- (216) 268-8867
(216) 268-8867
Serving Cleveland Heights & All Surrounding Areas
Serving Cleveland Heights & All Surrounding Areas
Cleveland Heights Tutors
Private Tutors in Cleveland Heights for All Subjects & Grade Levels
Looking for a great Cleveland Heights Tutor? From elementary all the way up to college and graduate school, our experienced team at Grade Potential ensures that you’ll receive the highest quality tutoring on your way to achieving your goals, all at an affordable price! We've worked with thousands of local students, so we know what it takes to be successful around here.
New clients receive a risk-free trial session where you can meet a tutor with no obligation. If you're not thrilled after your first hour, we don't charge you anything! Call us now to learn more and get specific pricing.
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(216) 268-8867
About Cleveland Heights
Just east of the downtown area and south of Lake Erie, Cleveland Heights, Ohio is a large suburb of Cleveland. Originally founded by the Connecticut Land Company in 1796, the city of Cleveland didn’t see widespread growth until after the building of the Erie Canal in 1825. Soon enough, settlers began coming into the Cleveland area. Mayfield Road became the first road leading into Cleveland Heights which had been heavily forested before farms, log cabins and rock quarries began dotting the landscape. Further development arrived with railroad service to the area connecting Cleveland to New York and Pennsylvania. Industrialist and founder of Standard Oil John D. Rockefeller came to Cleveland Heights in 1873 purchasing over 700 acres of land and establishing his summer home at Forest Hill. In 1892 New York lawyer and developer Patrick Calhoun, the grandson of American statesman John C. Calhoun, developed the Euclid Golf Club in Cleveland Heights to attract wealthy Clevelanders into the area. Calhoun hired renowned landscape architect E.W. Bowditch to develop an upscale community based on the “Garden City” model which was all the rage in America in the late 1890’s. Bowditch designed a community with large residential lots, curving tree lined streets and plenty of green space. The golf club itself became the first professionally designed 18-hole course in Cleveland. By the early 20th century, electric railcars began traveling along Mayfield Road from the big city to Cleveland Heights making it a viable home for workers who could afford to live outside the city and escape the growing intercity congestion. As the big city’s population began to rise, so did Cleveland Heights with a threefold increase from 5,000 residents in 1910 to over 15,000 in 1921. Today, Cleveland Heights is among the top ten largest suburbs in the greater Cleveland region.
A Cleveland Heights tutor can help you catch up on your most demanding academic subjects so you can take some time away from the books to enjoy the exciting things to do in Cleveland Heights and the surrounding area. Offering a taste of forested woodlands and grassy meadows just a few miles from the big city, Forest Hill Park in Cleveland Heights is 235 acres of combined wilderness and recreational development. The original site of Rockefeller’s summer home, visitors to the park can catch a glimpse of Lake Erie from Forest Hill’s highest point. The park features athletic fields, lighted tennis courts, nature trails, playgrounds and a hill for winter sledding. The park is home to a variety of wildlife such as deer, fox and geese.
Cleveland Heights benefits from its proximity to the cultural amenities in downtown Cleveland. With a collection of over 45,000 permanent works, the Cleveland Art Museum is one of the most important art museums in the United States. The museum is particularly famous for its holdings of Asian and ancient Egyptian art. Founded by Cleveland industrialists in 1913 the 75-acre museum is on the southern edge of Wade Park just west of Cleveland Heights. The museum features masterpieces from European and American artists including Caravaggio, Monet, Picasso and Bellows. The museum underwent a major renovation between 2005 and 2013 at a cost of $258 million.
Right next door to the art museum, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History has a collection of more than five million research specimens and artifacts in a variety of scientific fields. The museum’s archaeology department focuses primarily on the history of Native American societies in the Ohio and Northeast regions of the United States. The museum is also one of the leading researchers of physical anthropology and the study of human origins and evolution. The museum has more than one million visitors each year.
Getting Started Is Easy!Call us now: (216) 268-8867
Cleveland Heights, OH