Great Article On The Springboro Universalist Church...Now The Springboro Christian Church...
Frank A Mills researched and discusses the Springboro Universalist Society, the settlement of the Quakers, the Gregg family, the Underground Railroad...and much more.
https://t.co/DKkJ4DrYn8
Ace!
Hole in One Alert!
Springboro’s varsity golfer Ben Young claims his very first Hole in One on #8 tonight!
The 168 yard par 3, eighth hole may not be the longest. But it is situated at the highest point in the entire golf course.
Way to go Ben!
- Heatherwoode Golf Club
Bald Eagle Sighting At Heatherwoode Golf Club
It’s a dream for all golfers to hit their golf ball in for an “eagle” during a round.
Sean Haver of Wayesville didn’t get one Thursday, June 11, but he and his fellow golfers got to see a bald eagle swoop in for a meal from a pond at Heatherwoode Golf Course in Springboro.
The eagle is a popular visitor at the golf course between holes 11 and 15, according to Heatherwoode general manager Matt Starr.
“It was out there eating its dinner. Really cool to see,” said Haver, who took several photos of the bird.
Starr said the eagle usually makes a daily appearance. Clear Creek runs through Heatherwoode Golf Course.
During a recent flooding, Starr said the eagle found a lot of fish to eat on.
Ohio’s bald eagle population has dramatically increased in recent years. A 2025 bald eagle nest census found 964 active nests in Ohio, a significant increase from the 707 nests found during the 2020 nest census. Nests were counted in 87 of Ohio’s 88 counties in 2025, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife.
Eagles are federally protected and it’s against the law to do anything that interferes with the eagle or their nests.
DDN Article:
https://t.co/t12Z66dinO
Attention Springboro Residents & Families:
I wanted to share an important SAFETY UPDATE regarding Twin Creek, particularly for those whose properties line the creek or who frequent the water in back of North Park and Community park.
Late last week, a large raw sewage leak occurred upstream, which the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) confirmed has resulted in a significant fish kill and roughly 2.5 miles of contaminated water. This includes the sections of the creek running through Warren County within our city limits and behind North Park.
After reaching out to the city for clarification, here is where things currently stand:
The Source: The City of Springboro noted that the issue originated from Montgomery County Wastewater Services, not our local city infrastructure.
Official Safety Guidance: The City is in communication with ODNR and Montgomery County, BUT they have indicated that any official public safety notifications, updates, or remediation details must come directly from those two managing entities.
Because official warnings have NOT yet been posted on the City Website or information outlets, nor have any signs but put up at the park or along the creek, I wanted to share this directly so families can make informed decisions.
If your children or pets regularly play in or near Twin Creek, you may want to avoid water contact until Montgomery County or ODNR releases an official clearance.
Stay safe, everyone!
- Donald Cummings
What better way to start rehearsals for Charlie and the Chocolate Factory than a cast field trip to our very own chocolate factory in Springboro: Friesinger’s.
The classic story plays live on the La Comedia Dinner Theatre stage from June 25-August 9.
- La Comedia
Oh My Gourd...It's That Time Again!
We are planting!! The giant pumpkins are in the ground, and many seeds are in the ground already!! Grateful for another season!!
- Kleather's Pumpkin Patch
Killer Brownie Moves To Springboro!
Killer Brownie has landed a new state tax break for a move from Miamisburg to Springboro, and a pledge to create what the state says will be more than 80 new jobs.
Killer Brownie LTD expects to create 82 full-time-equivalent positions, generating $6 million in new annual payroll by Dec. 31, 2029, as a result of the company’s project near the intersection of Austin Boulevard and Ohio 741 in Springboro, the Ohio Tax Credit Authority has said.
Served on airlines, at Paycor Stadium and found on grocery shelves, Killer Brownie makes gourmet brownies.
The company will combine production and warehousing into one facility to add automation and additional production lines, the state said.
The Tax Credit Authority this week approved a 1.811%, nine-year Job Creation Tax Credit for the project.
That means that for nine years, Killer Brownie can claim a 1.811% credit on new Ohio payroll related to the project location.
