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Grog Run (Ohio)

Greater Cincinnati geography stubsOhio river stubsRivers of Clermont County, OhioRivers of OhioRivers of Warren County, Ohio

Grog Run is a stream in the U.S. state of Ohio.According to the Warren County Genealogical Society, the origin of the name "Grog Run" is unknown. Locally, the name derives from the stream that runs parallel with the road. Grog Run Creek, as it is locally known, lets out into the Little Miami River right outside of Loveland, Ohio. According to a number of residents, there have been many Native American arrowheads and other artifacts found near the creek and the surrounding banks.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Grog Run (Ohio) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Grog Run (Ohio)
Hutchinson Road, Goshen Township

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.263888888889 ° E -84.231111111111 °
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Address

Hutchinson Road

Hutchinson Road
45140 Goshen Township
Ohio, United States
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Chateau Laroche
Chateau Laroche

Château Laroche, also known as the Loveland Castle, is a museum on the banks of the Little Miami River north of Loveland, Ohio, United States. Built in the style of a Medieval castle, construction began in the 1920s by Boy Scout troop leader, World War I veteran, and medievalist Harry D. Andrews. He built the castle on promotional plots of land that were obtained by paying for one-year subscriptions to The Cincinnati Enquirer. Andrews named his castle after a military hospital in the Château de la Roche in southwest France, where he was stationed during the First World War. Its name means "Rock Castle" in French.For over fifty years, Andrews worked on his castle project. He pulled stones from the nearby Little Miami River, and when that supply was exhausted, molded bricks with cement and quart milk cartons.When Andrews died in 1981, he willed the castle to his Boy Scout troop the Knights of the Golden Trail (KOGT). The Castle has been extensively upgraded and renovated in the years since Andrews' death and has been mostly completed by the KOGT. The East tower now houses a short video presentation on Andrews' quest to finish his dream. The walls of the upstairs chapel feature many stones brought back by Andrews in his world travels and others sent to him from foreign locations by his friends and followers. Recently completed are an expansion to the outside gardens and a greenhouse. Tales of the castle being haunted – often coming from Chateau Laroche's own volunteer knights – have been reported over the years.