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                  <text>Heart of Ohio, Sunbury</text>
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                  <text>(narration by Dave Kaylor)&#13;
Like many Ohio towns, Sunbury ended up where it is because of an old Indian trail. The&#13;
Walhanding trail as it was known is today Route 3. Not long after the town was founded&#13;
in 1816 by William and Lawrence Myers on this trail, this place was built as an inn because&#13;
the trail became part of the stage coach run from Vernon to Worthington. This was a &#13;
thriving business in its day and today it's being restored by the Sunbury Library.&#13;
&#13;
Now this of course is Sunbury's pride and joy, the Town Square. You don't see town squares&#13;
that much in towns in Ohio anymore you especially don't see one this big, but there's a &#13;
good reason this one is here in Sunbury because it's in the law. You see,  it says in &#13;
the law that if they cut this up into pieces for development, the land has to go to the relatives&#13;
of the Myers who laid out the town. That's why this town square hasn't been touched.&#13;
&#13;
The Town Square was used for lots of things including grazing cattle and horse sales. Here's&#13;
a picture of one from the 1800's, see the inn at the right? Here's the same corner today.&#13;
&#13;
Sunbury really grew following the Civil War. The town hall was built in 1868. Many new businesses &#13;
followed. One notable entrepreneur was Charlie Wheaton who owned these buildings together downtown.&#13;
They say he sold just about anything including the first automobiles. By the way, he covered the &#13;
outside of his businesses with tin. It's still there today.&#13;
&#13;
Sunbury's always had industry too. The two most famous, probably the Creamery, which eventually &#13;
became Nestles Coffee Factory. But even bigger in its day was the old mill owned by Gottlieb &#13;
Jacob Burrer. It stood here just on the north edge of town. The Burrer home and barn still stand, &#13;
and so does Gottlieb's grandson Carlton. &#13;
&#13;
(Carlton speaking) &#13;
This was a congregation point, uh, for the farmers that would come in. They would bring their grain&#13;
to get it ground into flour and they'd be very unhappy if the, uh, flour they got wasn't from the grain&#13;
that they brought in (Dave Kaylor chuckles). Quite often they'd come in and they'd have to wait for their&#13;
grist and Grandmother Burrer would have 'em for lunch and, uh, so it was a very congenial atmosphere. &#13;
Those were the way things were back in the old days.&#13;
&#13;
(narration by Dana Tyler and Dave Kaylor)&#13;
DT: This is a Thistle-Class racing boat coming out of its fiberglass mold. It's made right here in Sunbury.&#13;
&#13;
DK: In fact Dana, this is only one of two places that it's made in the entire country. Now the Thistle-Class &#13;
sail racing boat isn't something you necessarily take your family out on a cruise on a  (Dana chuckles)&#13;
Saturday or Sunday afternoon. This is a racing class the people that buy these boats like to race. And it&#13;
was first built back in 1945.&#13;
&#13;
DT: Look at that.&#13;
&#13;
DK: Isn't that something?&#13;
&#13;
DT: It takes about two weeks to make one of these boats here at the Great Mid-West Yacht Company and they &#13;
make about 12 sailboats a year. &#13;
&#13;
DK: Doug Laber has been making Thistle Boats for the past 12 years, 11 years here in Sunbury. And a lot more&#13;
goes into it than just putting that old hull in a fiberglass mold and bring it up and there you have a &#13;
Thistle Boat. Tradition behind all this means there's a lot of skill that goes in to it. Doug, what are you&#13;
doing right now?&#13;
&#13;
DL (Doug Laber): At the moment we're fitting, uh, the rails to the hull side. There's an excess of fiberglass &#13;
in this section on the inside and we are making it fit so there's no extra bulge.&#13;
&#13;
DK: Why do you spend so much attention to detail, when you're making these boats?&#13;
&#13;
DL: It's gonna sound a little corny frankly, but we are interested in doing it as well as we can.&#13;
&#13;
DK: If it's worth doing, it's worth doing right.&#13;
&#13;
DL: Kind of the philosophy that, that I've adopted in, in making these boats, is that each of these boats is&#13;
being made as if it was the last boat we were going to make and we're going to keep it for ourselves.&#13;
&#13;
DT: The Great Mid-West Yacht Company makes new sailboats and fixes old ones. This is a 24 year old all wood &#13;
sail boat, beautiful wood, it's in for repairs here.&#13;
&#13;
DK: Now this is a newer boat. This is a fiberglass boat, one much like we saw coming out of the mold earlier.&#13;
And you can come here and buy 'em in Sunbury, the base price around $7,500. But by the time you get the &#13;
trailer and the cover and the sails and all the sailing hardware, you'll have about $10,000 in the Thistle.&#13;
So now that you have your Thistle, what do you do with it Dana?&#13;
&#13;
DT: Well here in central Ohio at Hoover and O'Shaughnessy Reservoirs there are sailing races but beyond that,&#13;
did you know that every weekend between May and October you can find a regatta within a four hour drive of &#13;
Columbus.&#13;
&#13;
(Narration by Pat Warren)&#13;
This is Sunbury's regular water supply source, the Big Walnut Creek. I'm actually standing on the intake &#13;