The move will increase the company’s footprint from about 50,000 to 140,000 square feet, an announcement from the Dayton Development Coalition and JobsOhio said.
“This moment is about more than a new facility,” Killer Brownie Chief Executive Chimene Mayne-Ross said in a statement. “It’s about investing in the future of our team, our brand, and the culture that has shaped Killer Brownie from the beginning.
Bringing everyone together under one roof creates space for deeper collaboration, continued innovation, and the kind of connection that allows us to keep delivering something truly special to consumers across the country.”
Killer Brownie traces its lineage to a beginning as a Dorothy Lane Market treat in the late 1970s. It became a separate wholesale entity in 2000, and it grew rapidly after moving to Miamisburg in 2019.
“Killer Brownie has developed a strong local following that has only grown since the company began distributing its products to national retailers,” JobsOhio President and CEO J.P. Nauseef said in a release. “Killer Brownie’s expansion and ongoing commitment to the Dayton region signal that Ohio’s entrepreneurial landscape is tailor-made for small businesses to grow, thrive, and scale as consumer demand increases.”
Note: Irresistible Foods Group (IFG), the family-owned parent company of King's Hawaiian, acquired a majority stake in The Killer Brownie Company in 2024. The original creator and co-owner, the Mayne family (founders of the Ohio-based Dorothy Lane Market), maintains an ownership stake and operates the brand alongside IFG.
DDN Link:
https://t.co/UG7eNI5Ej0
Springboro Girls Lacrosse Win Division 1 Regional Championship!
The Panthers beats King 12-11 and are headed to the State Final Four!!
Next stop is Mason on Tuesday at 7:00 for the state semi-finals against Upper Arlington!
(Enquirer Pics)
Springboro High School Baseball Fever...Catch It!
OHSAA Tournament begins tonight at home vs. Sycamore. The 19-7 Panthers hope to duplicate last year's tournament run (and more).
Ben Veletean was named the GWOC "Athlete Of The Year." Nick Hutchinson led the GWOC in batting average with a Ty Cobbish .524.
Meet The Springboro National Academic Quiz Tournament Team!
NAQT organizes the premier middle school, high school, community college, and college national quiz bowl championships in North America.
The Springboro team: Evan, Keenan, Austin, Matthew, Felix, Quinn, and coach Tommy Segi.
Tommy Segi has been a key member of our staff for the past couple of years, keeping score and helping manage the results of some of the biggest matches.
This year, he has a different title: coach. He’s guiding the Springboro (OH) team into the afternoon session of preliminaries, and his team is taking the benefit of having a good guide to steer them through the competition.
Springboro player Quinn says “the players you’re playing against here are better, and are playing at a higher level.” His teammates talk about the wisdom they’ve received on the level of the question they’re facing, and the format of the game; “we have to be ready on the timer.”
Keeran adds “we’ve got to be ready for FAST READERS.”
Segi says “This team has put in hard work and is dedicated.” He makes comment of having nationals-caliber teams in his league in Northmont and Beavercreek; “they see what makes a good team, and they focus on becoming that.
There are a lot of players who are balancing multiple commitments - athletics, band, jobs, etc - they still commit to the weekend tournaments and to the league during the week and they balance with their other commitments.”
Matthew believes in the repetition that his team has gotten during practice, and brings sage advice for the new quiz bowler. “The more questions we hear, the more answers we get.”
The goals for the day are being kept in check. Segi: “It’s hard for the first time to set a goal in numbers; we don’t control who we play at the beginning. But we just came off of scrimmages and we played well. It’s hard to quantify, but I know what I want the team to experience.”
Matthew adds: “We’re just here to do our best.” And then a couple of players give hints of more brash confidence, but Coach Segi is doing his best to tamp those expectations down. There’s such an easy rapport between the team and their coach, and that bodes well for a good day tomorrow.
#SpringboroOhio
Wow! What A Special Yard Sign Celebrating A Springboro High School Senior's Last Day Of School And Graduation!
