The Columbus Dispatch

6 things you might not know about the Hilltop neighborho­od

- Danae King, Sheridan Hendrix and Julie Fulton

The Hilltop, one of Columbus’ largest urban neighborho­ods, just west of Downtown, has a storied history that may surprise even some longtime city residents.

The land was originally owned by Lucas Sullivant, who founded Franklinto­n and left 1,600 acres of what is now the Hilltop to his two sons, William and Michael. In its early days, the area was known as Sullivant’s Hill.

The Great Flood of 1913 along the Scioto River nearly destroyed neighborin­g Franklinto­n and enticed people to move to higher ground on the Hilltop, which prospered as a community during the first half of the 20th century.

The constructi­on of several malls in the area and suburban flight in the 1950s and 1960s influenced the Hilltop’s decline. It wasn’t until the 2000s that broad interest in the community as a place to live was aroused.

Here are six things you might not have known about the history of Columbus’ Hilltop neighborho­od:

1. It was home to one of the largest Civil War camps in the North

One of the largest Union Army prisoner-of-war camps during the American Civil War once stood on the Hilltop.

Camp Chase, a 160-acre training camp for Ohio volunteers for the Union Army was turned into a prisoner-of-war camp, housing thousands of captured Confederat­e troops during the Civil War.

At its peak, the camp hosted 9,423 prisoners in January 1865 before closing in July of that year.

Today, the cemetery – a sma–ll, twoacre plot built in 1863 – is all that remains. Its entrance is on 2900 Sullivant Ave.

2. It was host to a lesser-known Seven Wonders of the World

Columbus used to have its very own Seven Wonders of the World, convenient­ly located next to each other at a Hilltop shopping center.

The exhibit, called the Walk O’ Wonders, opened in front of the then-great Western Shoppers Mart parking lot in 1956 and was free for the public.

The display featured mini replicas depicting the Eiffel Tower, standing 22feet tall; Niagara Falls, with 1 million gallons of water flowing daily; the Taj Mahal; the Sphinx and the Great Pyramids; the Parthenon; a 20-foot-tall Leaning Tower of Pisa; an eight-foot deep and 40-foot-long Grand Canyon; the Carlsbad Caverns; and the Trevi Fountain.

The attraction, dreamed up by mall developer Don Casto at a $250,000 price tag, took up a 700-foot by-60-foot strip in the center’s parking lot.

The exhibit, however, was frequently vandalized. Children would pour soap powder into the Niagara Falls and maintenanc­e was difficult, according to The Dispatch archives, eventually leading to the demise of the display.

Most of the wonders were bulldozed and destroyed in the 1970s after several years of decline. The Eiffel Tower, however, remained intact and lasted seven additional years at the center before finding a new home at a private residence in 1979.

3. Jesse Owens lived on the Hilltop when Ohio State wouldn’t let him live on campus

Jesse Owens, a Black man who won four gold medals in track and field in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, lived on the Hilltop while attending Ohio State University.

He lived at a house on South Oakley Avenue because Ohio State didn’t allow Black students to live in the dorms then.

His former house is on the Highland West Art Walk.

Owens died in 1980 of lung cancer. He was 66.

In 2001, the 10,000-seat Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium opened at Ohio State. It hosts track and field events, as well as lacrosse and soccer games.

4. Jazz great Nancy Wilson called the Hilltop home

Nancy Wilson, a nationally renowned jazz singer who died in 2018 at the age of 81 after more than 50 years in the music industry, lived on the Hilltop. She attended West High School.

Wilson won three Grammy Awards for her work, which also went platinum, and released more than 60 albums.

Wilson started singing at church as a young child. In 1956, she became a member of Rusty Bryant’s band in Columbus and left the city three years later when she got a record deal with Capitol Records.

She went on to receive an Emmy for her 1974-1975 variety show on TV and was known for her clear voice.

5. Michael Redd grew up there, too

Michael Redd – an Ohio State University alumnus, former NBA All-star and Olympic gold medalist – grew up on the Hilltop and attended Columbus West High School.

He played at Ohio State from 1998 to 2000.

In 2000, he was drafted by the Milwaukee Bucks and became an NBA Allstar in 2004. He was also the team’s MVP five times and got a gold medal in 2008 at the Beijing Olympics.

He’s also been inducted to the Ohio State Athletics Hall of Fame and the Ohio Basketball Hall of Fame.

Redd retired in 2013 and moved back to Columbus, where he is now an investor, philanthro­pist and businessma­n.

6. The nation’s largest building – before the Pentagon – was on the Hilltop

Built on the Hilltop in 1877, the Central Ohio Psychiatri­c Hospital was the nation’s largest building for more than

70 years until 1943, when the Pentagon was built.

The old hospital, which opened as the Ohio Lunatic Asylum, was built where the Ohio Department of Public Safety’s Charles D. Shipley Building now sits at 1970 W Broad St., just inside the boundaries of the Hilltop.

It was the first state-supported hospital in Ohio and had many names over the years, including the Columbus State Hospital.

After falling into disrepair during the 1980s, the building was demolished in 1991, according to The Dispatch archives.

This story is part of the Dispatch’s Mobile Newsroom initiative. Visit our reporters at the Columbus Metropolit­an Library’s Hilltop branch library and read their work at dispatch.com/mobilenews­room, where you also can sign up for The Mobile Newsroom newsletter. dking@dispatch.com @Danaeking jfulton@dispatch.com shendrix@dispatch.com @sheridan12­0

 ?? PHOTO ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Ohio State’s Michael Redd, now involved in community outreach in Columbus, was a star for the Buckeyes and the NBA’S Milwaukee Bucks.
PHOTO ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Ohio State’s Michael Redd, now involved in community outreach in Columbus, was a star for the Buckeyes and the NBA’S Milwaukee Bucks.
 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Jesse Owens, who won four gold medals in track and field in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, is shown at Republican headquarte­rs. He lived in the Hilltop when Ohio State wouldn’t let him live on campus.
FILE PHOTO Jesse Owens, who won four gold medals in track and field in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, is shown at Republican headquarte­rs. He lived in the Hilltop when Ohio State wouldn’t let him live on campus.
 ?? .STUART RAMSON/AP FILE ?? Grammy Award winner and legendary vocalist Nancy Wilson performs at the Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall in New York
.STUART RAMSON/AP FILE Grammy Award winner and legendary vocalist Nancy Wilson performs at the Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall in New York

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