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Berea–Midpark High School

2013 establishments in OhioBerea, OhioHigh schools in Cuyahoga County, OhioPublic high schools in Ohio
BereaMidpark (5)
BereaMidpark (5)

Berea–Midpark High School (BMHS) is a public high school in Berea, Ohio, United States, and is the only high school in the Berea City School District. The school was formed in 2013 from a consolidation of Berea High School and Midpark High School due to declining enrollment. It is located on a campus immediately east of Baldwin Wallace University and is housed in a building that opened in August 2020. Previously, BMHS was housed in the former Berea High School building on the same campus. That building opened in 1929 with additions in 1954, 1964, and 1995, and was demolished between August and November of 2020. A new building was built at the location of the previous one. The new building opened for the 2020-21 school year. As of the 2020–21 school year, BMHS has approximately 1,600 students in grades 9 through 12. Athletic teams are known as the Titans, and the school colors are blue and orange, with the blue coming from Berea High School and the orange from Midpark High School.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Berea–Midpark High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Berea–Midpark High School
East Bagley Road,

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N 41.3731 ° E -81.8452 °
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Berea-Midpark High School

East Bagley Road 165
44017
Ohio, United States
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BereaMidpark (5)
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John Wheeler House (Berea, Ohio)
John Wheeler House (Berea, Ohio)

The John Wheeler House, also known as The Little Hermitage of Berea, was home to John Wheeler, an American educator and the first president of Baldwin University in Berea, Ohio. Baldwin College eventually merged with nearby German Wallace College to become Baldwin Wallace University. Wheeler also has a building named after him on the Baldwin Wallace University campus. Wheeler's home, built in 1834, is the oldest continuously occupied residence in Berea, Ohio.The property was coined The Little Hermitage in a nod to Andrew Jackson’s estate near Nashville. Designated a century home by the Berea Historical Society, The Wheeler House has been restored by its current owners yet retains its original character and charm. The home is a modern classic and will celebrate its bicentennial in 2034. The Wheeler House is Italianate architecture and boasts original wood floors, crown moldings, windows, stained glass, two staircases, and hardware. The front porch, with dual swings, opens to the south lawn with its original stone walkway and two mounting blocks. There are also two expansive verandas overlooking the north, east, and west lawns. The home comprises 3,654 square feet (339.5 m2) of living space on three levels with a foyer, living room, formal dining room, kitchen, library, five bedrooms, three bathrooms, mud room, laundry room, and a home gym in the large, finished cellarage. The kitchen is a Clive Christian original and features two sinks, two islands, a table that faces a working fireplace, a bay window, and French doors that lead out to the back tree-shaded veranda. The property sits on 1.4 acres (0.57 ha) of land and features some of the oldest trees in Cuyahoga County. At the end of the driveway is a carriage house that has been converted into a two-car garage and studio with a brick patio that overlooks a ravine, creek, and waterfall. The home and grounds are surrounded to the north and south by Mill Stream Run Reservation, part of the Cleveland Metroparks system. The John Wheeler House was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1978. Its current owners, Dr. Scott J. Latiolais and Joel M. Latiolais, acquired the home in 2022.