserve University (CWRU), a private institution formed in 1967 by the federation of Western Reserve University (founded 1826) and Case Institute of Technology (founded 1880), maintains a total enrollment of 12,398 students in fall 2025, including 6,534 undergraduates and 5,864 graduate and professional students.[208] Located in University Circle on a 267-acre campus, CWRU emphasizes research-intensive programs in engineering, sciences, and health, with notable affiliations including the Cleveland Clinic for medical education.[209][210] Cleveland State University (CSU), a public research university established in 1964 with first classes in 1965, enrolls approximately 14,000 students across undergraduate and graduate programs.[211] Situated downtown near public transit hubs, CSU focuses on accessible education in fields like law, engineering, and urban studies, having graduated over 145,000 alumni, 85% of whom remain in the region.[211][212] John Carroll University, a private Jesuit Catholic institution founded in 1886 as St. Ignatius College, reports 2,339 undergraduates in fall 2024 on its 62-acre suburban campus.[213] It prioritizes liberal arts curricula integrated with ethical formation, maintaining small class sizes and high retention rates exceeding 89% for freshmen.[214][215] Specialized schools round out offerings: the Cleveland Institute of Art, founded in 1882, trains undergraduates in fine and applied arts with around 500 students; the Cleveland Institute of Music, established in 1920, focuses on classical music performance and enrolls about 300 musicians; and Ursuline College, Ohio's first Catholic women's college opened in 1871, provides liberal arts and nursing degrees to a smaller cohort.[216] Notre Dame College, a Catholic liberal arts school founded in 1922, ceased operations in 2024 amid financial challenges.[217] These institutions collectively support Cleveland's knowledge economy, though enrollment trends reflect broader urban declines in traditional-age students offset by graduate and professional growth.[207]

Educational Attainment and Systemic Issues

In Cleveland, educational attainment lags substantially behind state and national benchmarks. According to 2023 American Community Survey estimates, approximately 79% of adults aged 25 and older in the city possess at least a high school diploma or equivalent, compared to 90% in Ohio overall and 89% nationally. Bachelor's degree attainment stands at roughly 17%, far below the Ohio figure of 30% and the U.S. average of 34%. These disparities reflect long-term trends, with young adults in Cleveland showing only 45% postsecondary attendance rates versus 58% in surrounding Cuyahoga County suburbs.[218][219] The Cleveland Municipal School District (CMSD), serving the city's core population, exemplifies systemic deficiencies driving these outcomes. The district's four-year graduation rate reached 76.5% in the most recent reporting period, an improvement from prior years but still below the state average of 87%. Proficiency rates on state assessments remain critically low: 24% of elementary students achieve reading proficiency and 13% in math, with similar shortfalls at higher grades. The 2024-2025 Ohio state report card rated CMSD at 2.5 stars overall, indicating a need for support to meet standards, down from 3 stars the previous year due to factors including chronic absenteeism exceeding 40% in many schools. National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) scores underscore the gap, with Cleveland fourth-graders averaging 184 in reading—16 or more points below comparable urban districts for Black, Hispanic, and low-income students.[220][190][193][198] Root causes extend beyond school walls to intertwined socioeconomic factors, particularly concentrated poverty affecting over 30% of residents and family instability. Ohio data indicate children in single-mother households face child poverty rates several times higher than those in intact married-parent families, correlating with reduced academic supervision, higher mobility disrupting schooling, and elevated absenteeism. In Cleveland, where over 60% of children reside in single-parent homes—predominantly in Black communities—this structure precedes and exacerbates school underperformance, independent of funding levels which exceed state averages per pupil at around $15,000. Institutional analyses, including those from policy research groups, highlight how district monopolies limit parental choice, while bureaucratic inertia and teacher union priorities impede accountability; voucher programs, though diverting funds, have enabled thousands to attend higher-performing alternatives, suggesting competition as a partial remedy. Mainstream attributions to "systemic racism" often overlook these proximal causal mechanisms, as evidenced by persistent gaps even controlling for demographics in comparative urban studies.[221][222]

