Langstroth Cottage is a historic building on the Western College campus of Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. It was designated a National Historic Landmark on June 22, 1976. The cottage, built in 1856, is now the home for the Oxford office of the Butler County Regional Transit Authority. It was purchased for Beekeeper L. L. Langstroth in 1859, and he lived there for the next 28 years, conducting research and breeding honey bees.[2]
^"National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
^"About Langstroth Cottage". Miami University. Archived from the original on May 13, 2009. Retrieved June 12, 2009.
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LangstrothCottage is a historic building on the Western College campus of Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. It was designated a National Historic Landmark...
after whom is named: LangstrothCottage, a historic building in Oxford, Ohio Langstroth hive, a design of beehive Dawn Langstroth (born 1979), Canadian...
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the natural tree-trunk shape which bees were thought to favour. L. L. Langstroth is often credited with these developments, however an examination of the...
hitherto been acquainted with. He further developed the Langstroth hive design of Rev. L.L. Langstroth, which featured a movable frame around the bee space...
development of modern bee hives (such as the design published by Lorenzo Langstroth in 1853), the use of bee boles was a practical way of keeping bees in...