The Columbus Dispatch

Sandusky gearing up to celebrate 200th year

- STEVE STEPHENS

Yes, the weather is turning a mite chilly. That makes now the perfect time to start planning a Lake Erie getaway for the summer.

One of my favorite lakefront cities, Sandusky, has a big season planned. Next year marks the 200th anniversar­y of the city’s founding in 1818.

Two centuries is quite a lengthy history for an Ohio city. But the first European settlement in the future Buckeye State – also named “Sandusky,” from a Wyandot Indian word – was establishe­d elsewhere almost 70 years before the founding of the present-day town.

French traders cobbled together a small outpost on the northweste­rn shore of Sandusky Bay in about 1749. The rude site, known as "Fort Sandoski" or "Fourt Sandouske," was occupied for less than five years.

The British establishe­d their own Fort Sandusky on the opposite side of the bay in about 1761. It, too, was quickly abandoned — but the name remained on maps for decades after the fort's demise. (A third Fort Sandusky was later establishe­d near the site of present-day Fremont.)

After the town of Sandusky was finally establishe­d at its current site, it became one of Ohio’s first important port cities, the location of the state’s first railroad, the birthplace of Civil War financier Jay Cooke, a crucial stop for escaping slaves on the Undergroun­d Railroad and a hub of the 19th-century ice industry.

Today, the town sits at the center of the region’s thriving tourist trade.

Visitors who want to take part in the birthday celebratio­n next year can find the latest informatio­n and events list at www.sandusky20­18. com, the city’s official bicentenni­al website.

The first major event on the 2018 calendar is a Bicentenni­al Ball, on April 28 at the Cedar Point ballroom. (The venerable Cedar Point Amusement Park, which has become the roller-coaster capital of the world, will celebrate its 150th anniversar­y in 2020.) The gala will include live music and signature cocktails, and it will serve as a fundraiser to support more bicentenni­al events.

Sandusky will also host a tall-ships festival and downtown street fair July 12-15 and a homecoming and bicentenni­al celebratio­n later in the summer, with more events to be announced.

But even travelers who can’t make it for a birthday bash should stop in Sandusky to visit the beautiful, historic downtown, which offers a pretty floral clock and memorable fountain at the Erie County Courthouse.

Visitors will definitely want to check out the Merry-Go-Round Museum, some of the local wineries and Toft Dairy, itself a historic icon and the oldest dairy in the state. It serves tasty ice cream — with scoops the size of cannonball­s.

Speaking of cannonball­s, visitors can also catch a ferry in Sandusky to South Bass Island and the town of Put-In-Bay, site of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry’s famous 1813 Battle of Lake Erie navel victory and, today, Perry’s Victory and Internatio­nal Peace Memorial.

For more informatio­n about things to see and do in and around Sandusky, call 1-800255-3743 or visit www. shoresandi­slands.com.

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 ?? [STEVE STEPHENS/DISPATCH] ?? Visitors enjoy the fountain outside the Erie County Courthouse in Sandusky.
[STEVE STEPHENS/DISPATCH] Visitors enjoy the fountain outside the Erie County Courthouse in Sandusky.

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