Culture and Society

Arts, Theater, and Performing Venues

Playhouse Square, located in downtown Cleveland, comprises the largest performing arts center in the United States outside New York City, encompassing five historic theaters built between 1921 and 1922: the KeyBank State Theatre (3,200 seats), Connor Palace, Allen Theatre, Mimi Ohio Theatre, and Hanna Theatre.[223] These venues, originally movie palaces and vaudeville houses on Euclid Avenue between East 13th and East 17th Streets, faced decline and near-demolition in the 1960s but were preserved through nonprofit efforts starting in 1973, with renovations enabling Broadway tours, concerts, and local productions.[224] The district hosts over 1,000 performances annually, drawing more than one million visitors.[223] Severance Hall, situated in the University Circle neighborhood, serves as the permanent home of the Cleveland Orchestra since its opening on February 5, 1931, funded by over $7 million in donations from patrons including John Long Severance.[225] The neoclassical venue, designed by Walker and Weeks, features acoustics optimized for orchestral performances and hosts the orchestra's main season from September to May, accommodating about 1,800 patrons. The Cleveland Orchestra, established in 1918, performs symphonic repertoire there, with additional events including guest artists and chamber music.[226] The Cleveland Play House, America's first permanently established professional regional theater founded in 1915, now operates primarily from the Allen Theatre in Playhouse Square after relocating from its original East 85th Street complex built in 1927.[227] It received the 2015 Regional Theatre Tony Award and produces a season of classic and contemporary plays, emphasizing new works and educational programs like the Curtain Pullers youth theater started in the 1920s.[228] Annual attendance exceeds 100,000 for its mainstage productions.[229] Karamu House, established in 1915 as a settlement house in the Fairfax neighborhood, evolved into the nation's oldest producing Black theater, pioneering interracial performances with its first play in 1920. The venue has incubated talents including Langston Hughes and Ruby Dee, presenting professional theater, dance, and music focused on African American narratives, with ongoing community arts education.[230] Other notable performing venues include the Maltz Performing Arts Center at Case Western Reserve University, renovated in 2013 for opera, dance, and concerts, and the Beck Center for the Arts in Lakewood, offering theater, music, and dance programs since 1930.[231] These facilities contribute to Cleveland's diverse arts ecosystem, supported by resident companies like Great Lakes Theater, which performs Shakespeare and classics at the Hanna Theatre.[232]

Music, Literature, and Media

The Cleveland Orchestra, founded in 1918 by Adella Prentiss Hughes and others, held its debut concert on December 11, 1918, at Gray's Armory as a benefit for St. Ann's Parish.[233] The ensemble quickly gained acclaim under conductors like Nikolai Sokoloff and later George Szell, establishing itself as one of the world's premier orchestras by the mid-20th century through rigorous programming and recordings. Severance Hall, completed in 1931 as its permanent home, underwent significant renovations in the 1990s and 2000s to enhance acoustics and capacity.[233] Cleveland played a pivotal role in rock and roll's emergence, with disc jockey Alan Freed popularizing the term "rock and roll" on WHK radio in the early 1950s to describe rhythm and blues music appealing to white teenagers.[234] Freed organized the Moondog Coronation Ball on March 21, 1952, at Cleveland Arena, widely regarded as the first rock and roll concert, though it devolved into chaos due to overcrowding with over 25,000 attendees exceeding the venue's 10,000 capacity.[235] This event underscored the genre's explosive appeal and cultural impact. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, dedicated to preserving rock's history, opened in downtown Cleveland on September 2, 1995, selected for the city's foundational contributions despite competition from other cities.[236] In the 1970s, Cleveland fostered a proto-punk scene amid industrial decline, producing bands like Rocket From The Tombs, the Electric Eels, and the Mirrors, which emphasized raw energy and dissonance over commercial viability.[237] These groups influenced Pere Ubu, formed in 1975 from Rocket From The Tombs remnants, known for avant-garde experimentation blending punk aggression with art rock elements; their debut single "30 Seconds Over Tokyo" released in 1978 captured the era's alienation.[238] The scene's output, though limited by lack of major label support, contributed to punk's national diffusion via figures like Peter Laughner, whose guitar work and writing bridged Cleveland's underground to broader movements.[239] Cleveland's literary tradition includes 19th-century works like Albert G. Riddle's Recollections of War Times (1895), a memoir of Civil War experiences, and James Ford Rhodes's multi-volume History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 (1893–1906), which earned Pulitzer Prizes for its detailed analysis of political events.[240] Mid-20th-century novelists such as Don Robertson, whose The Greatest Thing Since Sliced Bread (1969) drew on the 1944 East Ohio Gas explosion for a coming-of-age narrative, and Herbert Gold, chronicling urban life in novels like The Man Who Was Not With It (1956), reflected the city's socioeconomic shifts. Speculative fiction writer Harlan Ellison, born in Cleveland in 1934, produced over 1,700 works including award-winning short stories like "'Repent, Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman" (1965), often incorporating themes of societal critique rooted in his Rust Belt upbringing.[241] Media in Cleveland traces to early print with The Cleveland Plain Dealer, established in 1842 and continuing as the primary daily newspaper after competitors like The Cleveland Press (1878–1982) folded amid declining ad revenue and union disputes.[242][243] Radio broadcasting began with WHK signing on in 1922, followed by WJAX and WTAM in 1923, stations that amplified local music and news during the interwar period.[244] Television arrived with WEWS (Channel 5) launching on December 17, 1947, as Ohio's first station, pioneering local programming like The Gene Carroll Show while competing with later entrants such as WJW (Channel 8) in 1948.[245] These outlets shaped public discourse, though 20th-century consolidations reduced independent voices, with modern challenges including digital disruption affecting circulation since the 2000s.[242]

