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Gazetteer
Cuyahoga -- U.S. County in Ohio
Population (2000): 1393978
Housing Units (2000): 616903
Land area (2000): 458.489183 sq. miles (1187.481481 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 787.069736 sq. miles (2038.501172 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1245.558919 sq. miles (3225.982653 sq. km)
Located within: Ohio (OH), FIPS 39
Location: 41.460301 N, 81.663852 W
Headwords:
Cuyahoga
Cuyahoga, OH
Cuyahoga County
Cuyahoga County, OH
Wikipedia
Cuyahoga

Cuyahoga may refer to:

Places:

  • Cuyahoga County, Ohio
  • Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
  • Cuyahoga Heights, Ohio
  • Cuyahoga River
  • Cuyahoga Valley National Park

Ships:

  • , a U.S. Coast Guard Cutter that sank in the Chesapeake Bay in 1978 after a collision with a freighter

  • , a ship built in 1927 and transferred from the United States Coast Guard to the United States Navy in 1933

  • Cuyahoga (ship, 1943), a Maritimer, a lake freighter built to the design of the United States Maritime Commission -- see Lower Lakes Towing

Other:

  • "Cuyahoga", a song by R.E.M. on their 1986 album Lifes Rich Pageant.
Cuyahoga (song)

"Cuyahoga" is a song by R.E.M. from their 1986 album Lifes Rich Pageant. It was written primarily by R.E.M. bassist Mike Mills and drummer Bill Berry. It is one of R.E.M.'s earliest environmentally conscious songs, along with the album's lead single, " Fall on Me."

The themes of Cuyahoga include the pollution of the Cuyahoga River in Ohio and the treatment of American Indians earlier in American history. Despite the grim themes, according to R.E.M. biographer David Buckley, the lyrics are "words of optimism, partnership and community, set against an age of individualism." R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck said of the song that the song "is a metaphor for America and its lost promises. This is where the Indians were and now look at it. It's one of the ugliest fucking rivers in the world." The song opens with the lines "Let's put our heads together and start a new country up," which R.E.M. biographer Tony Fletcher describes as sounding like a "call to arms." On the other hand, music writer Craig Rosen feels that the line adds to the song's optimism.

Another line in the song states that "we'll burn the river down." This line comes from the fact that as early as the 1910s the river was so polluted that one method of cleaning the river was to throw a torch in it and thus burn the pollutants. The river also actually caught fire in 1969, an event which helped raise awareness of water pollution. This was another inspiration for the song, and for other songs such as Randy Newman's " Burn On." Newman biographer Kevin Courrier believes that "Burn On" was an influence on "Cuyahoga."

Buckley describes the melody as "beautiful" and the refrain as "anthemic." Musically, "Cuyahoga" is propelled by Mills' bassline.

Musician Ken Stringfellow described "Cuyahoga" as being "an anthem, but it's not self-congratulatory. It's about what's gone wrong with our country. It was an anti-anthem in that way. It took on an issue, but it was still unifying and powerful. That's a hard thing to do well." Slant critic Jonathan Keefe noted that even 25 years after the song's initial release its "optimism...is still inspiring and relevant." He goes on to note that the song's message "reflects an intelligent and decidedly nonpartisan approach to political reconstruction without resorting to...didacticism." Pitchfork Media critic Stephen M. Deusner states that "With its rousing chorus and pensive bass line, 'Cuyahoga' mails postcard dispatches from a museum where rivers and plains are artifacts, consigned to diorama and memory rather than reality." According to music author Martin Charles Strong, "Cuyahoga" (and " Fall on Me") showed the band developing "an assured poise." Fletcher described "Cuyahoga" as the "lyrical peak" of Life's Rich Pageant. It is one of Mills' favorite songs and one he particularly enjoys playing live.

"Cuyahoga"has appeared on several R.E.M. compilation albums, including The Best of R.E.M. in 1991 and And I Feel Fine... The Best of the I.R.S. Years 1982–1987 in 2006. It was also included on the live albums R.E.M. Live, Unplugged: The Complete 1991 and 2001 Sessions and Live at the Olympia.

Usage examples of "cuyahoga".

October of 1894 Daniel McCone, the founder and owner of the Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron Company, then the largest single employer in Cleveland, Ohio, informed his factory workers through their foremen that they were to accept a 10 percent cut in pay.

Many of them were owned, and their neighborhood grocery stores, too, by Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron.

It said that Daniel McCone was too busy to give time to strangers who had nothing to do with affairs of the Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron Company anymore.

Alexander and his father and his brother would watch the Cuyahoga Massacre on Christmas morning.

Daniel McCone was a brilliant and brutal Scottish engineer and metallurgist, who founded the Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron Company, the largest single employer in Cleveland when I was born.

It happened in Cleveland, in front of the main gate of Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron, on Christmas morning in Eighteen-hundred and Ninety-four.

Sacco and Vanzetti, is I say, and about the Cuyahoga Massacre, about playing chess with old Alexander Hamilton McCone, and on and on.

The other son became chairman of the board and president of Cuyahoga Bridge and Iron.

He stammered because of the Cuyahoga Massacre in Eighteen-hundred and Ninety-four.

David felt a pressure on his chest, which might have just been the wind off the lake and down the Cuyahoga Valley but felt like more.

By the time anyone did, the flames were sweeping through the Cuyahoga Valley, decimating the shipyards at the Great Lakes Towing Company, and leaping a full five stories into the air.

David could see Terminal Tower, and the Cuyahoga River, and all those handsome bridges.

Where it happened was west of Cleveland, at the far edge of Cuyahoga County, under a big white tent, the hot dusk air tangy with the smells of fried dough, manure, and roasted corn.

Hoffa cites the huge number of members the Teamsters have-in Cuyahoga County, in Ohio, and nationwide.

Viewers themselves clapped, tens of thousands of hands clapping, in living rooms throughout the Cuyahoga River watershed.