Greater Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce
The Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber is a regional chamber of commerce. It is the nation's fifth largest chamber, representing nearly 5,000 businesses and 310,000 employees in southwestern Ohio, northern Kentucky and southeastern Indiana, also known as Greater Cincinnati, or the Cincinnati–Northern Kentucky metropolitan area. The Chamber spearheads The Cincinnati USA Partnership, a development organization including 15 counties in three states.[1]
The Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce was founded October 15, 1839 by 76 firms and private individuals who placed an ad in the Cincinnati Daily Gazette urging local businessmen to attend a meeting at the Young Men's Mercantile Library Association headquarters in the old Cincinnati College Building at Fourth and Walnut Streets.[2] This Chamber's founding preceded the United States Chamber of Commerce, which held its first meeting in Cincinnati,[1] by 73 years.
The Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce met in six different temporary locations until in 1876[3] they began the process that led to a permanent structure. The Chamber's Board of Real Estate Managers invited six architects to compete in a selection competition.[4] Henry Hobson Richardson's design won [5] and that building was erected in 1889.[6] A fire in 1911 caused substantial damage to the building,[7] leading to the discovery that only $90,000 of insurance was carried on the building, which had cost $772,674.05 to build,[8] and so it could not be repaired. When the property was sold, much of the granite from the building was saved and stored in Oakley, Ohio.[9] In 1967, Professor John Peterson at UC's University of Cincinnati College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning coordinated an effort to build a memorial to Henry Hobson Richardson out of the surviving stones. A design competition whose jury included's Richardson's grandson was held in 1968 and the design by student Stephen Carter (architect) was selected.[10] The memorial was completed in 1972 and resides in Burnet Woods.
According to Charles Ludwig, a journalist in the 1920s and 1930s for the Cincinnati Times-Star, up to that time, the Chamber had been involved in most of the city's significant developments since its creation.
As Cincinnati grew and became an eight-county metropolitan area in the mid-1960s, the Chamber changed its name to the Greater Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce to reflect its regional representation of businesses throughout Southwestern Ohio, Northern Kentucky and Southeastern Indiana. It is now called The Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber. The phrase "Cincinnati USA" is used to indicate that Greater Cincinnati extends beyond just one U.S. city and state.
The Chamber's magazine, Cincinnati Magazine, was created in 1967.
References
- 1 2 "Cincinnati USA Partnership Playing Key Role in Regional Job Growth Bioformix, Kao Latest Success Stories.". Feb 14, 2012.
- ↑ J. William Rudd (May 1968). "The Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce Building, Vol. 27, No. 2, pp. 115-123.". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians.
- ↑ "Secretary's report of 12 September 1876 reprinted in Richardson, The Architect and the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce Building, p. 42.". The Cincinnati Astronomical Society. 1914.
- ↑ "Richardson, The Architect and the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce Building, p. 55.". The Cincinnati Astronomical Society. 1914.
- ↑ ""A Model Building", The Commercial Gazette (Cincinnati, 9 June 1885), p. 4.". The Commercial Gazette. 1885.
- ↑ "Secretary's report on The Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce and Merchant's Exchange 40th Annual Report, p. 75.". 1889.
- ↑ "The Cincinnati Enquirer". January 11–24, 1911.
- ↑ "The Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce and Merchant's Exchange 40th and 62nd Reports, 1889 and 1912".
- ↑ Cincinnati Astronomical Society (1914). "The Preservation of the Granite Arches and Walls After the Fire, Richardson, The Architect and The Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce Building, pp. 111 - 113.".
- ↑ J. William Rudd (2012). "Richardson's rocks: DAAP-designed Cincinnati memorial in Burnet Woods turns 40". UC Magazine.
External links
Coordinates: 39°06′03″N 84°30′48″W / 39.100769°N 84.513231°W