What Happened to Dayton Ohio?

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • The story of Dayton Ohio…
    References:
    en.m.wikipedia...
    en.m.wikipedia...
    www.google.com...
    Images:
    "19681221 11 Main St. @ Monument Ave., Dayton, Ohio" by davidwilson1949 is marked with CC BY 2.0.
    "100_6838" by Uriel 1998 is marked with CC BY 2.0.
    "Greetings from Dayton, Ohio - Large Letter Postcard" by Shook Photos is marked with CC BY 2.0.
    CC BY 2.0
    “DaytonSkylineGMRiver.jpg”
    The Mighty Tim Inconnu
    commons.m.wiki...

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @kevink6265
    @kevink6265 2 года назад +600

    Dayton native here, pretty much nailed it. Another big blow was the loss of a huge GM plant.

    • @keithnorris8982
      @keithnorris8982 2 года назад +16

      Plant (s)

    • @T_O_Negative
      @T_O_Negative 2 года назад +23

      And y'all still buying their garbage vehicles

    • @rafaelartavia2289
      @rafaelartavia2289 2 года назад +23

      Due by union.

    • @shamrockshawtty
      @shamrockshawtty 2 года назад +25

      @@rafaelartavia2289 done by globalism

    • @retiredarmy3755
      @retiredarmy3755 2 года назад +27

      NCR, Delco-Moraine and Chrysler Air-temp losses really hurt. I had forgotten about Mead Paper.
      Losing the SAC Wing unit out of Wright-Patt didn't help either. Fairborn just dried up after that.

  • @marytygett4189
    @marytygett4189 2 года назад +249

    If it wasn’t for Wright Patt , we wouldn’t have landed here after 30 years of active duty . We’ve been here for 16 years now and we’ve grown to love this community. It’s pretty much 6 hours from everywhere 😉 . We are pleased with being able to visit family in St Louis, Chicago, Michigan and northern Ohio . Deep rich history lives here in Dayton . God bless 🌹

    • @themagicians1122
      @themagicians1122 2 года назад +2

      We ARE THE INVENTION CAPITOL OF THE WORLD
      WHO MADE THIS? " WHAT HAPPENED MESS.
      WITHOUT OHIO IT WOULDNT BE R& B MUSIC
      WE WOULDNT HAVE REFRIGERATION, CASH REGISTERS, THE AIR PLANE, AIR CONDITIONING NOR PLENTY OF OTHER MODERN LUXURIES, WE WOULDA STILL BEEN CRANKING UP.CARS IF CHARLES KETTERING DIDNT MAKE IGNITION STARTERS FOR CARS & sooooo much more .The Wire wheels For cars..
      Dayton invented. The aluminum can to make us not drink Coke pepsi out of dangerous glass huge bottles
      I love it here in Dayton
      Mary we are glad Wright Patt brought you here......Half the world is Sleeping on Dayton Ohio

    • @LilChiefMoe7
      @LilChiefMoe7 2 года назад +14

      @@themagicians1122 Dayton is fasho slept on . Dayton should be more known than what it is . Dayton really did a lot and set a lot of trends but we don’t get the credit we deserve. Plus its a ton of famous people who’s from Dayton like the Ohio Players, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Ron Harper, Wright Brothers, Roger Troutman, Nancy Cartwright, Sherri Saum, Dave Chapelle and more. Even John Legend is from nearby Springfield which is considered part of the Dayton Metro Area. Lebron James even lived in Dayton as a young child before moving to Akron. Plus It’s so many NBA & NFL Players who from Dayton I could go on and on 💯👌🏾 . the LA Rams head coach is from Dayton

    • @themagicians1122
      @themagicians1122 2 года назад +5

      We .are the invention capital

    • @jasonfelton7883
      @jasonfelton7883 2 года назад

      It's been years and years of poor Democratic leadership in the city that has destroyed Dayton NCR was struggling came to Dayton asking for help telling them in Atlanta was going to give them a tax break date and told him no so they moved.... Closing down then they're killed dating right now the city Democrats including the mayor are trying to sue Wright-Patt for crazy amount of millions of dollars.... They are pushing to build a whole new round of subsidized housing here .. Wright-Patt is already downsized if Dayton were to win this lawsuit they probably would go ahead and just shut the base down .... They spend millions of dollars on water towers that did nothing to boost revenue and they're almost never operational anymore. they built a monument that only someone from here would even understand what it was down there on main Street The Arc of the first flight or whatever the hell it is..... This was the home of the airplane why don't we have a giant airplane I mean Louisville's got a giant bat for Christ's sake..... Piss poor management that's what's wrong with Dayton

    • @nebraskacovington3615
      @nebraskacovington3615 2 года назад

      But like are you in DAYTON or are you in one of the little HOA communities like kettering, riverside, etc ? Because dayton dayton is still only known for destitution

  • @ashtonnajarian7549
    @ashtonnajarian7549 2 года назад +123

    Dayton is also directly next to two of the longest interstate highways in America. Drug trade really screwed us

    • @danielkoher1944
      @danielkoher1944 2 года назад +7

      Drivers that will not allow you to merge onto the highway. Texting, checking themselves in the mirror, no attention to driving.
      Then the texting drivers that fly out of the entrance onto 35. Without a thought nearly tearing the passenger side out of your automobile.
      With barely any traffic to cut in front, across all lanes to the left.
      I was amazed when I heard local news 5-6 years ago asking for video.
      To report bad streets?!
      What!
      There are news crew vans driving this lunar terrain daily.

    • @Kiwi99311
      @Kiwi99311 2 года назад +1

      We have the same problem in SLC. We have I80 and I15 crossing there.

    • @BlindMellowJelly
      @BlindMellowJelly Год назад

      The drug trade had nothing to do with the wave of big GOP industry regulations. From as far back as 1900 employers allowed drugs, hookers and gambling to be done without issue. That made the employees happy and production was epic. Drugs have always been in Dayton or Bevearcreek trust me when I tell you that. Often by white males who got the business from their fathers. Cocaine and Heroin have always been present as our research proves. Company doctors cared for hookers used to entertain the men and they had great care while working. Ya cant blame everything on drugs because the blame lies with those who decided to seel out for big $$ just like carrier did when they moved from Indy to Mexico.

    • @Oscar-gt8kx
      @Oscar-gt8kx Год назад +2

      And s*x trafficking is horrible in that area as well

    • @darrylslaughter649
      @darrylslaughter649 Год назад

      Yes,read the book by Gary Webb " Freeway " Rick Ross was in the area selling crack rat poison real cheap.

  • @alanthompson1791
    @alanthompson1791 2 года назад +165

    Not very accurate. GM plants on third st. , two in Moraine, one in Kettering, one in Vandalia, plus Chrysler and Frigidaire made Dayton 2nd only to Detroit in automotive manufacturing jobs, combined with hundreds of small machine shops contracting work from them, creating many many thousands of jobs, made Dayton the most dense manufacturing city per capita in the USA. The loss of GM related jobs and tax revenue was the biggest single factor in Dayton’s decline.

    • @oldmanintexas
      @oldmanintexas 2 года назад +16

      You nailed it. And nobody seems to have mentioned the benefits of having half of much traffic on the roads and a lot less smog also.

    • @keithnorris8982
      @keithnorris8982 2 года назад +5

      You nailed it... very well said!

    • @cienergi
      @cienergi 2 года назад +3

      Yes.

    • @andrabarrettcopefocke
      @andrabarrettcopefocke 2 года назад +9

      We had a GM plant in Cincinnati too. It was located in Norwood and I believe it closed in 87. My inlaws were from Dayton and they owned Focke's & Sons Co meat processing plant and I think it closed in the 70s. They were known for their Waldorf Hams.