Culinary Traditions and Local Breweries

Cleveland's culinary traditions reflect waves of Eastern European immigration, particularly Polish and Slavic communities, which introduced staples like pierogies and kielbasa during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Pierogies, boiled or fried dumplings filled with potato, cheese, or meat, became embedded in local culture through family recipes and church festivals, with Cleveland vendors producing millions annually for events like the annual Pierogi Festival in nearby suburbs.[246] [247] The Polish Boy sandwich exemplifies Cleveland's fusion of barbecue and ethnic influences, consisting of grilled kielbasa sausage on a bun topped with french fries, coleslaw, and barbecue sauce. Its origins trace to the 1940s at Whitmore's Bar-B-Q in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood, where owner Virgil Whitmore adapted po' boy styles with local Polish sausage amid the city's industrial workforce demographics.[248] [249] [250] Other regional specialties include Lake Erie perch and walleye, fried and served with tartar sauce, leveraging the city's proximity to the Great Lakes fishery that supplied over 10 million pounds of perch annually in peak years. Corned beef sandwiches, piled high at delis like Slyman's since 1966, draw from Jewish immigrant traditions, with portions exceeding one pound per serving. Cleveland-style barbecue emphasizes dry-rubbed ribs smoked over hickory, distinct from sweeter regional variants.[251] [252] [253] The local brewery scene revived in the late 1980s amid national craft beer growth, with Great Lakes Brewing Company opening in 1988 as Cleveland's first modern brewpub in Ohio City, founded by brothers Patrick and Daniel Conway using a historic building with Prohibition-era remnants. By 2025, the city hosts over 40 breweries, concentrated in neighborhoods like Ohio City and the Flats, producing balanced lagers and ales that earned Great Lakes multiple awards, including for its Dortmunder Gold exported nationwide.[254] [255] [256] Notable establishments include Market Garden Brewery, established in 2011 adjacent to the West Side Market, offering pub fare alongside beers like Prosperity Wheat, and Fat Head's Brewery, known for double IPAs since relocating to Cleveland in 2018. The scene supports economic impacts, with craft breweries contributing to tourism via passports and tours visiting sites like Noble Beast and Masthead.[257] [258] [256]

