In approximately 1816, Melcher Sherbondy assisted his son John (Clan A) in purchasing about 368 acres on a hill in Summit County, OH. In 1817, the families of John and George (Clan B) Sherbondy moved there. In about 1828-1830, Melcher and his wife and their son Peter’s family (Clan D) also moved there. This area became well known as Sherbondy Hill!
Sherbondy Hill, Ohio
Sherbondy Hill Park won an award and $150,000 in 2024 for park renovations and updates.
This was in response to a submission to the 2024 Akron Parks Challenge.
“Congratulations to Sherbondy Hill Park on winning the 2024 Akron Parks Challenge,” City Council President Margo Sommerville said in a release. “We are so excited about the investment of resources, the construction of a pavilion, and the enhancement to community well-being that having such a gathering space will bring to the residents of Ward 3.”
The vision for Sherbondy Hill Park, which the Akron Bengals Youth Football organization uses for practice, includes increased seating, a walking path, a pavilion and a small play space for families
Read the entire article from June, 2024, here, Sherbondy Hill Park Award
Sherbondy Hill of Akron, Ohio, A 12-page manuscript by Jeanette E. Sherbondy
Sherbondy Hill was a real place and not just an imaginary invention of our storyteller ancestors. It was a part of Akron, Ohio. Sherbondys were among the very first ten families that settled Akron and they made their mark on Akron history. John and George Sherbondy were early trustees of Portage Township: John was also Assessor and George was the Director of the Infirmary. Their brother Peter and sister Rosannah also settled there. Sherbondy descendants were inventors of a pneumatic tire and cofounders of the Diamond Rubber Company.
In the early days of cars, Sherbondy Hill was famous locally. My uncle Bill Sherbondy wrote in a letter about when he drove to Akron in search of Sherbondy Hill. He stopped at a gas station to ask where it was and the attendant told him he was on it! He related that people used to test their skills driving up it.
Dawne Crotts told me that the house on Sherbondy Hill was at the top of the hill. It was given to the city by the Sherbondys to be a school. Ex-Sheriff Samuel A. Lane writing about the early school in Akron, stated that there were several separate school districts including “the Sherbondy neighborhood.”
The school was also used as a church later. The Sherbondy Hill Church of Christ was organized on 1 February 1891 and as of July 1891 there were 21 members and 100 Sunday School scholars, under the leadership of Rev. Wellington Besaw.
1874 Map_PDF Portage, OH
1874 Map of Portage, Ohio (later became Akron).
If you enlarge to 200% and look at block 18 at the bottom you will see a concentration of Sherbondys.
There are also a few Sherbondys in blocks 14, 15 and 19
Postmark from “Sherbondy, Ohio” 1909
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