    • @jonathangardner4475
      @jonathangardner4475 2 года назад +20

      What happened is durable manufacturing has gone overseas, and liberal policies

  • @joshuabidgood2915
    @joshuabidgood2915 2 года назад +156

    Dayton, Springfield, Urbana, all those towns are just empty shells of once thriving communities. It's really sad what happened when industry left for China

    • @davidstaudohar8147
      @davidstaudohar8147 2 года назад +6

      Not to mention the industry that went to Canada and Mexico the number to Ford plant in Lorain ❓❓❓ this is direct result of Richard Nixon's deregulation

    • @charlespayne5965
      @charlespayne5965 2 года назад +3

      McCall magazine!!!

    • @arthurbrumagem3844
      @arthurbrumagem3844 2 года назад

      @@davidstaudohar8147 unions sent the car industry into the dump

    • @JP-dj1ow
      @JP-dj1ow 2 года назад +2

      My grandfather retired from McCalls. My grandmother worked at Inland. All gone.

    • @westonross5914
      @westonross5914 2 года назад +4

      Can’t forget about Middletown/middletucky

  • @tonywalters7298
    @tonywalters7298 2 года назад +41

    Also a big impact was the closure of the GM and Delphi plants in the area in the 2000's

  • @johnsavely5782
    @johnsavely5782 2 года назад +48

    Dayton had a ton of inventors as well. Tool and die was a huge part of Dayton back in the day.

    • @jimblevins4085
      @jimblevins4085 2 года назад +1

      in 1950,s Dayton was indeed called the tool and die capital of the world.

    • @larrymaloney877
      @larrymaloney877 2 года назад +5

      I live in Kettering. Too many small businessmen have moved from Kettering to avoid their oppressive government. Charles Kettering would be hounded by building inspectors today.

  • @anitajones7009
    @anitajones7009 2 года назад +25

    Dayton native here. Dayton has changed so much since the good ole days unfortunately not in a good way. Smh

  • @ellabnice99
    @ellabnice99 2 года назад +129

    As an Australian who has now spent some time in Dayton I actually really like the city. The people are some of the friendliest that I have met in the US. The downtown district is really happening and the Arcade is also a great spot. I got to attend the Big Hoopla event this year for March madness and I could really feel the strength of the community spirit. I think there are a lot of positive things to say about Dayton :)

    • @loganmadden3749
      @loganmadden3749 2 года назад +9

      You should stop by the Oregon district and the 2nd street market

    • @Walk_Off_0311
      @Walk_Off_0311 2 года назад +10

      I grew up in Dayton people are the worst lmao

    • @ainsleyscarlet9027
      @ainsleyscarlet9027 2 года назад +1

      That’s nice but you didn’t grow up here. Would love to live in Australia

    • @smallnoise4778
      @smallnoise4778 2 года назад +3

      I’m glad you got a good impression. I did some of the electrical work at the arcade. The brutal reality is drugs, murder, theft, and human trafficking are too prevalent here. A guy got sliced up pretty good on his arm leaving work from the construction of the arcade. I suppose anywhere is like that but there is still beauty to be found in the history and the hidden gems of the city. Would love to see the place become a a beacon of positivity and growth for the future generations. And not a major heroin and murder hub for the country.

    • @danielkoher1944
      @danielkoher1944 2 года назад

      Ella,
      As a native born Ohioan I’m wondering if you gave up your dual citizenship.
      If you still have it and want a taker please send a message.
      Most commonly referred to as the ‘Rust Belt’ do some RUclips searches for an eye opening look.

  • @patrickcovault2280
    @patrickcovault2280 2 года назад +7

    Dayton native. St. Elizabeth's hospital born. You didn't state anything that I found to be overwhelmingly false however,you didn't mention the city's biggest detriment: DRUGS!! We're the intersection of I-75 & I-70. For those that are geographical knowledge deficient,that's 2 roads that connect Miami,Florida to Detroit,Michigan & Los Angeles to D.C. need I say more? Its heartbreaking. Much like the rest of the U.S.,you'd be hard pressed to find ONE family that hasn't been devastated or negatively effected by drugs here. Its only getting worse

    • @bowtr0
      @bowtr0 3 месяца назад

      I am now 86 y.o. I worked for NCR from 1957-1967. Dayton residents refereed to NCR as "The Cash." I attended NCR training classes for many months off and on through the late fifties to early sixties. I really liked living in Dayton. Actually, if Dayton was now like it was in the early sixties, I'd still love to be living there - cheering on the Dayton Flyers. (They had some really good BB teams back then.) NCR was non union while other big employers, GM, for example, were union. Union workers snickered at we NCR employees. Of course, we know what the corporations do - they move their manufacturing to ANYWHERE that is less expensive, e.g. non-union.
      The strong unions may have been part of the cause for Dayton to lose NCR and GM.
      NCR was slow to adjust to the new high tech world and that certainly added to their demise as a manufacturer of computers, etc.

  • @original1stmother
    @original1stmother 2 года назад +58

    There's so much that can be done for Dayton Ohio but they have the wrong people in place.

    • @rafaelartavia2289
      @rafaelartavia2289 2 года назад +3

      Like west side.

    • @jimblevins4085
      @jimblevins4085 2 года назад +9

      You are so correct, Ohio is the 4th most regulated state in the nation, NY, Cal, Illinois are ahead of Ohio, Think about that, and the # 5 state has 100 fewer regs than Ohio, Taxes are too high, gas/fuel tax one of the highest in the nation, AND the roads are AWFUL, was born in Dayton and lived off and on there most of my life, Leadership has destroyed Ohio and especially Dayton, unlike places like Youngstown, Dayton was a very diverse economy. So Sad, NEED to DEMAND 1st class leadership???? You got to ask yourself, why would i live here if i could live in Tx, Fla,???

    • @original1stmother
      @original1stmother 2 года назад +9

      @@rafaelartavia2289 Absolutely. I'm originally from Cincy and the Dayton(west side) and many other areas throughout Dayton looks as if a nuke has been dropped on it. I'm a Kettering resident and I've never seen anything like it before. It makes me want to run for office.

    • @original1stmother
      @original1stmother 2 года назад +3

      @@jimblevins4085 ✅

    • @kevinpittman2517
      @kevinpittman2517 2 года назад +1

      @@jimblevins4085 so many corrupt democrats

  • @slammedek6452
    @slammedek6452 2 года назад +8

    As someone from Ohio. The question is more so "what happened to ohio"

    • @lowlifeangler
      @lowlifeangler 2 года назад +2

      No shit

    • @danielkoher1944
      @danielkoher1944 2 года назад +3

      You’ve got that Right! I grew up in southeast Ohio I was told to move here. What a thriving area and great venues. They’re right saying there’s many micro/craft breweries. You have to drink to function, this is no different than back home.
      With the exception of a much larger scale.
      Someone said ‘you can’t find a house for $20,000?!’ Just do a search you will find plenty. Some are missing a half their roof, and upstairs ceiling. Wiring, copper plumbing stripped, to renovate would easily cost $125,000.
      There’s so many vacant destroyed homes, the owners would be fortunate deeding it over to another person.
      There are plenty ready to be torn down, but there’s no way the grant money.
      Could possibly cover what truly needs removed.

  • @chrismadison620
    @chrismadison620 2 года назад +14

    I'm not even from Ohio but moved up here with my father when I was 16. It's been 13 years since. I chose to permanently stay here and even bought a nice house on the east side and there is plenty to do around here. It has gotten a lot better. It used to be trashy but now days it seems a lot cleaner. Now if they can fix there roads then I would be truly happy.

  • @Stevenimich
    @Stevenimich 2 года назад +136

    You all might laugh about why I moved to Dayton from Los Angeles, California a year ago... I honestly know a good thing when I see one. I've read plenty of posts here and most are true and some are just being a bit harsh. I can't compare Dayton to Los Angeles because Dayton is NOT the right city to pin up against a behemoth of a city. I'm NOT here to defend Los Angeles as this is about Dayton... This city has so much potential. I had read alot about Dayton and what happened to it before I bought a house here and moved. I'm not going to get heavy into all the negatives and positives about the place, but there is definitely something good occurring here and it shows. The downtown may look and feel empty, but it's not ugly or trashed/dirty. It's far from looking like Detroit, too. I find there are more good neighborhoods in this city than there are bad. So far, one year living here, I really like it. I can't really point my finger what it is about this city, but it's growing on me. It's a handsome city (you can laugh) and it's far from being a dead place. I love it's history and the numerous inventions born here. This city deserves a lot more respect.