Sports and Recreation

Professional Sports Franchises

Cleveland hosts professional franchises in Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association, and the National Football League, with the teams collectively drawing significant fan attendance despite periods of competitive struggles. The Cleveland Guardians (MLB), Cleveland Cavaliers (NBA), and Cleveland Browns (NFL) have been fixtures in the city since the mid-20th century, playing in dedicated stadiums along the Lake Erie waterfront and contributing to local economic activity through ticket sales exceeding 2 million combined annually in recent seasons.[259] These teams have experienced championship successes interspersed with long droughts, reflecting challenges in talent retention and management decisions amid a regional population decline from 2.2 million in Cuyahoga County in 1970 to 1.2 million in 2020. The Cleveland Guardians of Major League Baseball originated in 1900 as the Cleveland Lake Shores before adopting the Indians name in 1915 and rebranding to Guardians in November 2021 to address long-standing controversies over Native American imagery. The franchise has competed continuously in the American League since its inception in 1901, accumulating a historical winning percentage of .513 through the 2024 season with 9,940 wins against 9,443 losses. They secured American League pennants in 1920, 1948, 1954, 1995, 1997, and 2016, winning World Series titles in 1920 and 1948, though recent decades have seen only sporadic playoff appearances, including an American League Central Division title in 2022. Home games are played at Progressive Field, a 35,000-seat stadium opened in 1994 that underwent renovations in 2019 costing $4.25 million to enhance fan amenities.[260][261] The Cleveland Cavaliers joined the NBA as an expansion team in 1970 under original owner Nick Mileti, posting an initial record of 15-67 in their debut season but advancing to their first playoffs in 1976. The franchise holds a career record of 2,096 wins against 2,340 losses through the 2024-25 season, with 25 playoff appearances and a single NBA championship in 2016, achieved via a historic 3-1 comeback against the Golden State Warriors in the Finals. Ownership transitioned to Dan Gilbert in 2005, coinciding with the acquisition of LeBron James, whose returns in 2014 enabled the title before his departure in 2018; subsequent rebuilding yielded Eastern Conference Finals berths in 2024 but no further championships. The team plays at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse, a 19,432-seat arena renovated for $185 million between 2017 and 2019.[262][263] The Cleveland Browns were founded in 1946 as a charter member of the All-America Football Conference by coach Paul Brown, dominating the league with four consecutive championships from 1946 to 1949 before merging into the NFL in 1950, where they won titles in 1950, 1954, 1955, and 1964. The franchise relocated to Baltimore in 1996 amid ownership disputes, becoming the Ravens, but was reactivated in Cleveland in 1999 through league expansion; since then, the Browns have compiled a 143-249-1 record through 2024 with no playoff wins and zero Super Bowl appearances, attributed to frequent quarterback instability and coaching turnover exceeding 10 head coaches since 1999. They play at Huntington Bank Field, a 67,431-seat stadium opened in 1999 as Cleveland Browns Stadium, with ongoing debates over potential upgrades or relocation due to attendance fluctuations averaging 60,000 per game in 2023.[264] Beyond the major leagues, Cleveland fields minor professional teams including the Cleveland Monsters of the American Hockey League (affiliated with the NHL's Columbus Blue Jackets since 2007) and the Cleveland Charge of the NBA G League (relocated to the city in 2021), alongside an emerging MLS Next Pro soccer club set to debut in 2025 at a planned downtown stadium. These franchises support talent pipelines but generate lower revenues, with the Monsters drawing about 8,000 fans per game in the 2023-24 season.[265][259]

Collegiate and Amateur Athletics

Cleveland State University, located downtown, competes in NCAA Division I as a member of the Horizon League, fielding 16 varsity teams including men's and women's basketball, soccer, wrestling, and track and field. The Vikings' basketball program has produced NBA talent such as Norris Cole, who led the team to the 2009 Horizon League championship and earned multiple All-League honors before being drafted in 2010. In the 2023-24 academic year, CSU athletics reported a department-wide GPA of 3.00, over $1.3 million in philanthropic support raised, and more than 900 hours of student-athlete community service.[266][267] Case Western Reserve University in University Circle sponsors 19 NCAA Division III varsity sports within the University Athletic Association, emphasizing integration with its research-focused academic environment; men's teams include football, basketball, wrestling, and swimming, while women's programs cover soccer, volleyball, and lacrosse. The Spartans have achieved national prominence in wrestling, with the program securing All-American honors and NCAA tournament appearances in recent seasons, alongside consistent UAA conference contention in track and field.[268][269] John Carroll University in University Heights fields 25 NCAA Division III varsity teams, recently joining the North Coast Athletic Conference on July 1, 2025, after departing the Ohio Athletic Conference; sports encompass football, lacrosse, basketball, and cross country, with the Blue Streaks maintaining a strong regional presence supported by the new 125,000-square-foot Athletic, Wellness & Event Center opened in September 2025. The program emphasizes 325 miles of local trails for training in endurance sports like track and soccer.[270][271][272][273] Amateur athletics in Cleveland feature organized adult and youth leagues, including the Greater Cleveland Adult Baseball association, a wood-bat league for players over 30 competing on high school and college fields across the metro area since its establishment as a competitive amateur outlet. Recreational adult leagues through facilities like Force Sports offer indoor soccer, volleyball, and tennis in locations such as Rocky River and Eastlake, running seasonal sessions from fall through spring. Youth-focused organizations like Ohio Elite Athletics provide multi-sport training in track and field, wrestling, and flag football for ages 5-18, prioritizing skill development and educational goals over professional pathways.[274][275][276]

