This weekly update includes the following: -The Completed Development page has received most of the attention. Most projects finished since 2010 have been restored, and I am now working on adding projects for years going all the way back to the 19th Century. -All other development pages saw some limited updates. –Rail Transportation History continues to expand.
Coming soon: -I have been putting together some data for several updates to the demographics pages, particularly related to immigration and crime data. -A restoration of the Census Tract Maps page is in the works, though not this coming week. -Monthly weather stats for another month should arrive this week. -At least one new non-update post is coming this week. -There will be a focus this week in particular to restore the Under Construction and Proposed Development pages.
The weekly update for June 3-6 continues to show progress on the site’s restoration. This included the following: -The Completed Development page received extensive additions for the years 2015-2019. -The January Weather records page was fully restored and includes 2019 data. -The Columbus Tornado History page got a large addition. -A few new graphs were added to the Columbus City Demographics page. -Columbus Transportation History received multiple entries. -Odds and ends were added to several other pages across the site.
On April 22nd of this year, All Columbus Data suffered a major hack. Several attempts were made to restore the website in full and to save the content through backups. At least twice, the site was restored only for it to fall back into the hacked configuration- some kind of jewelry website. Eventually, it was determined that there was corruption within the core files themselves, and since it could not be safely determined which ones, the host refused to restore any of the original content, as the attack was malicious enough to threaten the hosting servers themselves. So, the site was completely scrubbed and at least some of the original content that was not otherwise saved on archived websites was lost. After 7 years of work, it was a sickening result. Now, the rebuilding process has begun. Fortunately, a lot of the core lost data much of the site was built upon still existed in my own personal files, so for many of the pages, it’s simply a matter of putting that information back up on new pages. That is what I’ve been working on this week. Here is what I’ve done so far this week:
-2 new articles were added. -Monthly weather pages for April and May have been restored, complete with updated data for 2019. -Several pages within the Historic Building Database have had at least a few buildings added. -Partially restored the Completed page for Columbus Development . -Added several population graphs to the Columbus city, county and metro area demographics pages. -Partially restored- and expanded- the Columbus Tornado History page, one of All Columbus Data’s most popular.
I will continue to work to restore more pages and posts over time, but it will be an extended process.
Columbus has been receiving a lot of great national press in recent years, and that continued when CNN called the city a top Memorial Day weekend destination. The recent opening of the National Veterans Memorial, the first of its kind in the country, seemed to play a prominent role in the decision.
The National Veterans Memorial on the Scioto Peninsula, completed in 2018.
And here were the top 25 cities with the highest numeric growth 2010-2018. 1. Columbus: +105,500 2. Hilliard: +7,979 3. Dublin: +6,896 4. Grove City: +6,050 5. Cincinnati: +5,662 6. Delaware: +5,177 7. North Ridgeville: +4,424 8. Westerville: +4,267 9. New Albany: +3,165 10. Pickerington: +2,910 11. Mason: +2,874 12. Newark: +2,456 13. Reynoldsburg: +2,385 14. Gahanna: +2,303 15. Wadsworth: +2,214 16. Beavercreek: +2,198 17. Marysville: +2,173 18. Avon: +2,070 19. Powell: +1,809 20. Grandview Heights: +1,785 21. Upper Arlington: +1,751 22. Harrison: +1,711 23. Lancaster: +1,634 24. Oxford: +1,514 25. Sunbury: +1,485
Columbus’ growth is very impressive in Ohio, but it has also been a top 15 fastest-growing city in the country for the past few years now, and there appears to be little standing in the way of that continuing.