News

A $3.9 million home New Albany topped the month's sales. Data comes from county auditor offices in Franklin, Delaware and ...
Here’s the inside story on how Max and Lenore Brown, with Herb Cook Jr. and some well-known investors, brought a fresh voice ...
Children’s Hunger Alliance faces a drastic cut to its state funding, which could mean 1.5 million fewer meals for kids.
Lyttle, who died in April, left a lasting impression on the reporters and editors he worked with, as well as the community.
The drag icon and West family matriarch will lead Stonewall Columbus' Pride March this year, advocating for the LGBTQ+ ...
More than 40,000 people attended the Columbus Metropolitan Library's inaugural event, and staffers hope to build on that ...
The 19th century entrepreneur left his mark on Downtown, but his former 5,000-acre farm south of the city is all but gone.
Torso in the Short North offers vibrant, fluid fashions for every month of the year, from Pride Month merchandise to ...
Todd and Martha Monk restored the German Village home to its former glory through careful, detailed research and labor.
High school classmates tend to drift apart as the years roll on following graduation. Hoping to avoid that fate, a group of friends from the Westerville North High School class of 2005 came up with a ...
To say Ukeme Awakessien Jeter wears many hats is an understatement. To name a few: immigrant, engineer, lawyer, mayor and city council member, author and mom. She added another in April as a new ...
They say: “You are what you eat.” If that’s true, then it also must be true in the plural and past tense form: “We were what we ate.” In honor of Columbus Monthly’s 50th birthday, I decided to look at ...