    • @stardust949
      @stardust949 2 года назад +2

      Welcome! Glad you came out here to the Rust Belt to join in the fun, lol! (I live in Yellow Springs---but have also lived in and around Dayton, worked in the Oregon District and done live theatre too.)

    • @benjaminrobinson3104
      @benjaminrobinson3104 2 года назад +2

      that’s awesome

    • @hallertyler38
      @hallertyler38 2 года назад

      Go back to California, you’re ruining housing prices

    • @joshuatalley7834
      @joshuatalley7834 2 года назад +4

      Have you been you any of the local eating spots? There's a street where most the UD students hang out and live by. It's called Brown St. And has lots of places to eat and shop. You should check it out if you haven't already

    • @rebelbatdave5993
      @rebelbatdave5993 2 года назад +2

      Having been stationed at Terminal Island, USCG CHASE, Basically
      Long Beach, I can definitely understand! Dayton area was a Good Place to Grow up in! They used to have a Great/Good Hockey Team. Long Time ago! At least there's a Cabela's near by!
      PRAISE GOD AND HAVE A GOOD ONE!

  • @c-dogg9188
    @c-dogg9188 2 года назад +146

    Also known as the Funk Capital of the World due to many funk bands from Dayton like the Ohio Players , Heatwave and Zapp

    • @sarbnitrof4663
      @sarbnitrof4663 2 года назад +7

      Dayton?! Jesus i lived here my whole life and never heard that, thanks for the interesting tidbit

    • @original1stmother
      @original1stmother 2 года назад +2

      @c-dogg91 Absolutely

    • @bobdavidson9770
      @bobdavidson9770 2 года назад +5

      Seen ohio players, Bill Withers, and some o there great groups at u.d arena for a soul and blus festival in the 70's.

    • @c-dogg9188
      @c-dogg9188 2 года назад +1

      @@bobdavidson9770 Nice 🙂

    • @marytygett4189
      @marytygett4189 2 года назад +1

      That’s right !!! I loved the Ohio Players ! ( I’m showing my age now ) great point my friend!

  • @conniecozzini2452
    @conniecozzini2452 2 года назад +44

    Spent five years in Dayton. You missed mentioning its biggest asset, the nicest people in all of the US. Kind, generous, welcoming, hard working, Dayton has them all. The comment about taxes is correct. City taxes too high coupled with a State Income tax. Retirees leave if they can so one can live better on less income. I miss Dayton and it’s people!

    • @johnkochendorfer7705
      @johnkochendorfer7705 2 года назад +6

      True
      I'm moving out after 10 years here
      I'll never find better neighbors
      Good folks Christian hearts

    • @jillybean15894
      @jillybean15894 2 года назад +4

      I've lived in the Dayton area my entire life, and I agree, we have the friendliest people here! We have great people and lousy weather, lol!!!

    • @ggg21201
      @ggg21201 2 года назад +8

      @@jillybean15894 I just moved here almost a year ago from Hawaii. Why do people keep saying it's lousy weather! Having all four seasons is AMAZING! Grass is always greener on the other side.

    • @zpclosangelesgraffiticafe
      @zpclosangelesgraffiticafe 2 года назад

      @@ggg21201 is Cleveland Ohio a good place to live for a single retired 40 year old?

    • @ggg21201
      @ggg21201 2 года назад

      @@zpclosangelesgraffiticafe I'm 34 and single as well. I would say absolutely but it depends. My brother lives in Los Angeles and I visit there often. Be prepared for some culture shock and losing out on some things that you had in a big city, but if you are very adaptable and are able to find the positive things and not focus on the negatives than you will really love the move. Affordability alone is worth it but you also have to consider things like having to remake friends in a new area which can be really tough at first. You should definitely seek out some kind of community to find new friends and relationships if you are coming by yourself. It's totally worth it in the end imo though. Also do your homework. The area I live in is extremely safe and full of great people, but not all neighborhoods are like that.

  • @carolecampbell8813
    @carolecampbell8813 2 года назад +83

    Worked at Mead not Med right out of high school. Surprised you didn't mention the multiple GM plants. Whole communities grew around each one. I know there was at least four large separate plants. Also known for the funk bands that originated here. We also had a downtown theater that was famous for the Kenley Players, so many actors came to town to do stage acting, especially I know the 1960s. Early arena musicians came to have concerts at Hara Arena, Elvis, Johnny Cash to name a couple. Hopefully we can become a bustling area once again. Most living here don't plan on leaving either way. The Gem City is our hometown.

    • @keithnorris8982
      @keithnorris8982 2 года назад +4

      Very well said🙂

    • @robmohio77
      @robmohio77 2 года назад +8

      Delco was the most well known divisions of GM in Dayton. The name Delco came from the Dayton Engineering Laboratories Co., founded in Dayton, Ohio, by Charles Kettering and Edward A. Deeds in 1909. Delco was responsible for several innovations in automobile electric systems, including the first reliable battery ignition system and the first practical automobile self-starter.

    • @elbob17
      @elbob17 2 года назад +8

      I heard that and was like "Hmmm, I went my entire life thinking it was Mead as in Meed."

    • @kati1017
      @kati1017 2 года назад +7

      We had fabulous jazz acts at Gilly's. Salem Ave used to be bustling and beautiful. Good Samaritan and St Elizabeth hospitals were needed, now they're gone... Lots has been lost. I miss those days.

    • @sandcastlelyndylynneklynch766
      @sandcastlelyndylynneklynch766 2 года назад +4

      Oh we loved the Kenley Players!! In the early & mid 1970s
      We wld come stay at the Mall Moter inn Hotel (where RTA hub is now) & that's where all the actors wld stay too!! We wld swim w them on the roof pool & my brothers wld get paid to walk the star's dogs! LOL! My mom started dating Glen Campbell's Stand in(& he looked like Glen Campbell too!!)
      I've met Barbara Eden (she played Maria in Sound of Music!) I've met Lucy Arnez (Lucille Ball & Desi Arnez Daughter) she played the princess in The Princess & The Pea play
      Oh We met Her mother Lucille Ball at Marians Pizza for the Cast Party!! We wld stay at the Mall Moter Inn hotel for the opening night and then come back & stay the wkend for the final run the final performance & cast party at Marians Pizza so that way we lived w them, we watched em work then we ate w em!! So many stars! It was my mom's way of getting over a divorce from an air force officer and she being from Chicago & we living in Fairborn (we did live in officer housing on base) my mom thought Fairborn was too small town for her so she loved taking us kids to Dayton to see the Kenley Players at memorial Hall!! Those were great memories!! Thanks for the reminder !!
      Blessings !!

  • @ULTRASMOKE
    @ULTRASMOKE 2 года назад +80

    Nice video. Born and raised here in Dayton. It's sad this used to be an awesome place. The east.and.westside of Dayton are.disturbing to see. Poverty and bad choices and poor leadership has dragged this place thru the ringer. I miss those days and there is some changes taking place. But these so called leaders are a not funny JOKE!

    • @exit5620
      @exit5620 2 года назад +7

      I'm from Dayton, went to Stiver's in the 60s. Things went downhill in the 70s. Liberals took over after the 68 riots and it's been a crime ridden city ever since. Loved Dayton in the 60s left in 75.

    • @WilliamXLee
      @WilliamXLee 2 года назад +6

      @@exit5620 blame the liberals! Of course! I know where you were on Jan 6th last year! Yeehahahaaaa!

    • @exit5620
      @exit5620 2 года назад +3

      @@WilliamXLee I'm surprised your mother told you?