Major Facilities and Events

Progressive Field, situated at 2401 Ontario Street in downtown Cleveland, functions as the home ballpark for the Cleveland Guardians of Major League Baseball. Constructed as part of the Gateway Sports and Entertainment Complex and opened on April 4, 1994, the facility features an urban design with angled seating and a current seating capacity of 34,820, the smallest among MLB stadiums.[277][278] Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse, located at 1 Center Court adjacent to Progressive Field, serves as the primary arena for the Cleveland Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association and the Cleveland Monsters of the American Hockey League. Initially opened in 1994 as Gund Arena within the Gateway Complex, it received its current name in April 2019 following renovations and a sponsorship agreement with Rocket Mortgage, with a basketball configuration accommodating approximately 19,432 spectators.[279][280] Huntington Bank Field, an open-air stadium on the Lake Erie shoreline at 100 Alfred Lerner Way, hosts the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League and has a seating capacity of 67,431. Built in 1999 to replace the original Cleveland Municipal Stadium and previously named Cleveland Browns Stadium until September 2024, the venue secured its current naming rights through a 20-year partnership with Huntington National Bank.[281][282] Cleveland's venues have hosted numerous high-profile sporting events, including four games of the 2016 World Series at Progressive Field between the Cleveland Indians and Chicago Cubs.[283] Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse accommodated Cleveland Cavaliers home games during the NBA Finals from 2015 to 2018, culminating in their 2016 championship victory.[283] Huntington Bank Field is scheduled to host Monster Energy Supercross on April 18, 2026, marking the event's return to Cleveland after three decades.[284]

Infrastructure and Transportation

Road Networks and Freeways

Cleveland's road network centers on a system of interstate highways and limited-access freeways that facilitate regional commerce and suburban connectivity, with approximately 50 miles of such roadways serving the city. The primary north-south corridors include Interstate 71 (I-71), which extends from downtown Cleveland southward through the city to connect with Columbus and beyond, and Interstate 77 (I-77), running parallel to I-71 but veering southeast to link with Akron. East-west travel relies heavily on Interstate 90 (I-90), which traverses the city as a major artery from the Ohio Turnpike westward through downtown and suburbs like Lakewood and Rocky River before continuing toward Toledo. Auxiliary routes such as Interstate 480 (I-480) form an outer beltway encircling the metropolitan area, while Interstate 490 (I-490) serves as a short urban spur connecting I-71 and I-90 to industrial zones east of downtown.[285][286] These freeways originated from mid-20th-century planning under the federal Interstate Highway System, authorized by Congress in 1944 and accelerated post-1956 with the Federal-Aid Highway Act. Cleveland's "Thorofare Plan," formalized in 1945 and expanded citywide, integrated freeways with surface streets to promote economic growth and address post-World War II traffic demands, resulting in the construction of the Memorial Shoreway as the region's first east-west limited-access road in the late 1930s. Subsequent builds, including the Inner Belt (portions of I-71 and I-90) in the 1950s-1960s, prioritized commerce over urban fabric preservation, often displacing neighborhoods in line with federal urban renewal policies that emphasized vehicular mobility. Several proposed routes, such as the Clark, Lee, and Heights Freeways, were abandoned due to community opposition and environmental concerns by the 1970s.[287][288][289] Ongoing maintenance and expansion reflect persistent infrastructure challenges, including aging pavements and bridges exacerbated by deindustrialization-era funding shortfalls. The Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) initiated a $173 million full-depth replacement of I-90 west of downtown through Rocky River and Lakewood in 2025, addressing deterioration from heavy freight traffic. Similarly, I-77 pavement rehabilitation from south of Fleet Avenue to I-490 began as a multi-year project to mitigate cracking and rutting. The Opportunity Corridor, a $331 million boulevard linking I-490 to University Circle completed in phases through the 2010s, aimed to improve access to east-side economic hubs but drew criticism for limited traffic relief relative to costs.[290][291] Traffic congestion remains moderate compared to peer cities, with Cleveland ranking third-lowest among U.S. metros for delays; drivers lose an average of 46 hours annually to gridlock, below the national median, due in part to population decline reducing peak volumes. Average daily traffic on key segments like I-90 exceeds 100,000 vehicles, yet commute times average 24.7 minutes citywide. Road quality lags, however, with the Cleveland-Akron area exhibiting Ohio's highest share of poor pavements—contributing to 16% statewide classification as deficient—stemming from deferred maintenance amid competing budget priorities like transit subsidies. ODOT's 2025 congestion study identified 72 high-risk locations statewide, including urban I-71/I-77 interchanges, where bottlenecks arise from merging freight and commuter flows without adequate capacity upgrades.[292][293][294][295]

