Abstract: |
The Van Sweringen Company was a real estate development firm formed by Oris P. and Mantis J. Van Sweringen, two brothers who,
in 1905, began purchasing land in what is now Shaker Heights, Ohio, 8 miles southeast of Cleveland. The land, originally part
of Warrensville Twp., was settled in 1822 by the celibate North Union Shaker community, which disbanded in 1889. The Van Sweringen
idea was the development of a comprehensively planned "garden city" suburb which included the maintenance of natural topography
and lakes, curving roads, and specific locations for apartments, commercial areas, public schools, churches and private secondary
schools. The plan was achieved in the 1920s and 1930s, with the company managing and enforcing strict zoning and building
restrictions, deed (including ethnic and racial) restrictions, and architectural design guidelines. The suburb grew to a population
of nearly 18,000 by 1930, in large part due to the construction by the Van Sweringens of the Shaker Rapid Transit, a high-speed,
convenient railway link to downtown Cleveland with a traffic-free right-of-way. The Van Sweringens were very private men,
and most of their personal and company records have been destroyed. The collection consists of correspondence; sales prospectuses
and brochures; lot valuations and reports; newspaper and periodical clippings; development maps, graphs, miscellaneous demographic
information and photographs re: Shaker Village, Shaker Heights and Shaker Country Estates; plat maps, plans, restrictions
and opinions re: development along, and the extension of, Shaker Blvd.; and maps of triangles and strips deeded to the municipalities
of Shaker Hts., Beachwood and Pepper Pike. The collection pertains primarily to the development of the company's Shaker Country
Estates, and is a good source for local history and the history of planned communities.
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