LORAIN


Meaning of LORAIN in English

city, Lorain county, northern Ohio, U.S., 26 mi (42 km) west of Cleveland, on Lake Erie at the mouth of the Black River, adjacent to Elyria (south). Moravian missionaries camped briefly on the site in 1787, but the first permanent settler was Nathan Perry, from Vermont, who built a trading post there in 1807. First known as Black River, it was incorporated as the village of Charlestown in 1836 and was renamed in 1874 for the county (which had taken its name from the province of Lorraine, Fr.) when it was rechartered as a city. The coal and iron-ore trade was established with the completion in 1872 of the Cleveland, Lorain, and Wheeling Railroad (later part of the Baltimore and Ohio) and the opening of the Poe Lock at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. (1896). Industrial development began after 1890, when a steel mill was built on the Black River. Lorain is now a major Midwest shipping centre handling coal, iron ore, and limestone. Industries include shipbuilding, auto and truck assembly, and the manufacture of steel piping, power shovels, cranes, bearings, gypsum products, and clothing. Pop. (1990) city, 71,245; Lorain-Elyria PMSA, 271,126.

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