Public Transit and Mobility

The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority (RTA), established in 1974, operates the region's primary public transit system, encompassing bus, rail, paratransit, and vanpool services across Cuyahoga County and parts of adjacent counties.[296] In 2024, RTA recorded 24.9 million passenger trips, reflecting a 12.7% increase from 22.1 million in 2023, though still below pre-pandemic levels of approximately 37 million annually.[297] Fare revenue reached $32.9 million in 2024, up from $29.9 million the prior year, with standard one-way fares at $2.50 for cash or contactless payments, $5 for daily passes, and discounted rates of $2.50 for seniors, disabled riders, and children aged 6-17.[298] [297] RTA's rail network includes the Red Line, a heavy rail rapid transit route spanning 19 miles from Cleveland Hopkins International Airport westward to the Louis Stokes Station at Windermere in East Cleveland, serving 18 stations and carrying 3.2 million passengers in 2024.[299] The Blue and Green Lines, light rail services originating from Shaker Heights and Van Aken Boulevard, converge at Shaker Square before sharing tracks through downtown Cleveland to Tower City Center, with combined annual ridership of about 808,100 in 2024 and weekday averages of 2,600 boardings in early 2025.[300] Bus services dominate RTA operations, with over 200 routes including bus rapid transit lines like the HealthLine along Euclid Avenue, which together provided millions of vehicle-miles annually; seven high-volume routes each exceeded 1 million passengers in 2024.[296] [299] Complementary mobility options include dockless e-scooters and e-bikes from providers such as Bird, Lime, and Veo, available citywide with rental fees starting at $1 plus per-minute charges, regulated through designated shared mobility hubs that integrate with transit stops.[301] [302] RTA's SHARE Mobility microtransit program, launched in partnership with private operators, offers on-demand rides from rail and bus stations to final destinations, enhancing last-mile connectivity for commuters.[303] Rider surveys in 2024 indicated high satisfaction rates, with 89% valuing the system overall and improvements in perceived safety, cleanliness, and reliability despite ongoing challenges like fare evasion and incomplete pandemic recovery.[304] [305] Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (CLE), the primary commercial airport serving the city, handled 10,173,861 passengers in 2024, marking a 3% increase from the prior year and the first time exceeding 10 million passengers since 2019.[306] [307] As Ohio's busiest airport, CLE connects to over 50 nonstop destinations and lies within 500 miles of nearly half the U.S. population, facilitating regional cargo and passenger flows.[308] However, it ranked last among medium-sized U.S. airports (4.5–9.9 million annual passengers) in the 2024 J.D. Power North America Airport Satisfaction Study, scoring 580 out of 1,000 due to issues in terminal facilities, security screening, and food/beverage options.[309] Burke Lakefront Airport (BKL), a smaller general aviation facility on the downtown lakefront, primarily supports corporate, charter, and flight training operations.[310] In October 2025, Cleveland officials, including Mayor Justin Bibb, sought congressional approval to close BKL, arguing it occupies prime shoreline that could be redeveloped for public access and economic uses, with Congresswoman Shontel Brown endorsing the move to "reconnect Clevelanders to our waterfront."[311] [312] The airport remains operational pending federal review, given its status as a reliever airport under FAA guidelines.[313] The Port of Cleveland, managed by the Cleveland-Cuyahoga County Port Authority, ranks among the Great Lakes' largest facilities, processing approximately 13 million tons of cargo annually, predominantly bulk commodities like iron ore, steel, and heavy machinery.[314] Iron ore shipments reached nearly 9 million metric tons in 2023, driving a $7.07 billion regional economic impact and supporting over 23,000 jobs through maritime and related activities.[315] [316] The 80-acre general cargo terminal maintains a 27-foot seaway depth, features two 60-ton mobile cranes, nine berths, direct rail access, and warehousing, enabling service to over 150 ports in 70 countries via St. Lawrence Seaway routes.[317] [318] Intercity rail service operates from Cleveland Lakefront Station, an Amtrak facility built in 1977 at North Coast Harbor, serving the Lake Shore Limited route with daily trains to New York City, Boston, Chicago, and intermediate stops, totaling four arrivals and departures per day.[319] Proposed expansions, including the 3C+D corridor linking Cleveland to Cincinnati via Columbus and Dayton, advanced to feasibility studies in 2025, with Amtrak projecting initial thrice-daily service and reduced Cleveland-Cincinnati travel times.[320] Bus connections include Greyhound Lines from the downtown terminal to nationwide destinations, Megabus low-cost services to 12 regional cities, Barons Bus for Midwest routes, and state-funded GoBus for rural Ohio links to urban centers like Columbus and Cincinnati.[321] [322] Ohio's 2025 intercity bus expansion doubled service coverage, adding routes to communities such as Bowling Green and Marion to enhance connectivity ahead of potential rail developments.[323]

