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Dublin City School District (Ohio)

Dublin, OhioEducation in Delaware County, OhioEducation in Franklin County, OhioEducation in Union County, OhioSchool districts in Ohio

The Dublin City School District, also known as Dublin City Schools, is a public school district in Ohio. It encompasses 47 square miles (120 km2), and serves most of the city of Dublin, Ohio, as well as part of the city of Columbus, and unincorporated parts of Delaware and Union Counties. In the fall of 2017, district enrollment exceeded 16,000 students attending its nineteen schools. In the 2010-2011 school year, Dublin City Schools finished on May 27, 2011, prior to Memorial Day, however the end of the first semester did not end prior to Winter Break.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Dublin City School District (Ohio) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Dublin City School District (Ohio)
Tara Hill Drive, Washington Township

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N 40.109166666667 ° E -83.140277777778 °
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Tara Hill Drive 5614
43017 Washington Township
Ohio, United States
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Field of Corn

Field of Corn (with Osage Orange Trees) is a publicly funded art installation in the city of Dublin, Ohio. The installation consists of 109 concrete ears of corn positioned in rows and standing upright in a grassy field. At one end of the field are two rows of Osage-orange trees, one pre-existing and the other planted for the project. Sculpted by Malcolm Cochran, with landscaping by Stephen Drown and James Hiss, Field of Corn was commissioned by the Dublin Arts Council and completed in 1994.The display site, named the Sam and Eulalia Frantz Park, was originally farmed by Sam Frantz, an inventor of several hybrid corn species, and was donated to the city in the late twentieth century. The art installation is partly a tribute to Sam Frantz and is also intended to remind visitors of Dublin's agricultural heritage. Along the west side of the park, near the Osage orange trees, are signs that describe the project and explain hybridization.Three different molds were used to cast the concrete ears of corn, which stand about 6 feet (1.8 m) tall. The breed of corn represented is known as Corn Belt Dent Corn, a double-cross hybrid variety. The ears are rotated in several directions to make it appear as if each ear is unique. They were cast at a precast concrete manufacturer, Cook & Ingle Co., in Dalton, Georgia. Each ear weighs 1,500 lb (680 kg)Field of Corn has become a popular piece of public art in the Central Ohio Community. The display received "Best of Columbus" honors by readers of Columbus Monthly magazine each year of its nomination since 2008, including four #1 awards as best public artwork in central Ohio.