Columbus Public Schools dominate the K-12 primary school landscape, with each of the suburbs also having fairly large districts as well, sometimes overlapping municipal boundaries. CPS offers many alternative schools as well, such as Columbus Alternative High school, Fort Hayes and Ecole Kenwood. Notable private schools within Columbus include Columbus School for Girls, Bishop Watterson High School, Bishop Ready High School, DeSales High School, Worthington Christian High School, Saint Charles Preparatory School, and the Columbus Academy and Bishop Hartley High School.
Business
As Columbus is the capital of the state of Ohio, there is a large government presence in the city. Including city, state, and jobs at the public Ohio State University, government jobs provide the largest single source of employment within Columbus. However, it is by no means a majority.
Columbus is the headquarters for a number of businesses as well. Nationwide Insurance makes its home downtown in a large, multi-building complex that dominates the northern end of the downtown area. Limited Brands (formerly known as The Limited, Inc.) is located on the east side of the city and is the parent company of the retail stores The Limited, Express, Victoria’s Secret, and Bath & Body Works, among others. Worthington Steel is primarily located on the north side of the metro area in the Worthington suburb. Two fast food chains have their homebase in the Columbus metro area as well, Wendy’s and White Castle, with Wendy’s still operating their first store downtown as both a museum and a working restaurant. Cardinal Health has its headquarters in the northwest suburb of Dublin. Huntington Bancshares also has its headquarters in the downtown area. Borden Chemical (formerly part of the Borden, Inc. corporation prior to its acquisition and subsequent divestiture) is located downtown as well. The Ross Products Division of Abbott Laboratories, makers of Ensure nutritional drink and Similac infant formula, is also headquartered in Columbus, with over 7,000 employees.
Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Related Travel Information
Ohio Travel Guide
Many people consider Ohio as one of the most beautiful places in the world. The northern side of Ohio borders onto Lake Erie, and with the great Ohio River and many other rivers flowing through the state, water recreation is abundant. The state of Ohio is mostly covered in fertile farmland, and the northeast is home to the world’s largest Amish population, a decidedly old-fashioned community which sells their freshly grown produce along with traditional handmade crafts in the small town country shops. To the south lies Ohio’s outback, a less populated region that is heavily forested and
The City of Delaware is the county seat of Delaware County, Ohio6. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 25,246. According to a list compiled by American Demographics Inc., Delaware County was 14th out of 20 areas in the U.S. that were the fastest-growing in the country in 2000.
Delaware is home to the Little Brown Jug, harness racing's most prestigious event for standardbred horses.
Geography
Delaware is located at 40°17'56" North, 83°4'19" West (40.298898, -83.072007)1.
The town is located about 24 miles north of Ohio's capital city, Columbus, due north along U.S. Highway 23.
According to the United States
Bexley is a city located in Franklin County, Ohio. Incorporated as a village in 1908, Bexely is a fine, old tree-lined suburb of Ohio's Capitol, Columbus, located on the banks of Alum Creek. A college town bisected by the National Road, Bexley resulted from a merger of neighborhoods including the prestigious Bullitt Park, established in 1889, and the Lutheran community centered on Capital University and Trinity Lutheran Seminary.
It is also the name of an ancient English village now largely consumed by the suburbs of London, but given prominence through lending its name to one London Borough of Bexley of 32
Powell is a city located in Delaware County, Ohio. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 6,247.
The community was first settled around 1801, two years before Ohio became a state. It was named "Middlebury" at the time, because the first settlers came from the Middlebury, Connecticut area. In 1857, Judge Thomas Powell established the first post office in the community, and the residents decided to adopt his name. Powell was finally incorporated as a municipality in 1947. The population remained small until the 1980s, when residential development expanding from the northern Columbus metropolitan area reached
Hilliard is a city located in Franklin County, Ohio. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 24,230.
Geography
Hilliard is located at 40°2'4" North, 83°8'34" West (40.034310, -83.142678)1. It is bordered on the east by Upper Arlington, on the north by Dublin and south by Columbus, and to the west lay open farmland. Downtown Columbus lies in a distance to the southeast, its skyline visible at times when crossing bridges. The only major highway that runs through Hilliard is I-270, which runs north and south slightly east of the middle of the city.
According to the United States