city, seat (1803) of Gallia county, southern Ohio, U.S., on the Ohio River, near its junction with the Kanawha River, 30 mi (48 km) north-northeast of Huntington, W.Va. The third oldest European settlement in Ohio, it was founded in 1790 by the Scioto Company for Royalists fleeing the French Revolution who had been deceived by agents of the company into purchasing land certificates that were worthless. The company later, however, financed a settlement at the site, and some French moved there. The name means city of the Gauls. During the American Civil War its strategic location resulted in economic prosperity; troops were channeled through the city, warehouses were built, and river traffic on the Ohio River increased. Gallipolis is the shipping centre for a farming and coal-mining region and has light industry. Rio Grande College/Community College (1876) is 12 miles (19 km) northwest. Just south of the city is a large roller dam (1938) that raises the navigable depth of the Ohio River for 50 miles (80 km) and uplifts the Kanawha for 30 miles (50 km). A division of Wayne National Forest lies west and south of Gallipolis. Inc. village, 1842; city, 1865. Pop. (1990) 4,831.
GALLIPOLIS
Meaning of GALLIPOLIS in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012