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"This is a town of best-kept secrets, where the thrill of a new discovery lies around every corner."

-Travel + Leisure Magazine, November, 2004

 

Economy & Business Accolades

• Home to 10 Fortune 500 headquarter firms and nine Fortune 1000 headquarter companies. In addition, another 400 Fortune firms have operations in Greater Cincinnati.

• Expansion Management Magazine ranked Cincinnati USA No. 12 for Best Metro for European Investment and No. 16 Best Metro for Business Expansion, July 2004.

• Site Selection Magazine named Cincinnati USA No. 8 of its Top Metros for New & Expanded Facilities, March 2004.

• More than 1,000 firms engaged in international trade - ranking Greater Cincinnati 22nd nationally in total exports.

• Fortune Magazine ranked Cincinnati 7th among the Top 15 Cities as Great Places to Live and Work.

• Forbes Magazine calls the region one of the "Best Places for Business and Careers."

• Business Development OUTLOOK Magazine names Cincinnati one of the top 25 "2000 Choice Cities" for business expansion or relocation.

• The New York Times says, "Cincinnati exemplifies the cities driving the U.S. economy".

• Employment Review and Outlook both listed Cincinnati among the Top 20 Best U.S. Cities in which to Live and Work.

• Inc. Magazine ranked Cincinnati among the top 25 Large Metro Areas to Start a Business in Now.

• Entrepreneur Magazine ranked Cincinnati 16th for entrepreneurship and #1 for “LowestFailure Rates”.

• Yahoo Internet Life says Cincinnati is one of the Top Wired Cities in 2000 - ranking it 25th out of 50.

• Sprint Business ranked Greater Cincinnati on their list of "Most Productive Cities in America"based on economic productivity composite index.

• Sales & Marketing Management ranked Cincinnati 10th in its Top 20 Hottest Markets for Selling and Doing Business. Factors considered included population increases, retail sales,effective buying income, increase in building permits, unemployment rates, job growth, mix of industries, tax rates, number of corporate relocations and number of new corporations.

• Dun & Bradstreet and Entrepreneur Magazine ranked Cincinnati 16th among large cities in its “Best Cities for Small Business.”

• Dun & Bradstreet and Entrepreneur Magazine ranked Cincinnati 1st with the Lowest Business Bankruptcy Rates.

 

 

Livability Accolades & Highlights

• In its August 2004 issue, AmericanStyle magazine ranked Cincinnati No. 5 among its list of 26 top arts destinations, recognizing three of Cincinnati’s arts venues: the Contemporary Arts Center, the Cincinnati Art Museum’s recently opened Cincinnati Wing and the renovated Taft Museum of Art.

• In April, 2004, Esquire Magazine ranked Cincinnati as seventh on its top 10 list of “Cities that Rock”. Cities were chosen based on the talent in their music scenes, venues and record stores.

• In 2004 credit-card giant VISA ranked Cincinnati No. 10 in its list of the 50 most innovative cities.

• Cincinnati is the fifth most literate city in the country out of 79 with populations of 200,000 or more, according to a study by Jack Miller, chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater.

• Sporting News magazine names Cincinnati as the No. 1 college basketball city in America based on the quality of the University of Cincinnati and Xavier teams and their dedicated fans.

• In a list compiled by Bert Sperling, creator of Money magazine’s annual “Best Places to Live” placed Cincinnati among the top 20 fun cities in the United States.

• Newport Aquarium was named Zagat Survey's No. 1 aquarium in the Midwest and one of the 25 top-rated attractions in the country.

• Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden ranked 13th of 50 national attractions in the 2004 Zagat Survey.

• Cincinnati Art Museum tied with four museums for best art museum in the 2004 Zagat Survey.

• Newport on the Levee topped the national list of malls and shopping centers in the 2004 Zagat Survey.

• The Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal was chosen as one of the “10 great places to cherish choo-choo heritage” by USA TODAY in 2004.

• USA TODAY in 2004 listed Oktoberfest-Zinzinnati as one of as one of the nation's “10 great beer festivals.”

• Greater Cincinnati is ranked in the top ten by Fortune magazine as a great place tolive and work.

• Special Millenium Edition of Places Rated Almanac ranked Greater Cincinnati seventh - the top 3% of metro areas.

• Dubbed the “Queen City of the West” by Longfellow and called “America’s most beautiful inland city” by Churchill.

• Study found that the average buying power in Cincinnati was eighth best in the nation.

• Cincinnati’s Fine Arts Fund, the oldest in the nation, ranks among the top three in thecountry for total dollars raised by a united arts campaign.

• World-renowned symphony orchestra, fifth oldest in the nation.

• Cincinnati Opera – internationally acclaimed second oldest company in the U.S.

• The May Festival, oldest choral music event in the Western Hemisphere.

• One of the top five zoos in the U.S. and the second oldest. Renowned for breeding exotic animals and recently added Manatee Springs. Nation’s first and largest Insectarium. Most gorilla births of any zoo.

• Paramount’s Kings Island – one of the top ten amusement parks in the nation.

• The Newport Aquarium – in Newport, KY., with 11,000 creatures, the nation’s largest air shark viewing area and largest King Penguin collection.

• Tall Stack – “top tourism event in 1999”.

• Krohn Conservatory - one of the nation’s largest public greenhouses.

• One of the largest municipal park systems of a major U.S. city.

• Waynesville – the antique capital of the Midwest.

• The public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County ranks third in the nation in total circulation.