    • @Tracywhited2
      @Tracywhited2 2 года назад +2

      Yep. Typical dem city. Lived in Dayton my whole life. Filthy shame how it’s rotting away after such a beautiful rich history

    • @khoiphan7477
      @khoiphan7477 2 года назад

      @@exit5620 I feel that if Dayton’s Mayor is a conservative Dayton would prob be better than now

  • @paulettehammond-duerson8989
    @paulettehammond-duerson8989 2 года назад +8

    I was just downtown and oh my goodness. It is unbelievable unbelievable, how far it has went down.

    • @danielkoher1944
      @danielkoher1944 2 года назад

      You know That’s Right!

    • @cindyfavorite195
      @cindyfavorite195 2 года назад

      So very true. I had an appointment with a lawyer to settle mom’s estate, sixty of her 83 years in the area, grew up inner city after the war, and we were raised in western Dayton. It deteriorated after the racial violence in mid to late sixties and early seventies and we left town for the new suburban areas north, then clear away in the country. I’m not sure if the city can come back, some areas downtown quirky and fun, but huge areas completely blighted and abandoned. And the hospital mergers took old traditional families out of neighborhoods nearer to town and quite exclusive years ago. The southern suburban areas and base looking aged, and lots of empty buildings, while a county south is more like Cincy and growing. Dayton and Montgomery county are in a bad spiral, don’t expect much to recover.

    • @5678LeeLee
      @5678LeeLee Год назад +1

      I guess you missed all the new apartments and condo's that are being built downtown, especially around the Baseball stadium. Ever been to a Dragon's Game? Great family fun!

  • @bcats1309
    @bcats1309 2 года назад +39

    They were trying to make Cincinnati Dayton a metro-plex. Combining the two city complex into a single area! It still might happen and would save Dayton.

    • @nvledgevblemedia
      @nvledgevblemedia 2 года назад +13

      Need a subway or high speed rail

    • @SchmaltzyCraftsy
      @SchmaltzyCraftsy 2 года назад +7

      They are growing closer and closer together

    • @Carbiniz3r
      @Carbiniz3r 2 года назад +1

      Thats a 1 way traffic ordeal. Dayton has nothing exclusive to offer that Cincinnati doesnt have

    • @SchmaltzyCraftsy
      @SchmaltzyCraftsy 2 года назад +2

      @@Carbiniz3r Dayton Springfield do. Young's, Guerras krazy tacos and speakeasy ramen both highest rated in the whole region both called vest in state, Dayton has some really incredible authentic mexican, and I think a far superior musuem.

    • @kassandraclinch3688
      @kassandraclinch3688 2 года назад +2

      It's currently happening. Thats why Dayton is experiencing the largest development of real estate right now in its history.

  • @devicynspyder9271
    @devicynspyder9271 2 года назад +24

    I'm from Cincinnati and I would go to Dayton for hara arena to see concerts. I saw pantera and slipknot and nine Inch nails there

    • @sarbnitrof4663
      @sarbnitrof4663 2 года назад +1

      Damn, i didn't see any of those guys til i left dayton lol

    • @devicynspyder9271
      @devicynspyder9271 2 года назад +3

      @@sarbnitrof4663 it was mostly in the 90s

    • @srt4victors
      @srt4victors 2 года назад

      I use to go see the monster trucks at hara

    • @robertbulach86
      @robertbulach86 2 года назад +1

      Hara arena was a great concert venue. I was at Pantera 101 proof there. Seen tool as well. Awesome shows and the place has great acoustics. I definitely miss the place. It's a vacant lot now

    • @devicynspyder9271
      @devicynspyder9271 2 года назад +1

      @@robertbulach86 oh it was my favorite place for the longest time I could easily get down on the floor and no one cared about smoking

  • @chiroguy98
    @chiroguy98 2 года назад +39

    Mead Paper was pronounced like “meeed”. Good video.

    • @exiron0202
      @exiron0202 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for confirming this. The video's pronunciation had me so confused I was googling my butt off trying to figure out why it wasn't pronounced the same as Lake Mead!

  • @christopher370
    @christopher370 2 года назад +46

    Has a great museum in the Dayton Art Institute just west of downtown. Highly recommend.

    • @chrislynch1469
      @chrislynch1469 2 года назад +2

      One of the best in the country, super great spot

    • @mikef5881
      @mikef5881 2 года назад +1

      Actualy, just north of downtown, across the river.

    • @shamrockshawtty
      @shamrockshawtty 2 года назад

      Take a pistol if you go there. It's in a very bad part of Dayton

    • @SchmaltzyCraftsy
      @SchmaltzyCraftsy 2 года назад

      It's only second to Cleveland's musuem I think. Toledo of all places pulling a 3rd.

    • @oscarrameno6865
      @oscarrameno6865 2 года назад

      No you don’t

  • @SeanA099
    @SeanA099 2 года назад +17

    Air Force museum is cool

    • @transmothra
      @transmothra 2 года назад +2

      It takes DAYS to get through it all, and 90% of it is actually pretty mind-blowing to see up close

    • @erikb8979
      @erikb8979 2 года назад +2

      Absolutely. I’ve been there many times. Absolutely fantastic place to visit. You can literally spend an entire day there

    • @transmothra
      @transmothra 2 года назад +2

      @@erikb8979 An entire day is nowhere near enough! Maybe for each section.

    • @erikb8979
      @erikb8979 2 года назад

      U probably r right.

  • @martymcmannis6581
    @martymcmannis6581 2 года назад +6

    I'm from Ohio and can't believe I never made it to the air and space museum. Thanks for the video and the reminder.

    • @annehenry6243
      @annehenry6243 2 года назад +1

      It's a big place, so be prepared to do a lot of walking, but it is AWESOME!!

    • @phillipsuttles1926
      @phillipsuttles1926 2 года назад +1

      @@annehenry6243 and free!

  • @richardjones1087
    @richardjones1087 2 года назад +23

    As a Dayton native, I left in 1987 and returned for visits over the years. In 2014, I returned to be closer to both of my aging parents: my dad in Trotwood and my mom in Fairfield. I don't understand how Trotwood's mayor hasn't been to maintain at least a grocery store! There are so many empty business fronts and more closing (looking at you Dollar General), it's a serious food desert. The Oregon District is so boring. It's so far off the beaten path, no one is walking from the RTA hub. The city continuously hypes downtown but there is nothing open past 4pm, no restaurant options, no grocery store options, and the areas where there are entertainment venues, grocery stores, certainly are not where majority Black residents live. Jefferson Township has a total of "300" students from grade school to high school. And that's a high-end estimate. Now that both my parents have passed, looking to relocate back to the South.

    • @prod.jessykataylor
      @prod.jessykataylor 2 года назад

      manz just gave Dayton a shitty review

    • @TheAHuman
      @TheAHuman 2 года назад +1

      You are wrong about the food. There is some good stuff around.

    • @bobbycarter5940
      @bobbycarter5940 2 года назад +2

      As a young minority I noticed there’s not many safe places to go meet other young people compared to Cincinnati or Columbus

    • @matthewmeier1120
      @matthewmeier1120 2 года назад +4

      The Oregon district went down hill after the shooting. But there are still plenty of places to eat and party on a Friday evening. New ones opening all the time. Trotwood has been a shithole for a very long time. Since the Salem mall was still around. Crime rate was through the roof and it is still climbing. Its not a mystery why there aren't any businesses thriving in Trotwood.

    • @danielkoher1944
      @danielkoher1944 Год назад

      Also, no parking!

  • @cfrygirl
    @cfrygirl 2 года назад +10

    Ohio was just chosen to have Intel be made here. Several other companies that make biomedical engineering devices also are here now. God bless the Gem 💎 City ❤️

    • @joshmcdarris
      @joshmcdarris Год назад +2

      Intel will be east of Columbus, not Dayton. Good for Ohio though.

    • @Becca4.2
      @Becca4.2 Год назад

      @@joshmcdarris only and hourish away though. Good for the whole region. An hour commute isn't the worst.