Urban Development

Neighborhood Evolution and Segregation Patterns

Cleveland's neighborhoods initially formed around early settlements like Ohio City, established in 1818 and annexed to the city in 1854, drawing immigrants and fostering ethnic enclaves such as those of Irish, German, and later Eastern European groups in areas like the Flats and near industrial zones.[324] By the late 19th century, the city's expansion supported diverse residential patterns, with affluent districts like Euclid Avenue's "Millionaire's Row" emerging alongside working-class immigrant communities.[325] The Great Migration from 1910 onward transformed demographics, as Cleveland's African American population surged from 8,448 in 1910 to 34,451 in 1920, primarily settling in the Central neighborhood due to job opportunities in steel and manufacturing but constrained by discriminatory practices.[326] This influx displaced earlier Jewish residents, who largely exited Central between 1917 and 1925, while Black newcomers faced overcrowding in aging housing stock.[326] By 1930, the Black population reached 72,000, concentrated in East Side areas amid restrictive covenants that legally barred non-whites from many neighborhoods until invalidated by the Supreme Court in 1948.[327] Federal policies exacerbated segregation through the Home Owners' Loan Corporation's redlining maps in the 1930s, grading East Side Black and immigrant areas as "hazardous" (red) based on perceived risk tied to race and ethnicity, denying mortgages and insurance to residents regardless of creditworthiness.[327] [328] Post-World War II, the Federal Housing Administration's underwriting favored suburban developments for whites, subsidizing their exodus while redlined urban zones deteriorated from disinvestment.[329] Blockbusting tactics by real estate agents in the 1950s-1960s fueled rapid racial turnover, as agents spread rumors of impending Black influx to induce white panic-selling at low prices, then resold to Black buyers at inflated rates, accelerating transitions in neighborhoods like Hough and Glenville.[330] White flight intensified in the 1960s-1970s, driven by suburban affordability via federal loans, rising urban crime rates in transitioning areas, and declining school quality, contributing to Cleveland's population drop from 876,000 in 1960 to 573,000 by 1980 as middle-class whites departed for suburbs like Shaker Heights and Parma.[331] [332] Economic analyses attribute this not solely to prejudice but also to rational responses to property value depreciation from speculative flipping and fiscal strain on cities from lost tax bases. In 1965, only 1% of Greater Cleveland's Black population resided in suburbs, reinforcing East Side concentration where, by the 1970s, neighborhoods like Central and Hough were over 90% Black amid industrial decline.[332] Persistent patterns emerged with the East Side predominantly African American and the West Side retaining higher white and Hispanic populations, as evidenced by 1980 census data showing segregation indices above national averages due to entrenched housing barriers and self-selection by income and family structure.[333] [334] Redlined areas today correlate with higher poverty and eviction rates, underscoring long-term causal effects of policy-driven disinvestment over purely cultural factors.[335] Despite fair housing laws post-1968, Cleveland remains among the most segregated U.S. metros, with limited integration due to ongoing economic disparities rather than overt legal barriers.[336]

