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    I love this picture from 1895, but did not have room to put it on other pages.  So
    here it is, sort of out of place, but yet sending a message.

    You may have noticed that I took the liberty of putting this website together in an
    order that speaks of "just what was that person thinking."  This page should have
    been first, but I felt that the short chronological history of the Southside would do
    better on the first page to get your attention.  The transition of the area was and
    is so profound that it needed to be told not in a story line but from actual
    accounting of what happened.
March 11, 2008:
As you can see there have been many changes to this website.  We are still not finished.  Linking this site to the new Lincoln High School site is proving to be a
challenge but both sites are coming together and
Lincoln High School is up and running.  The links on that new site are all not working yet, but the data is there.  We
have more donations of pictures and yearbooks and they will go up shortly along with whom gave us all this great information.  The
Thank You + page of this site will
have Contributors and the Site Index for both websites.
***********
May 12, 2008:
The history of the Tremont War Monument or Tremont War Memorial as it is also known, is now on the Landmarks page.  Please check it out.  Located behind St.
John Cantius, across the street from the old St. John Cantius High School, it sits on an area of land known as the "Tremont Triangle."  Originally named for the shape
of the plot, it now signifies the ongoing stewardship of the three veterans' organizations in Tremont:
PLAV Post 30, Post 58 and the Polish Army Veterans Post 1.  
Neighbors in the area are now also assisting in cutting the grass and maintaining flower beds.
*********
May 21, 2008:
Have updated the Photos page with a picture of another contributor, Laura Nicklas Hine.  The Lincoln High School site is again being revised and added to.
******
June 4, 2008:
We have been allowed to borrow a large amount of material for our other website, Lincoln High School, Cleveland.  We are taking the time to scan all of this material
so we can get it back to its owners.  So much of what we got is fragile that it can only be scanned a few pieces at a time.  The lamp used to scan and copy material
gets too hot for us to be comfortable to do more.

The
Thank You + page has been updated with 1955 Lincoln High School graduate Rosemary Pestovic Sounik added as a contributor.  
**********
June 8, 2008:
A picture of Rosemary Pestovic Sounik has been added to the Photos page.  There is major moving around of the Lincoln High School, Cleveland site.  The
graduate's lists have gotten too large and long and they will be moved to a site of their own, leaving the Lincoln High School site open for more photos and articles.  
**********
June 14, 2008:
The Lincoln High School Graduates site is up and running.  It can be reached from its link here or from the Lincoln High School, Cleveland site.

A few persons are being moved from this site to the Lincoln High School Notables page.  There will still be persons on this site's Notables page who attended Lincoln
High School, but those who we know did not live on the Southside and attended Lincoln have been moved.  The only exception is Lincoln graduate and Southsider,
Ida
Jean ("Hoppy") Hopkins
, a renowned athlete and 1972 Olympic contender.  We felt it would be better to have her biography with her classmates.
Picture from "Cleveland Plain Dealer",
May 10, 1895.
Cleveland's Southside
Today's Tremont
Neighborhood