  • @tothra
    @tothra 2 года назад +7

    Dayton was the Silicon Valley of its day. From Dayton local public radio, WYSO: "In the early 1900s, Dayton became the invention capital of the United States, with the most patents per capita. From the end of the 19th century through the 20th century, the city's influential inventions included the airplane, the cash register, the self-starting ignition for automobiles, and the pop top beverage can. The long list of inventions also includes the electric wheelchair, the stepladder and the parking meter". Dayton's influence continues today with creations of the Boolean search engine for computer search use, and the creation of the practical LCD screen in use today. With places like Air Force Research Lab and AF Institute of Technology fueling local private tech companies, Dayton's resurgence from the 70s and 80s continues

  • @thumbs.down.
    @thumbs.down. 2 года назад +7

    There's actually another museum, Carillon Park, that also focusses a lot on Dayton's history, including a pop-tab exhibit and an entire building dedicated to the Wrights Bros. It's got a lot there, but it's still pretty cool.

  • @bullnukeoldman3794
    @bullnukeoldman3794 2 года назад +6

    Dayton may have been bigger in the past but it was always a fairly dreary and rough city even back in the 1950s when I was growing up. A lot of Dayton's criminality has been bleeding over to and harming surrounding communities for decades. I avoided going there back then and still do to this day. Wright-Patterson AFB is close to but not a part of Dayton and is actually located some miles away in another county (Greene County). What happened to Dayton started far longer ago than the early 2000s.

  • @kayodephillips5435
    @kayodephillips5435 2 года назад +5

    Dayton Ohio my hometown still here and love it

  • @laurenmcgough9800
    @laurenmcgough9800 2 года назад +3

    I live in Dayton; sadly there is a lot of crime here - shootings almost everyday and over-doses. Dayton isn't the greatest place to live in anymore.

  • @JP-dj1ow
    @JP-dj1ow 2 года назад +23

    Dayton is just a skeleton left of what it was. My parents and grandparents have told me many times throughout the years about how it used to be. I had multiple family members that moved to the Dayton area from Kentucky just to work at GM. Many good paying union jobs throughout different manufacturing sectors all gone. The farm I grew up on was bought with McCalls and GM money. All my family members that had the big nice houses, farms, properties all worked at GM. Including the others mentioned, losing the GM plants along with all the many other jobs that depended on them destroyed the city.

  • @RC-vz7mx
    @RC-vz7mx 2 года назад +2

    Wright Patt doesnt just generate employment directly by employing people on base it also brings in huge numbers of Government Contractor companies, ie Northrop, General Dynamics, BAE, Lockheed, etc

    • @cindyfavorite195
      @cindyfavorite195 2 года назад

      But many working at those companies have moved south and East to newer and more accessible areas from I 70&75. Crime and education in Dayton are in bad shape.

  • @JollyPirateAhoy
    @JollyPirateAhoy 2 года назад +4

    I'm in Dayton. The decline seems a lot more than stated. Though homelessness has grown throughout the city and suburbs

  • @michaelausting9344
    @michaelausting9344 2 года назад +9

    Great area to be a teenager in the 1960s!😀

  • @therealjirosomer876
    @therealjirosomer876 2 года назад +13

    My mom is from the Dayton area sad to see it go downhill

    • @email5023
      @email5023 2 года назад +2

      Sorry about your Mom.

    • @therealjirosomer876
      @therealjirosomer876 2 года назад

      @@email5023 my mom's still alive dude

    • @email5023
      @email5023 2 года назад

      @@therealjirosomer876 That is good to hear. You stated she went downhill and that does not necessarily mean she is gone. I hope she gets better!

    • @therealjirosomer876
      @therealjirosomer876 2 года назад +1

      @@email5023 I was talking about the city not my mom

  • @MRDoom12
    @MRDoom12 2 года назад +4

    Dayton resident here to say you forgot all about GM taking a MASSIVE toll on Dayton and even extending to surrounding states!

  • @rikkr1307
    @rikkr1307 2 года назад +3

    I'm guessing pretty much the same thing that happens to nearly every Ohio city. Politicians making promises they can't or refuse to keep and lining their own pockets.

    • @Golfing422
      @Golfing422 2 года назад

      Politicians selling jobs to China and doing bad trade deals like Nafta is what happened.

  • @tomb20061
    @tomb20061 8 месяцев назад +1

    NCR and Mead really hurt, but the GM factories shutting down was really the major blow for Dayton and surrounding communities. I used to live close to the plant in Vandalia. It’s a shame.

  • @norseman5041
    @norseman5041 2 года назад +5

    I came from Norway back in the 90's been (wife is from here) living in a couple of suburbs of Dayton, and now just south of the city. I like it her; people are very friendly, easy to get anywhere with several airports not far away. I lived a lot in FL because of work, if you dream of a FL lifestyle, you must consider what you have here in Ohio, OH is a very nice state to live in. Now with many companies accepting home offices, OH is an awesome place to live. Given the opportunity, I will live the rest of my days here.

    • @danielkoher1944
      @danielkoher1944 Год назад

      Since you are infatuated with Dayton.
      Could I please have your Norway 🇳🇴 citizenship?
      Thanks in advance. 😊

  • @MrKAHutch
    @MrKAHutch 7 месяцев назад +1

    GM and its subsidiaries feed a ton of families and kept Dayton and the surrounding cities full of tax dollars. When the auto industry collapsed in 2008 it destroyed the city economically.

  • @SneakGoblin7
    @SneakGoblin7 2 года назад +8

    Living about 15 mins from Dayton it's nice to see how other towns have survived like my hometown miamisburg

    • @MARLEYFANcbr
      @MARLEYFANcbr 2 года назад +2

      Hamburger Wagon. YUM!

    • @techgirl1337
      @techgirl1337 2 года назад +1

      Sorrel's was my favorite store growing up.

    • @curtisgum9689
      @curtisgum9689 2 года назад

      Miamisburg and sorrounding, I’m a local business owner. Check out our shop for any window or glass needs. We are in the original star city hardware building. Star Windows!

  • @terrietackett8964
    @terrietackett8964 2 года назад +2

    I read that at the turn of the 20th century, Dayton was the leader in patents produced. Dayton is also the home of Chewy, a pet product company that is very large .....

  • @marykellerzacks9110
    @marykellerzacks9110 2 года назад +4

    Dayton known as the GEM City was also home to the largest magazine printers in the world.; Dayton Press/ McCalls Printing was responsible for Newsweek, Readers Digest, Life, Look, Redbook, Hustler and the list goes on.

  • @downtownon7thavenue
    @downtownon7thavenue 2 года назад +2

    What’s so sad about NCR moving is that the company is no longer open. It’s permanently closed according to their website. What a waste of 1250 jobs. Great video.

    • @downtownon7thavenue
      @downtownon7thavenue 2 года назад

      @@tonyc945 the location in Duluth closed so maybe they moved or only operate online. The physical location in Duluth GA is closed permanently. You can look that up

  • @tstahler5420
    @tstahler5420 2 года назад +8

    We lived in Dayton back in the early 70s. My dad worked for NCR, my brother had his 1st job at Woody's market. Dayton was a nice place to live with a very robust economy.

    • @techgirl1337
      @techgirl1337 2 года назад

      Man, I remember Woody's so well. Is it still there?

    • @tstahler5420
      @tstahler5420 2 года назад

      @@techgirl1337 I have no idea. I have not been to Ohio for about 50 years.

    • @chrish4977
      @chrish4977 2 года назад +2

      @@techgirl1337 Woody's is no longer there. The person in charge of the bakery for Woody's built a bakery where the grocery stood.

    • @outbackigloo6489
      @outbackigloo6489 2 года назад +1

      I used to live in West Carrollton and shopped at Woody’s all the time. After I moved, my first visit to West Carrollton was in 1999, and Woody’s was closed then. I think they closed earlier that year.