• The Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park won the 2004 Regional Theatre Tony Award

 

 

Healthcare Accolades & Highlights

Medical firsts and other noteworthy successes highlight Greater Cincinnati’s

medical history:

• The first oral polio vaccine developed by Dr. Albert Sabin

• The first medical laser laboratory, established by Dr. Leon Goldman

• The first antihistamine - Benadryl by George Rievesche

• The first pediatric eye institute

• The first argon laser surgery in the U.S.

• The first Pediatric Liver Care Center and the Prenatal Research Institute

• The first heart-lung machine

• The first use of YAG laser to remove brain tumors

• The first hip replacement

• The first Center for Environmental Genetics, funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Services

• The first emergency medicine residency program

• The first bachelor's degree program in nursing

• The first medical center in the world to treat inoperable brain tumors and other tumors with new noninvasive LEXAR radiotherapy

• Pioneering of skin grafting techniques; one of the first skin banks

• Leader in the treatment of cancer and blood disorders in children

• One of the most successful bond marrow transplant centers for children

• Developed the Alcyon computer system to monitor the vital functions of high-risk newborns;only one its kind in the world

• Developed a method for the preservation of whole blood

• The Heimlich Maneuver to prevent choking, by Dr. Henry Heimlich

• One of the world’s largest surgically-oriented vascular laboratories

• One of five national sites for vaccine research of childhood diseases

• Nationally recognized transplant program for heart, lung, liver, pancreas and kidney

• Developer of the bubble oxygenator

• World-renowned children's hospital - first in pediatric surgeries and third in research funding from National Institutes of Health.

• Largest number of pediatric surgeries, emergency and outpatient visits

• First in America to install a new type pacemaker designed to help people with heart failure

• Launching of new world-class brain clinic – Neuroscience Institute

• “Best Doctors in America” includes 112 faculty members from the College of Medicine

• Discovery of a drug the reverses arthritis in laboratory animals and prevent septic shock and onset of diabetic symptoms

• Developed method to measure brain damage

 

 

Cincinnati Firsts

• 1835 - First bag of airmail - lifted by a hot air balloon.

• 1849 - First city in the U.S. to hold a municipal song festival - Saengerfest.

• 1850 - First city in the U.S. to establish a Jewish hospital.

• 1850 - First city in the U.S. to publish greeting cards - Gibson Greeting Card Company.

• 1853 - First practical steam fire engine. First city to establish a municipal fire department and first firemen's pole.

• 1869 - First city to establish a weather bureau.

• 1869 - First professional baseball team - the Cincinnati Red Stockings, later known as theCincinnati Reds.

• 1870 - First city in the U.S. to establish a municipal university - University of Cincinnati.

• 1870 - First city to hold annual industrial expositions.

• 1875 - First city to establish a Jewish theological college - Hebrew Union College.

• 1880 - First city in which a woman, Maria Longworth Nichols Storer, began and operated a large manufacturing operation - Rookwood Pottery.

• 1880 - First and only city to build and own a major railroad.

• 1902 - First concrete skyscraper built in the U.S. - the Ingalls Building.

• 1905 - Daniel Carter Beard founded the Sons of Daniel Boone, later known as the Boy Scouts of America.

• 1906 - First university to offer cooperative education - University of Cincinnati.

• 1935 - First night baseball game played under lights.

• 1952 - First heart-lung machine - makes open heart surgery possible. Developed at Children's Hospital Medical Center

• 1954 - First city to have a licensed Public television station - WCET TV.

 

http://www.mostlivable.org/cities/cincinnati/home_acc_cinci.html

Charles Dickens was favorably impressed by Cincinnati too back in 1842.

___________________

 

BBC to film at Mercantile

Skeptics society will debate issues

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Mark Hansel

Post staff reporter

 

The British Broadcasting Corp. will film a portion of a documentary about Charles Dickens'1842 visit to the United States at the Mercantile Library Building on Walnut Street Downtown next week.

The library will host an informal debate Monday about current issues in a discussion of critical thinking by the Cincinnati Skeptics Society, which will be included in the documentary. The society is a local organization that uses scientific methods to investigate and dispute far-fetched claims, such as UFOs...

www.cincypost.com

Publication Date: 11-13-2004

More positive filming in Cincinnati is good news. The Mercantile Library is very cool inside.

 

I also heard that an anti-smoking commercial was being filmed in the B/G restaurant on 9th and Main downtown a couple weeks ago.

  • 1 year later...

Children's ranks second in grants

CINCINNATI ENQUIRER

September 11, 2006

 

 

CINCINNATI - Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center ranks second among the nation's pediatric hospitals in research funding from the National Institutes of Health.

 

Children's was awarded $83.1 million in NIH grants for federal fiscal year 2005. Children's Hospital Boston ranked first for funding with $102.8 million in NIH grants. Cincinnati Children's emphasis on research will result in better bedside care, said Thomas Boat, director of the Cincinnati Children's Research Foundation and chairman of pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center...

 

http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060911/NEWS01/609110361/1056

Slight spelling issue from Travel + Leisure - his name was Rieveschl...but indeed, go George!

Quick! Let's consolidate this into "The Official *I LOVE CINCINNATI* Thread"! :roll:

When it gets to three pages of *Love*, then sure.

 

Until then, bah.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

LOL!!!

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

  • 18 years later...

"Here's the town that beats the Dutch!"

 

Does anyone have any idea what this could possibly mean on this 1907 post card?

 

IMG_9233.thumb.jpeg.c17d99e999a4eae053a5ad2256afb2ae.jpeg

  • ColDayMan changed the title to Cincinnati Accolades

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