Downtown Revitalization Projects

Efforts to revitalize downtown Cleveland intensified in the 1990s following decades of population loss and economic stagnation, focusing on sports, transit, and public spaces to attract visitors and residents. The Gateway Project, completed in 1994, created a 28-acre sports and entertainment district featuring Progressive Field (originally Jacobs Field) and Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse (originally Gund Arena), drawing over 2 million annual visitors and catalyzing adjacent developments.[337] A pivotal initiative was the $200 million Euclid Corridor Transportation Project, a bus rapid transit line known as the HealthLine, which opened in October 2008 along a 6-mile stretch of Euclid Avenue from Public Square to University Circle. This project, funded partly by federal grants, included dedicated lanes, transit stations, and streetscape improvements, spurring $5.8 billion in private investment including new housing, offices, and retail by 2023.[338][339] Public Square underwent a $50 million redesign completed in 2016, consolidating fragmented quadrants into a unified 6.5-acre pedestrian-friendly park with event spaces, fountains, and improved accessibility amid surrounding traffic. Ongoing enhancements in 2024 addressed safety and mobility, including $750,000 in state funding for plaza upgrades.[340][341][342] In the 2020s, residential growth accelerated with approximately 850 new apartment units completed in 2024 across multiple high-rises, doubling downtown's population over the prior decade and supporting a shift to mixed-use vibrancy. Key projects include Bedrock's Riverfront Cleveland master plan redeveloping 35 acres along the Cuyahoga River with public spaces and mixed-use buildings, and the $300 million Sherwin-Williams global headquarters, a 36-story tower rising near Public Square. Further developments like the Cosm entertainment venue in the Gateway District and Rock Block site preparations aim to enhance entertainment and retail by 2027.[343][344][345]

Recent Infrastructure Initiatives (2020s)

In the early 2020s, Cleveland benefited from federal infrastructure funding under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, enabling multimillion-dollar upgrades to transportation and utilities amid ongoing efforts to address aging systems built in the mid-20th century.[346] Key initiatives focused on reducing combined sewer overflows, modernizing public transit, and rehabilitating highways, with the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) allocating $1.5 billion for 213 projects across 17 Northeast Ohio counties in 2025 alone.[347] Project Clean Lake, a $3 billion endeavor by the Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District launched in phases starting in the 2010s but accelerating through the 2020s, aims to capture and treat 4 billion gallons of untreated wastewater annually before it enters Lake Erie, with tunneling and storage facility construction ongoing as of 2025.[348] Complementing this, Cleveland Water's infrastructure projects include lead service line replacements and plant enhancements, extending a prior $630 million program to maintain water quality for over 1.6 million customers.[349] Public transit improvements include the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority's (RTA) Railcar Replacement Program, which plans to overhaul its entire light rail vehicle fleet by 2030 to enhance reliability on the Red, Green, and Blue Lines serving 20 million annual riders.[350] The RTA also advanced Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) along the 4-mile West 25th Street corridor (MetroHealth Line) in the mid-2020s, incorporating dedicated lanes, signal priority, and station upgrades to improve service frequency and connectivity from downtown to southern suburbs.[351] Highway efforts feature ODOT's $173 million I-90 rehabilitation east of Cleveland, entailing full pavement replacement, median barrier upgrades, drainage improvements, and lighting enhancements starting in 2025.[352] Cleveland Hopkins International Airport's Terminal Modernization Program, a $1.6 billion multiphase project initiated in the early 2020s, focuses on reconfiguring concourses, expanding security checkpoints, and integrating sustainable features to handle 10 million passengers yearly while competing with regional hubs.[353] Bridge replacements, such as the Cleveland Metroparks' Hawthorn Parkway Bridge reconstruction completed in July 2025 ahead of schedule, addressed structural deficiencies over the Cuyahoga River Valley, restoring full access for vehicles and trails.[354] These initiatives, while straining local budgets, prioritize resilience against flooding and traffic congestion, drawing on public-private partnerships for execution.

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