104 church steeples plus 36 of Cincinnati’s public step-streets and historic hillside byways across Hamilton County, on live satellite or topographic imagery. Tap any pin for a full info sheet — history, dates, height or step count, and notable features. Filter by region or type and check off each one as you visit.
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About this guide · A Colophon
Building on Caroline Williams
The idea here isn’t new. Sixty years ago a Cincinnati artist was already cataloging the same city by hand — and this guide picks that work up with 21st-century tools.
From 1932 to 1979, Caroline Williams (1908–1988) drew “A Spot in Cincinnati” for The Cincinnati Enquirer — weekly pen-and-ink sketches of the city’s steeples, streets, and step-streets, each paired with history she researched herself. She wasn’t inventing reverence for the skyline; she was recording it in detail, one block at a time.
In 1962 she gathered the steeple drawings into Cincinnati — Steeples, Streets and Steps, hand-set and hand-printed on her own Penandhoe Press in Burlington, Kentucky. The title named the city’s defining character — the hilltop spires, the winding streets, the public step-streets — the same terrain this map’s topographic layer traces.
Williams’s etching “Spires of Eighth Street” framed three downtown spires and City Hall on a single block. This is that same block from a drone.
Same subjects, today’s tools — GPS, an interactive map, aerial video — and room to keep adding the ones she never got to.
Queen City SteeplesAfter Caroline Williams · Penandhoe Press, 1962