- Welcome to Cincinnati Museum Center
- Quick Tips
- Let's Get Started
- Welcome to Shaping Our City
- Adventure Roadmap
- Meet the Experts
- Shape The City Introduction – Video
- Shape The City
- First Settlement to 1810
- Land Acknowledgement
- Changing Currents – Gallery
- Artifacts Case – Gallery
- Birchbark Canoe – Gallery
- Map of Trails
- Flatboats – Gallery
- You Decide: Changing Currents – In-hand Interactive
- 1810 to 1860
- Advances in Technology
- Ferries and Canals
- Picking Up Steam – Gallery
- Steam-Powered Inclines
- You Decide: Picking Up Steam – In-hand Interactive
- 1860 to 1920
- Beyond the Basin – Gallery
- Annexation
- Inclines – Gallery
- Streetcars – Gallery
- You Decide: Beyond the Basin – In-hand Interactive
- Thank You For Visiting CMC
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Cincinnati Museum Center
Shaping Our City:
First Settlement to 1920
Venture through time to explore the Cincinnati region from before the 1700s to 1920. From canoes and flatboats, to steamboats and trains, to inclines and streetcars, discover how Cincinnati’s transportation story has changed and is still being written. Explore historic vehicles and objects, maps, photographs, media and interactive elements to see how Cincinnati’s urban design has both connected and divided the city and its people.
Shape the City
First Settlement to 1810
Click each box to reveal the topics you will explore in this virtual field trip.
1810 to 1860
1860 to 1920
MEET THE EXPERTS
Meet the experts from Cincinnati Museum Center and partnering learning institutions that will be guiding your virtual adventure!
Citizen of the Muscogee Nation
Education Coordinator for the Greater Cincinnati Native American Coalition
Associate Professor of Social Studies Education & History, Faculty Senate Parliamentarian, Black Studies and History Department Affiliate, Northern Kentucky University
Cincinnati Museum Center
Cincinnati Museum Center
SHAPING OUR CITY
Use the interactive video below to explore how the region has changed over time.
General Photo Collection (Delta Queen)
Click the video icon to learn more!
Learn more about Shaping Our City.
FIRST SETTLEMENT TO 1810
Native stewardship of our region goes back at least 13,000 years. People were attracted to the level, elevated land and a system of overland trails. At 981 miles long, the Ohio River and three major tributaries provided plentiful water, fertile soil for farming and routes for communication and trade. 
Click the photo icon to learn more!
Learn more about Shaping Our City.
Click on the icons to explore more about this area.
Click on the icons to explore more about this area.
Click on the icons to explore more about this area.
Click on the icons to explore more about this area.
1810 to 1860
In the nineteenth century, new technology influenced big changes. At one point, canals were the way of the future. Steam engines – specifically external combustion engines – dramatically changed transportation and industry. 
Although steamboats could go up and down the river as they pleased, people preferred trains for their ability to move people even more quickly and affordably over land. 
Advances in Technology for Transportation and Industry
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FERRIES AND CANALS
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Learn more about canal boat Senator
Residents of southern Ohio and northern Kentucky used ferries to maintain social and business connections. Canals were built to more quickly connect farmers and manufacturers north of Cincinnati with markets in the city.
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Learn more about canal boat Lady Hamilton
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Lady Hamilton canal boat
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Learn more about Canal Boats
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STEAM-POWERED INCLINES
It quickly became inexpensive to travel by steam on land and water. People and goods could easily travel great distances but it also became affordable to use steam power to move local traffic up Cincinnati’s hills. Steam-powered inclines would soon follow, but would be eclipsed by the next leap of technology by the mid-twentieth century.
Mt. Auburn Incline, Cincinnati, Ohio
Photo by Charles H. Muhrman, 1872-1873
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
1860 to 1920
By 1860, Cincinnati was the seventh largest city in the United States.  With the surrounding hills confining the city to its founding footprint, Cincinnatians began to push their way out of the basin and up the hills. As Cincinnati began to annex new territory, inclines and streetcars provided a way to easily travel up the hills and still access downtown.
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Learn more about Shaping Our City.
Click on the icons to explore more about this area.
Click on the icons to explore more about this area.
Click on the icons to explore more about this area.
THANK YOU FOR VISITING
Thank you for exploring Shaping Our City: First Settlement to 1920 at Cincinnati Museum Center. To discover more, check out our other virtual field trips and a wide array of online resources, including Ohio History Day, CMC’s interviews with WMKV, and our curator-led blog, Off the Shelf, all found on www.cincymuseum.org. 
To discover more about Cincinnati’s transportation history, we encourage you to reserve
Shaping our City: 1920 to Today.
To explore CMC’s epic exhibits, such as Shaping Our City, in-person, click the button below to purchase tickets. *Due to COVID-19, some exhibits may be closed. Please check www.cincymuseum.org prior to visiting for the most up-to-date list of open experiences.
To reserve other Virtual Field Trip experiences, click the button below to explore CMC’s current offerings! Remember to check back soon, as we frequently add new experiences.