  • @brookecady3249
    @brookecady3249 2 года назад +1

    Dayton is the best kept secret. Small world, friendly people, low cost of living. Beautiful landscapes, low traffic, no homeless, low crime. More rain than you may want as well as some gloomy days. #worthit

  • @joshuatalley7834
    @joshuatalley7834 2 года назад +8

    This is the type of city you can raise a family in. My grandpa on my mom's side, moved here from Georgia way back when and met my grandma. They were really young when they got married but they started a family that has branched throughout Dayton and the Miami Valley. My gratitude for them is immeasurable because they started this huge family I'm a part of. I've got tons of aunts and uncles, and cousins just on my mom's side. So Dayton holds a special place in my heart. No matter where I go, this will always feel like home to me

  • @Davett53
    @Davett53 2 года назад +2

    I'm from Cleveland, Ohio originally, but I have made Columbus, Ohio my home since 1977. I'm an artist, and as such I was able to exhibit in Dayton, in Cleveland, Cincinnati, Canton, and in other mid-western cities. In Detroit, and in Indianapolis. Now way back in the 1980s, before and during the times I was exhibiting there,...Dayton was enjoying much revitalization. New "hip" places to dine, drink, see Art,...& listen to music, were sprouting up everywhere. They even have an Art Institute that many attend. I hope it didn't go back down hill after those years. We enjoyed ourselves there, and found it a place one might want to move to. Of course since then, Columbus has really grown a lot, and may be hippest place in Ohio, in 2022.

  • @chrisfair11
    @chrisfair11 2 года назад +6

    I am here to back up what an automotive Hub Dayton was. One of the things that flayed the city (and the black community) was them not honoring the retirement of most of their employees. Dayton was a thriving city for African Americans and the amount of music that came out of here during the 60s-70s is mind boggling when you learn about it.
    Second, you can't make a video about Dayton without mentioning the symbiotic relationship with Cincinnati. Their suburbs are so intertwined that Dayt-innati is almost it's own entity.

  • @marcmichales7141
    @marcmichales7141 2 года назад +4

    NCR had a huge park for their employees. I played bassoon in the NCR Band. We gave concerts in that park. It had several large pools. I lived in an area called Dayton View, it was going down hill then and it looks pretty rough now. The people I met during my short time in Dayton were wonderful and I have great memories of my time there.

    • @1chicgeek368
      @1chicgeek368 2 года назад +2

      I played clarinet in the NCR Band. Clark Haines, God bless him. Loved him and was terrified at the same time 🙀

    • @marcmichales7141
      @marcmichales7141 2 года назад +1

      @@1chicgeek368 I'd forgotten his name, thanks.

    • @cindyfavorite195
      @cindyfavorite195 2 года назад +1

      My daughter was in the band, and we really miss that beautiful park, and all the opportunities at “the cash”, NCR was the neighborhood years ago. All of our families went north or south of town, and most kept going. Logistics around 70-75 interstates crossing growing again, but south of town to Cincinnati is the happening place.

    • @sharoncrawford3042
      @sharoncrawford3042 2 года назад +2

      I had a neighbor that worked at NCR. I remember, as a kid, going there and we all had lunch in the park.

  • @Intellistan
    @Intellistan 2 года назад +9

    Coulda been 3 minutes solid of back-to-back nation-changing firsts mentioned here. Inventions, events, groups, music, societal firsts.... Dayton went so hard for a long time. There's something in the water around here for sure there's been some incredible stuff come out of Dayton. Lots of money going around here you just have to know where to look. Very attractive for small businesses- lots of support put on through Montgomery County. Harrison Township has an as-high crime rate per-capita than any major big ghetto city, Washington Township has the lowest and is nick-named the land of milk and honey. I love Dayton. You can't be soft around here but you bet you can learn anything about life within 20 minutes of it. Farms, industry, extreme tech, military, weapons, healthcare, transportation.. it's all still here just not as much in some cases. Forgot to mention how it's the most prime location in the nation to reach over half the population of the country within a day's drive for trucking companies... GM being the sell-outs they've always been was the last straw for most of the area. Tons and tons of opportunity if you want to put in the work- dozens of trade-based construction companies, landscaping companies, house-keeping services, small businesses of many many kinds are so busy they turn down customers. Real-estate is booming.. I mean, I could thrown together a 30 minute video of just how ham Dayton has went and still goes. There's a reason why some of the greatest minds on Earth have been from Dayton- we aren't the same from around here.

    • @visalee1734
      @visalee1734 2 года назад +1

      Yes! Dayton's inventions are blessings to humanity! Dayton is amazing! ❤️

  • @somewhereinohio7199
    @somewhereinohio7199 2 года назад +2

    I could add it was the union's unwillingness to negotiate with Chrysler and GM that caused them to leave Dayton for good

  • @donhunter4752
    @donhunter4752 2 года назад +4

    I've restored houses here in Dayton with some of the nicest craftsmanship in tile, wood etc. And gota say you should come out here and hangout with us sometime it's a beautiful place

  • @christophernichols9387
    @christophernichols9387 2 года назад +1

    No mention of the fact that you can drive up to any gas station and sit there for a half hour and you'll be offered fentanyl-cut heroin to try? I could be wrong but I have a feeling that has something to do with it.

  • @a2bmoving526
    @a2bmoving526 2 года назад +5

    The real reason is population got darker...there I said it

  • @illwestwood
    @illwestwood 2 года назад +2

    Born & raised in West Dayton I LOVE my city but man has it went south smh future looking brighter though we will be great again I believe that #937

  • @Tommy88-
    @Tommy88- 2 года назад +4

    The movie studio (s) will be good for the city for sure. Plus, directors have discovered how good (and gritty) southwest Ohio looks on camera. They can use it as the northeast or other midwestern states on camera as well.

  • @SteveandLizDonaldson
    @SteveandLizDonaldson Год назад

    Dayton-area resident here. Dayton sits at the center of the nation's largest rails-to-trails bike route system. Over 350 miles of paved, off-road bicycle paths. They're also great for walking and running. I'm on them at least once a week.

  • @ginodominick4500
    @ginodominick4500 2 года назад +4

    Downtown is also a big lost no stores to shop the arcade is just being used for university Dayton students and alumni if you don't drink just bars and Apt buildings 4 Restaurant's I Eat at needs more shopping centers

    • @exit5620
      @exit5620 2 года назад

      Downtown Dayton used to be a thriving place even in the 70s. People would always be going back and forth .

  • @thomaskittsii1008
    @thomaskittsii1008 2 года назад +1

    Born in Kokomo Ind in 62.. Dad work for NCR and we moved to Miamisburg in 69.. The burg is 5 minutes south of Dayton..The GM closing and the loss of NCR really hurt this town.. Luckily dad got his 42yrs in with NCR before they sold out, but those two closings really hurt this town because many many smaller companies supported both organizations..so when both companies closed alot of people lost they're jobs in the smaller manufacturing businesses that supplied both...Then the Heroin epidemic hit just a few years ago and it wiped out alot of people also... but I'm proud to have grown up here and it's a good place... No different than in other smaller city with about 500,000 citizens.

  • @KrommFarenborn
    @KrommFarenborn 2 года назад +20

    The Dayton region has some of the best suburbs I have experienced. Centerville, Washington Township, ,Woodbourne, Oakwood, Beavercreek, Englewood, Springboro, parts of Kettering and Miamisburg…very nice places.

  • @nowadd0
    @nowadd0 2 года назад +1

    Dayton is on an uptick and bringing up the past doesn't factor into what is happening now and in the future....Come see Downtown Dayton and see for yourself!

  • @DrumlineArchives
    @DrumlineArchives 2 года назад +3

    I’ve only been to Dayton a handful of times for my annual pilgrimage to WGI finals. Doesn’t seem like there’s a lot going on there outside of that weekend. But you guys have a nice aerospace museum - I got to see the SR-71 flight suit my grandpa worked to develop.

  • @llluminatixx7
    @llluminatixx7 2 года назад +2

    All of Ohio is depressing. If you have an opportunity for another state, go to it.

