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City of Cuyahoga Falls

2310 Second Street
330-971-8000

History: 

Cuyahoga Falls was founded in 1812, and was originally called Manchester. The Cuyahoga River runs both south and north through the City and the Cuyahoga "Falls", which extend for about 2 miles, fall farther than Niagara Falls.

Due to the rough water, Native Americans who used the river to travel from the Great Lakes to the Mississippi left the river at the Falls and used what is now Portage Trail to continue their journey south. The river was an early source of power for mills and manufacturing, and by 1840 Cuyahoga Falls had a wider variety of manufacturing than any other Ohio settlement.

The river now is a source of beauty, recreation and contemplation. In the place of the old Vaughn Machinery plant now stands the Cuyahoga Falls Sheraton Suites Hotel, with its Riverfront restaurant offering an unparalleled view of the Cuyahoga "Falls". Waterworks Park, home of the City's Family Aquatics Center, offers hiking, picnicking and biking along the River, and the 6,000 acres in the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area provide year-round outdoor opportunities for the people of Cuyahoga Falls and Northeast Ohio.

While industry has moved away from the River, it has not moved away from Cuyahoga Falls. In fact, the City has enjoyed a steady economic growth pattern of residential, commercial, and industrial uses. The City enjoys a diversity of manufacturing and industrial uses of all sizes, and is in the process of developing almost 1,000 acres of industrial parks. Residential development, while most strongly focused on single family residential, similarly offers a wide variety of housing options for people of all ages and family sizes.

The 1985 merger of the City of Cuyahoga Falls and Northampton Township, the first statutory merger of an incorporated and an unincorporated area in Ohio, in many ways shaped the future of the City into the 21st Century. The City almost tripled in geographic area, to approximately 27 square miles. The relatively rural character of the former township has added a balance to the more developed core of the old City. Ten years after merger, the people of what was once two communities continue to move forward together to forge the Cuyahoga Falls of the future.