Official Name: | Glenville |
Settlement Type: | Neighborhood of Cleveland |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | United States |
Subdivision Type1: | State |
Subdivision Name1: | Ohio |
Subdivision Type2: | County |
Subdivision Name2: | Cuyahoga County |
Subdivision Type3: | City |
Subdivision Name3: | Cleveland |
Population As Of: | 2020 |
Population Footnotes: | [1] |
Population Total: | 22,581 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Demographics Type1: | Demographics |
Demographics1 Title1: | White |
Demographics1 Info1: | 3.3% |
Demographics1 Title2: | Black |
Demographics1 Info2: | 93.4% |
Demographics1 Title3: | Hispanic (of any race) |
Demographics1 Info3: | 0.7% |
Demographics1 Title4: | Asian and Pacific Islander |
Demographics1 Info4: | 0.5% |
Demographics1 Title5: | Mixed and Other |
Demographics1 Info5: | 2.8% |
Timezone: | EST |
Utc Offset: | -5 |
Timezone Dst: | EDT |
Utc Offset Dst: | -4 |
Postal Code Type: | ZIP Codes |
Postal Code: | 44108 |
Area Code: | 216 |
Blank Name: | Median income |
Blank Info: | $26,434 |
Footnotes: | Source: 2020 U.S. Census, City Planning Commission of Cleveland |
Glenville is a neighborhood on the East Side of Cleveland, Ohio. To the north, it borders the streetcar suburb of Bratenahl, the Cleveland Memorial Shoreway, and the Lake Erie shore, encompassing the Cleveland Lakefront Nature Preserve. To the east, it borders the suburb of East Cleveland, and to the south, it borders the neighborhoods of Hough and University Circle. Glenville borders the Collinwood area to the northeast at East 134th Street, and St. Clair–Superior to the west at Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and the Cleveland Cultural Gardens in Rockefeller Park.[2]
The Glenville neighborhood was founded in 1870 as an independent village. Until 1904, it also included the now adjacent lakeside village of Bratenahl, Ohio. Bratenahl departed from Glenville during the city of Cleveland's annexation of Glenville in 1904.[3] In its early years, Glenville had been a small village, serving mainly as a resort community to Cleveland's upper-middle class residents. It was also home to the Glenville Race Track (harness racing) and the Cleveland Country Club.[4] Following World War I, developers invested in Glenville with the rapid construction of single and multi-family homes throughout the Cleveland neighborhood, turning the once quiet village into a bustling inner city neighborhood.
From a period beginning shortly after its annexation in 1904 and into the 1950s, Glenville was predominantly a Jewish neighborhood with a small African American population.[4] At its peak, Jews made up over 90% of Glenville's residents.[5] The neighborhood's large Jewish influence during the time of its development was most notable along E.105th street, where dozens of Jewish owned stores, bakeries, kosher butchers, and other businesses lined the street. Several synagogues were built throughout the neighborhood, most of which are used today as African American churches.[6] By the mid 1950s, the neighborhood's Jewish population began to relocate from Glenville to adjacent eastern suburbs.[7] Similarly to surrounding inner city neighborhoods, Glenville rapidly turned into an African-American neighborhood.
In the 1960s, racial integration saw an accompanying civil unrest in the neighborhood, which reached its climax in the 1968 Glenville Shootout. Like much of the violence associated with civil unrest during the Civil Rights Movement in other major US cities as well as in the adjacent Hough neighborhood, racial tensions were a catalyst for an ensuing demographic shift.
Today, Glenville is predominantly African-American. While having been so for over a half century - being one of Cleveland's most visible examples of poverty, crime and urban decay - Glenville has in the early 21st century gained more positive national media attention, particularly in its high school football team, which has rapidly become one of the better known preparatory programs in Ohio as well as the nation.[8] [9]
https://rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1150869
https://n.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1150869
Glenville High School and its feeder schools serve the community at large.
Glenville is bordered on the northwest by Gordon Park (part of the Cleveland Lakefront State Park district)[10] and on the entirety of its immediate western edge by the winding Rockefeller Park. Built on land donated to the city by John D. Rockefeller in 1897, the wooded 276 acres, through which a section of Martin Luther King Boulevard runs, is known for its historic greenhouse and the Cultural Gardens, and is the largest park located completely within the city limits of Cleveland.[11]
Notable residents of Glenville include: