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When General Motors Co. opened an automobile assembly plant in Norwood in 1923, the citizens of Hamilton County’s second largest city were elated. That meant thousands of jobs that would bolster the local economy.

It came at an opportune time for Norwood. According to headlines of the day, some in the struggling community were considering whether to ask to be annexed by Cincinnati.

Now, 100 years later, we can better see how their fortunes would rise and fall with that of the automaker.

In September 1922, an Enquirer story announced that GM had acquired a 16-acre plot in Norwood, formerly used as circus grounds and a ball field. The site was nestled between the Pennsylvania and the Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) railroad lines, a major factor in choosing it.

Workers put together cars on the Chevrolet assembly line in the General Motor plant in Norwood in 1959. The plant was active from 1923 to 1987.

The Norwood facility didn’t manufacture auto parts; it was an assembly plant with two lines, one for building Chevrolet cars, the other for Fisher bodies, both subdivisions of GM. The plant was to employ 2,100 people and complete 300 cars a day.

“Norwood has been having some ambitious dreams since the General Motors Corporation started to build the big Chevrolet auto plant there,” the Cincinnati Post reported on the feeling of great expectations in April 1923, four months before the plant opened.

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