Ohio was the heart of the Steel, tire, auto, and mechanical manufacturing from the industrial revolution till it’s peak in the 1950s. This was particularly true for Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Dayton. Pennsylvania also was a “steel” king at roughly the same time.
Since the 1950s, which again was the peak of Cleveland’s population many factors began to erode the population there. Among them was recognition of the pollution problem which now plagues industrial Asia, foreign competition, crime, and the flight of the middle class from big cities to the suburbs.
usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/nation/census/2011-03-09-ohio-census_N.htm
Cleveland lost 17% of its population to fall to 396,815 — its fewest inhabitants since 1900. The city peaked in 1950 at 914,808. More residents abandoned the city from 2000 to 2010 than in the 1990s.
I would guess this church and it’s congregation fell victim to that trend in Ohio. In the past few years there has been interest in urban renewal in a few big cities, but For some places I guess, like this beautiful old Church, it was too late. Truly Cleveland is the unsung Detroit. The same could be said for Dayton really. It lost AC Delco, Steel, NCR, GM and more. Dayton and other Ohio cities are full of beautiful decaying old mansions and buildings with too few resources to go around.