  • @Pogey_Bait
    @Pogey_Bait 2 года назад +6

    The birthplace of Guided by Voices, Kim and Kelly Deal of the Pixies and The Breeders and many other great musicians. The people here are real. Great punk scene in the early 90's as well. Lots of culture here if you know where to look.
    That, and lots of invention and innovation has come out of this city. Some great people here.

    • @5678LeeLee
      @5678LeeLee Год назад

      Dayton, The Land of Funk music : The Ohio Players, Lakeside, Roger.....

    • @termar3774
      @termar3774 Год назад

      GBV's Bob Pollard was my science teacher at Kiser IMS back in the day!

  • @visalee1734
    @visalee1734 2 года назад +2

    I love Dayton Ohio! 💕

  • @marvinmanson7923
    @marvinmanson7923 2 года назад +7

    I was born in Dayton Ohio in the mis 60s...Back then,it's was fun and some what safe... Now, there's no way I would live back in Dayton Ohio, waters bad ,roads are bad, drug problems, youngsters bad assess...my home town is a mess...

    • @annehenry6243
      @annehenry6243 2 года назад +2

      Actually, we have some of the best drinking water in the country.

    • @DanEBoyd
      @DanEBoyd 2 года назад

      @@annehenry6243 Like Springfield.

  • @tinamarcum6170
    @tinamarcum6170 2 года назад +1

    Don't forget Dayton Ohio is also the birthplace of The NFL. THE FIRST GAME WAS PLAYED AT TRIANGLE PARK

  • @BobbaJam
    @BobbaJam 2 года назад +5

    Another factor in the decline of Dayton has been the educational tradition of Industrial Age high wealth families of Dayton. They often sent their children to East Coast boarding schools. The Pattersons, Meads, Talbotts, Shaws, etc. and even high wealth families today have practiced this. As young adults these offspring have often remained on the coasts and invested there as adults because they have limited Dayton connections after growing-up on the coasts. Cincinnati has had Summit Country Day, Country Day, St. Xavier, Ursuline Academy, Seven Hills School (and now Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy) for many years and it was/is rare for Cincinnati elite families to attend high school or earlier in the East. That has helped to keep old money investments in Cincinnati and has been a tailwind to a thriving middle market sector. Dayton remained more dependent on large corporates to provide jobs and prosperity. If they leave for college there is a much better chance they return than when they leave town for high school. Dayton has Miami Valley School since 1964 but that has a particular appeal that doesn’t cover the spectrum of political and religious philosophies that the 5 elite schools in Cincy do.

    • @Tommy88-
      @Tommy88- 2 года назад

      What about oakwood? I don’t recall lots of people there moving away for k-12.

  • @glorfindelchocolateflowery6392
    @glorfindelchocolateflowery6392 2 года назад +5

    I have so many coworkers from Dayton and they always say it's worth the miles to drive to Cincinnati everyday for their job because there's no jobs in Dayton. Heartbreaking. I don't understand why they just won't move here instead of wasting all that gas money

    • @larrymaloney877
      @larrymaloney877 2 года назад +2

      Keep in mind KY residents drove to Dayton daily to work in factories after WWII. Some did rent apartments and return to their wives in KY on the weekends.

    • @glorfindelchocolateflowery6392
      @glorfindelchocolateflowery6392 2 года назад +2

      @@larrymaloney877 wow I didn't know that

    • @larrymaloney877
      @larrymaloney877 2 года назад +3

      @@glorfindelchocolateflowery6392 , today many of us are of "Appalachian extraction:)"

    • @cindyfavorite195
      @cindyfavorite195 2 года назад +1

      Lots of newer jobs in warehouses and distribution, but not the volume or income potential to rebuild the area. I75/70 interchange busy, but many roads and bridges in poor repair, needed more GM jobs to return than did, and fulfillment jobs paying way low.

    • @glorfindelchocolateflowery6392
      @glorfindelchocolateflowery6392 2 года назад +1

      @@cindyfavorite195 gas prices don't help either😔😔 the government knows us ohioans are dirt poor 🤣🤣 don't understand why they can't help the citizens of Cincinnati and Dayton with these income problems among other things..

  • @matthewmarquis8732
    @matthewmarquis8732 2 года назад +11

    Lots of really wonderful things in Dayton but it is the most depressed city I've ever lived in and the future planning seems misdirected, at best. Damn shame. There is incredible potential here if small business development and forward-thinking growth modeling replaced the tired reliance on major corporations and chain businesses to grow the economy. That said, until the city proper reckons the economic and socioeconomic disparity between the city's east and west sides there's little hope for an equitable sustainable future for all residents.

    • @elbob17
      @elbob17 2 года назад

      Democrat leadership will continue to push diversity just for diversity's sake and the few remaining nice towns in Dayton will turn to shit like all of the others that are riddled with crime and drugs.

    • @exit5620
      @exit5620 2 года назад

      Well, you can help, go over to the west side and start a biz.

    • @elbob17
      @elbob17 2 года назад +2

      @@exit5620 I've lived in Dayton since 2011 and I can count the number of times I've been to West Dayton on one finger.

    • @selah71
      @selah71 2 года назад +3

      Dayton is one of the most segregated cities in America and has been so for decades.

    • @exit5620
      @exit5620 2 года назад +1

      @@elbob17 West Dayton can be a one way trip.

  • @nena_nezali
    @nena_nezali 2 года назад +1

    Cincinnati native here... we wish we were as cool as Dayton.

  • @StansAuto83
    @StansAuto83 2 года назад +4

    I used to live in Dayton and I loved it there. I used to walk downtown and ride the city buses.

    • @cindyfavorite195
      @cindyfavorite195 2 года назад

      We didn’t need a car in the sixties. Walk to school, bus to grocery and shopping centers, good healthcare downtown and great department and specialty stores. Good doctors and clean neighborhoods. The race wars in the early to mid sixties sent young families out and entire neighborhoods failed.

  • @danquirke443
    @danquirke443 2 года назад +2

    The great Dayton flood of 1913 is some interesting history. NCR began turning out boats instead of cash registers within hours to rescue people.

  • @6PieceNugget
    @6PieceNugget 2 года назад +3

    I think it's getting better again. Lots of small businesses, housing being built and renovated, people generally having a better attitude in the wake of the mass shooting. The art community is great. Whenever someone asks me what there is to do here, I tell them they better like art and history

  • @bossone1216
    @bossone1216 Год назад +1

    People keep ignoring the fact that the liberal leadership failed to attract business to the area with incentive. Dayton had many opportunities like casinos on the river by Las Vegas investors who wanted to build up the river area but leadership stopped that with over taxation and politics. Another opportunity with Amazon in the heart of downtown Dayton and due to politics that failed too. As of 2022 Dayton leadership continues to fail after multiple billionaire investors are now starting to pull out of downtown development because of politics over taxation and unwillingness to provide a safe atmosphere in the area by funding the police. These aren't opinion these are facts.

  • @davidwilson7042
    @davidwilson7042 2 года назад +13

    The largest amateur radio convention in the world, Hamvention, happens in Xenia, 20 miles away.

    • @roselee4445
      @roselee4445 2 года назад +1

      Used to be at Hara ARENA

  • @squigglyline2813
    @squigglyline2813 2 года назад +1

    Wright Brothers: born in Ohio, raised in Ohio, lived in Ohio, did their research, work, and build in Ohio.
    North Carolina: "first in flight!"

  • @kimhohlmayer7018
    @kimhohlmayer7018 2 года назад +12

    Still an amazing city with tons of culture. And Mead is pronounced “meed.”

  • @yagirlnee7415
    @yagirlnee7415 Год назад +1

    I can't wait to move out of Dayton. I've lived here my whole life and it has always been a run down and crime infested city.

  • @scottposey1793
    @scottposey1793 2 года назад +7

    Last one out of Dayton, Please turn out the lights.......