structure, that's the pipe through which the water is pumped. Now ordinarily this creek should be high enough &#13;
to flow over that dam. That hasn't happened since mid July. The Sunbury Reservoir is about 50 million gallons &#13;
low, notice the water mark. There's just enough water left for about 25 days. Last week it was decided the &#13;
solution to the water problem is to install a temporary water line from a neighboring quarry in Galena to the &#13;
Sunbury Reservoir. The National Guard loaned Sunbury the pipe, Nestle is paying the workers. But the job is taking&#13;
longer than expected. The emergency pumps were expected to be operational today, but the pipe is old, the segments&#13;
must be bolted together by hand. Water Department Supervisor Phil Frentsos says the pumps should be working tomorrow,&#13;
no later than next week. Still it's only a temporary solution. When the reservoir is full again the pipeline&#13;
will be dismantled. &#13;
&#13;
PW: You're looking at the possibility maybe of buying that quarry?&#13;
&#13;
Gene Sparks: It's a possibility, yes.&#13;
&#13;
PW: But nothing is definite?&#13;
&#13;
Gene Sparks: No, nothing is definite at the time, no.&#13;
&#13;
PW: I guess the real point though is that something has to be done.&#13;
&#13;
Gene Sparks: Something has to be done for the people of Sunbury.&#13;
&#13;
PW: The sunny side to the story is this, none of Sunbury's residents have had to go without water, yet. Pat&#13;
Warren, Eye Witness News.&#13;
&#13;
(Narration by Doral Chenoweth the "Grumpy Gourmet")&#13;
This is the Grumpy Gourmet today coming to you from the Heart of Ohio. We're in Sunbury. We're up here to check&#13;
on the balance of trade. Yesterday Kentucky Fried Chicken opened up a store in Beijing China of all places.&#13;
Where would you expect not to find a Chinese Restaurant in the heart of Ohio? In Sunbury on the square. Today &#13;
we're going to try Wah Yuen. This is C U Uh, everyone calls him Bobby. For the past six years he's operated&#13;
this fresh wok cookery Chinese Restaurant. Hey you want to talk Pau? No, the food's good, chicken dishes here are &#13;
the fresh specialty of the day. There are very few pineapple groves in Sunbury Ohio, but they make great use&#13;
of it here in the sweet and sour chicken. Taste, aroma, color, beautiful. We spoke with Bobby about his place&#13;
but his English is not too good so he'll answer in Chinese.&#13;
&#13;
DC: Uh, We couldn't find a translator so this is probably what he said. Do you have Peking Duck?&#13;
&#13;
Bobby: (speaking Chinese) "No, but if you don't get out... You'll have to duck!"&#13;
&#13;
DC: Why did you go in the restaurant business?&#13;
&#13;
Bobby: (speaking Chinese) "None of your business!"&#13;
&#13;
DC: What is this, no chopsticks?&#13;
&#13;
Bobby: (speaking Chinese) "#?!#!$!#"&#13;
&#13;
DC: This is the Grumpy Gourmet bringing knowledge from the combat zone in the Heart of Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
(Sunbury baseball history, William Henry Southworth, without any soundtrack)&#13;
&#13;
Interview with Carol Southworth Watson and Dave Kaylor&#13;
&#13;
CSW: Um all of his brothers were railroaders, and he had about six weeks working on the railroad&#13;
and he thought, you know I really don't like this. So he ran away to Portsmouth, much to his &#13;
mother's chagrin, to become a ball player. And then from Portsmouth then, I don't know, Branch Rickey &#13;
was somewhat instrumental, and he went on to the Toledo Mudhens and then to Cleveland. Well &#13;
he would clown with his boys.&#13;
&#13;
DK: He wasn't a Casey Stengel&#13;
&#13;
CSW: No, no he would clown with his boys, but he  would be here for Spring Training.&#13;
&#13;
DK: Uh Huh&#13;
&#13;
CSW: So, and uh, then so far as the boy scouts were concerned, he was really perpetuating what they &#13;
were doing here.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Sunbury </text>
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                <text>The Sunbury collection contains documents on a variety of topics related to the history and development of Sunbury. Item types represented in this collection include diaries, maps, meeting ledgers, business documents and histories. </text>
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              <text>Heart of Ohio: Sunbury</text>
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              <text>Special broadcast from Columbus's WBNS-10TV on the history and development of the Village of Sunbury, as well as a tour of the Town Square  and businesses in the area as they were in 1987.  According to the June 11, 1987  issue  of the Columbus Dispatch, WBNS-10TV acquired the first satellite news truck that made news reporting possible from anywhere in Ohio. News reporters Dana Taylor, Dave Kaylor and Doral Chenowith  created a new series, "Heart of Ohio," and visited Sunbury to record the show&#13;
for the news.</text>
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              <text>WBNS-10TV; Columbus Ohio</text>
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          <name>Date</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="143873">
              <text>1987-11-13</text>
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              <text>Ohio--Delaware County--Local history--Village of Sunbury&#13;
Ohio--Delaware County--Small business--Village of Sunbury&#13;
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