The culture of Akron, Ohio is an amalgamation of local features of the city, which was founded in Summit County in 1825.
While the city originally had German roots, the influx of immigrants in the late 1800s and early 1900s brought Jewish, Italian, Lithuanian, Polish, Slovenian and Ukrainian food to the table: pastrami, pierogis, pizza, and sauerkraut balls. Today's restaurants also feature African, Asian, Middle-Eastern, and Mexican cuisine.
Urban farming is part of Akron's cultural landscape. The city has provided many places to grow food, and has also supported many new restaurants: Bricco, Cilantro, Crave, and Lockview. Independent grocery stores include Krieger's, Mustard Seed Market, and Seven Grain Market.
Akron has a longstanding claim to being the birthplace of the hamburger.[1] A "National Hamburger Festival" was held in the city annually for many years.[2]
Founded in 1922, the Akron Art Museum was vastly expanded in the early 2000s and now hosts international exhibitions along with its local collections.
Directly across the street from the museum is the small Nightlight Cinema, an independent enterprise. As Vogue describes it, the theater "focuses exclusively on locally produced movies, as well as obscure documentaries, foreign films, and first-run indie features (in other words—titles you’ve likely never heard of, and that’s the point)".[1]
The award-winning Knight-Ridder newspaper chain began in Akron as two separate companies, the Akron Beacon Journal and the German-language New Yorker Staats-Zeitung.
The city is the birthplace of Rita Dove, former Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress.
Sojourner Truth gave her famous "Ain't I A Woman" speech in Akron at the Ohio Women's Rights Convention in 1851.
The city is and has been home to award-winning writers David Auburn and Terry Pluto.
A former literary editor of Esquire, Adrienne Miller, came from the Akron suburbs; she later wrote the novel The Coast of Akron.[3]
The landmark Akron pizza shop Luigi's is the inspiration for the pizza shop Montoni's in the comic strip Funky Winkerbean, written by Akron native Tom Batiuk.[4]
In the Flaming Carrot Comics, Iron City, where the Carrot lives, was made similar to Akron and another working-stiff town, Pittsburgh.
Writer and illustrator Bill Watterson has also lived in the county.
Akron has been home to a wide variety of musical artists including:
In the late 1970s, following the international success of local band Devo, talent scouts combed the city. Soon, several compilation albums promoted the "Akron Sound", a multifaceted music scene led by the Waitresses and Rachel Sweet, and many artists of regional prominence including Tin Huey, Liam Sternberg, Bizarros, and Rubber City Rebels.[6] [7]
Other major rock musicians from the city are:
The city's music scene is chronicled and commemorated in the Akron Sound Museum, established in 2015.[8]
The Akron Art Museum has hosted free outdoor concerts every summer since 1984.[9]
Major venues for music in Akron include the Akron Civic Theatre, E.J. Thomas Hall, and Blossom Music Center. Residents and fans of alternative music still miss the Lime Spider, but continue to appreciate new bands and live poetry at Annabelle's and Paolo's.
The North Hill neighborhood was known for jazz during the early 1900s.
The city is home to basketball superstar LeBron James, and renamed part of its Main Street to "King James Way" in his honor.[1] The city hosts a Minor League Baseball team, the Akron RubberDucks, who play in Canal Park. The World Championship finals of Soap Box Derby are held annually at Derby Downs.
Hikers and bikers have long enjoyed the Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail, which runs through Akron and on to Cleveland.[1]