    • @dajuansanford9289
      @dajuansanford9289 2 года назад

      Nothing wrong with Dayton. You just have to travel to work in places like Cincinnati or anywhere outside downtown Dayton. Jobs all around that pay well. Lazy lazy people. Wait till the Ukrain and other emigrants get here. They will put in work to make things better and some will say gentrification. This is your house, mow the lawn, weed eat, edging, fertilizer, keep you stuff up. Don’t get mad when other people build up “not your shit” but the community.

    • @scottposey1793
      @scottposey1793 2 года назад +1

      @@dajuansanford9289 Lived in the Dayton area for 52 years. I've watched the deterioration and the failures of this city. This area is a toxic dump and only getting worse. It is starting to shadow Detroit, Youngstown, Akron, Cleveland and other dead manufacturing cities.
      BTW, the quote I posted was originally the local UAW & IUE unions death moan when GM shuttered all their plants and left Dayton a desert of it's once glory. Dayton's nothing but a shell and a overgrown ghetto full of people of all races, creeds & religions who have no pride in their community or themselves, only want to leech off the government for as long as they can. Don't you think entire housing areas that have 5 or 6 generations of welfare recipients living in one house enough??

  • @THEREALDPVRK
    @THEREALDPVRK 4 часа назад

    Dayton wasnt rough but it defintely wasnt all safe growing up. we moved to mo in 2009 because my Dad said his job at Cargill was liquidated due to a dying industry. Its sad. I remember places like Delco Park, Harrys Bagel shop, many places i wasnt old enough to go to but id love to go back eventually. Miss it

  • @bryantsteury8910
    @bryantsteury8910 2 года назад +8

    BUT WHAT ABOUT THE TRIANGLES?!

    • @claydenlinger2043
      @claydenlinger2043 2 года назад +1

      the Dayton Triangles football team? One of the first NFL teams? First NFL game was played in Dayton, I think

    • @angeliquejohnson6237
      @angeliquejohnson6237 2 года назад

      @Clay Denlinger the first football game was played in Rock Island, IL. The formation of the league happened in Dayton. As a former resident of Dayton, & a resident of Rock Island, I get the privilege of rooting for two cities in need of a comeback. I love both & hope the glimmer of flame will continue to be stoked.

  • @terrallputnam7979
    @terrallputnam7979 2 года назад +2

    While I was there I tried to keep the Delphi Automotive plants open by helping cut utility waste. I tried to be often tell the union workers to quit bleeding the company dry. They laughed and said, "Delphi is part of GM and GM has more money than God.

    • @larrymaloney877
      @larrymaloney877 2 года назад +2

      Employees failed to see the lower wages and benefits of foreign automakers in the area. Brand loyalty shifted as quality shifted. GM died of greed.

    • @cindyfavorite195
      @cindyfavorite195 2 года назад

      Now we know how much we lost. The rows of warehouses and lower paying packing and transit areas near I 70&75 fairly stable, but pay too low to improve much, and infrastructure needs updated.

  • @bigmillofficial
    @bigmillofficial 2 года назад +5

    Born and raised in Dayton, OH. We are the home of this sound called "funk". No we are not a big tourist attraction but we have very good soul food restaurants like "mom & pops" kinda foods. Everything is mostly affordable from the home living to our prices in general. Population of maybe 500k ppl somewhat. Besides having Wright patt base & the Schuster center we don't have too much. Especially since the hara arena shut down & the Salem mall. Trotwood has turned into a ghost town with Cub foods being shutdown amongst other businesses. But the city has been known to have plenty factory jobs like GM, mahle, AK steel, p&g, fuyao. It's not the biggest or most fun place to visit but this is HOME. And we are taking what we have whether ideas, talent, or degrees & still becoming successful. Shout out to Dayton,OH. And thanks for making a video about us.

  • @BlindMellowJelly
    @BlindMellowJelly Год назад +1

    Being raised there I can say this is sort of what happened. It is important to note the republican machine did not help in their era of selling manufacturing to other countries. These companies leave because of incentives and regulations by the GOP. In Troy Hobart suffered as well and eventually had to sell. This is what the politics of a state gets involved with without knowing. I say this because my father had a manufacturing plant out near Vandalia and due to republican attacks on his hiring and retaining of workers they tried to force him out. Oh, yes he was not republican so they did not like him thriving as he did. They began with race and saying he had too many minority workers and not enough good white people. That was new and not at all true but they had nothing else to say so they invented that as a issue. As sad as this is we blew it by republican leadership beginning with Ford opening its doors up to China so they could learn how to make cars better than us. It worked
    My family are all Jeep lovers and each child and my wife and I own them....they are all made in Canada....ummm? Interesting right?

  • @kati1017
    @kati1017 2 года назад +2

    Dayton used to be so much better. I miss those times...

  • @roberth5767
    @roberth5767 2 года назад +2

    I was raised in Dayton. Joined the Army in 1970. When I retired in 1997, I really had no reason to go back.

    • @3rtrxp494
      @3rtrxp494 2 года назад

      That’s wen the city still was popping 1997

  • @ryaheflin3784
    @ryaheflin3784 2 года назад +3

    I've lived here all my life and I can guarantee that it's a wonderful place. Dayton is it's own small little world where just about everyone knows everyone or someone who knows someone. Some are absolutely friendly and some are downright awful but friendly outnumbers the awful by a ton

  • @zudemaster
    @zudemaster 11 месяцев назад

    Dayton was a manufacturing city. So many countless and now forgotten factories are no more. At one point there had to be at least 5 various GM related plants in the Dayton area and countless other factories and businesses that supported those factories. Its all gone now, and those jobs will never come back.

  • @jacksonb2568
    @jacksonb2568 2 года назад +3

    Honestly, the outskirts of Dayton are doing pretty good. I try not to go downtown too often unless going to car events, but it seems to be going up and down. They make some progress but then loss some. The drug issue is one of the worst around here. Living directly next to the base and the museum is really neat though, with often hearing a ton of cool planes. Also, living within walking distance of bills donuts is definitely a treat

  • @msu924
    @msu924 2 года назад +2

    I'm a Michigan native (michigander). Moved here in 2014, graduated from Centerville in 2018, enlisted in the Air Force in 2019 and got put right back here 🤣. Its a great area to raise a family and settle down. Theres a lot to love about Dayton and the surrounding cities. Alot of people are moving away. Montgomery County covers most of Dayton and its surroundings and is also the highest taxed county in the state. Other than that, I really enjoy the area.

  • @OGxSoup
    @OGxSoup 2 года назад +3

    born and lived in Ohio. no one wants to live in Dayton.

  • @nking581
    @nking581 2 года назад +1

    The Wright Brothers first flight was in Dayton. The first recorded flight was at Kitty Hawk.

  • @LarryKelly
    @LarryKelly 2 года назад +6

    Turned down a IT job offer from Mead in 1984 and a move to Dayton. The Mead office building was impressive. Expensive and unionized labor in the area eventually were the downfall of many industries.

  • @larrymaloney877
    @larrymaloney877 2 года назад +2

    LOL "government jobs one of three primary employers" exemplifies what is wrong with Dayton and Montgomery county. You forgot to mention fast food: as a major employer. When a society is so sickly and obese that "healthcare" is one of the three major employers, it's time to stop with fast food. I remember, as a kid in the sixties getting off the bus in front of Rikes. I had to time my jump to miss all the congestion of busy people shoulder to shoulder briskly walking the sidewalks.

  • @cindysmithlucinda6369
    @cindysmithlucinda6369 2 года назад +9

    Democratic business taxation caused declined in industries.

    • @rockman4699
      @rockman4699 2 года назад

      Here comes the low information Trumpers

  • @unclegunnysack4895
    @unclegunnysack4895 8 дней назад

    Industry moved out, then it went through rough times, then the Detroit mob moved in and pushed out the Chicago mob and recruited the gangs they didnt kill off. They are big on stability and steady income, so Dayton is alot safer now. Been here for 20 years.