City-Owned Utility
Electricity in Galion, OH
Served by Galion Electric Department
Galion receives electricity from a city-owned municipal utility, not one of Ohio's investor-owned utilities. Municipal utility customers are not eligible for Ohio's retail electric choice program — you cannot switch to a competitive supplier through the PUCO Apples-to-Apples comparison tool. Your rates are set directly by Galion Electric Department.
Contact Galion City Hall for current rates and billing information.
History of Galion
The region was first inhabited by Native American tribes up until the first settlers, Benjamin Leveridge and his two sons, arrived in 1817. In 1820, William Hosford and his two sons, Asa and Horace, settled on land outside of the area. It was not until Colonel James Kilbourne decided to "lay out a town half way between Columbus and the Lakes" that the crossroads of Portland and Main street were settled by the Hosford family. This crossing was known by various names including: Moccasin, Horseshoe, Hard Scrabble, Spang Town, Hosfords and Goshen. Galion was laid out in 1831. However, in 1824 the town petitioned for a post office using the name Goshen and later changed to Galion by the postmaster general, John McLean, due to a town already being named Goshen in Ohio. The etymology of the name Galion is uncertain. A post office called Galion has been in operation since 1825.Asa Hosford is considered the "Father of Galion" due to his work as a state legislator in which he did work to get a rail line through the area that was completed in 1851.On April 30, 1882, in Galion, Ohio, a mob of around 2,000 people took Frank Fisher, an African American man accused of raping a white woman, from the town jail and lynched him. The mob hanged Fisher in broad daylight despite efforts by local authorities to intervene.
Wikipedia →Galion by the Numbers
- Population
- 16,641
- Median Age
- 43.6 yrs
- Median Household Income
- $57,234/yr
- Median Home Value
- $127,700
- Homeownership Rate
- 65%
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year Estimates (2023)
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