Christian Kadrovach's path began at Bright Beginnings Child Care Center and continued through Clearcreek Five Points, Springboro Intermediate, Springboro Junior High, and of course, Springboro High School.
Throughout the years, Christian has been actively involved in sports, playing basketball from elementary school through his freshman year, spending seasons on the field with SCBA baseball, and playing football for the Wee Panthers.
Outside of school and sports, Christian’s passions reflect both his adventurous spirit and his strong work ethic. His love for cars has become more than a hobby — it’s something that truly reflects his personality and drive.
Christian is preparing to begin an exciting new journey at Elite Welding Academy, where he plans to pursue a career in welding, and continue building a future driven by hard work, determination, and ambition.
No matter where life takes him next, Springboro will always be where his story began.
Christian's proud Dad and Step Mom are Kyle and Claire Kadrovach. His proud Mom and Step Dad are Ashley and Tony Collins.
Springboro Saturday Look Back...Seven Years Ago
The "Floating Evergreen Tree" located on SR 741 past Springboro before reaching Red Lion.
Photo taken by McCall Vrydaghs.
Instead of the utility company trimming the tree from the bottom, they removed the middle of the tree which was close to the line. As the tree grew, it appeared the tree was floating.
Springboro's A.J. Ewing Is Now A Major Leaguer!
Desperately in need of turning their season around, the New York Mets plan to call up top prospect A.J. ahead of Tuesday’s game.
The 5-foot-10, 160-pound Ewing, a left-handed hitter, was a fourth-round pick by the Mets in 2023 out of Springboro High School. The club will need to open a 40-man roster spot for him Tuesday.
Ewing has played just 12 games at Triple-A Syracuse, where he had an .827 OPS in 51 plate appearances and five stolen bases. Ewing excels on the bases and stole 70 bags across 124 games in the minor leagues last year.
He had a breakout season last year and slashed .315/.401/.429 in 564 plate appearances over three levels. Despite his just 28 games at Double A last year, the Mets invited him to major-league spring training, viewing him as a viable option at some point.
They just probably weren’t banking on its being the second full week of May.
#AJEwing
#SpringboroOhio
Congratulations to our 2026 scholarship winner Kinsley Brown.
Kinsley was a member of the golf team at Springboro High School. She will be attending Ashland University where she will also play golf, and pursue her degree in business and hopes to work in medical sales.
Once again congratulations and good luck in all you do.
- Michael's Believe Page
Note: This page is dedicated to Michael Tepe and keeping his memory alive by taking our Believe Bags wherever we may travel!
Michael's Believe Foundation was started to honor a young man, Michael Tepe, who passed away in an automobile accident on November 10, 2013.
Michael was a 2010 graduate of Springboro High School, and a Student Athlete at The College of Mount Saint Joseph where he was majoring in Special Education / Social Work.
June 22nd is the 12th Annual Believe Foundation Golf Outing.
https://t.co/C46AibMu2D
Springboro's All-Time Hits Leader!
Congratulations Ben Veletean, who had a four-hit day with three extra-base hits, becoming the all-time hits leader for Springboro baseball in a 14-4 win against Wayne yesterday!
The Panthers are now 13-4 and play at Olentangy Liberty later today.
Veletean and Nick Hutchinson continue to lead the GWOC in batting average (.566 and .563). Ben also has 13 stolen bases and Nick's 0.67 ERA is second in the GWOC.
‘42 Is My Number’ – How Springboro’s Bella Miller Is Inspired By Jackie Robinson...
Sometimes it’s nice to have a prompt for how one book can change the viewpoint of your world.
A phone notification popped up for Springboro senior Bella Miller early in the day on April 15. The message provided a reminder of the source for her strength she uses to tackle challenges presented on the softball field and everyday life.
The notification sent to her and others across the country told individuals it was “Jackie Robinson Day” across Major League Baseball. A day created in 2004 to celebrate a historical moment in the history of the United States.
Robinson made his MLB debut on April 15, 1947, as the first player of color to participate in a big league game. And 79 years later the trials and tribulations he endured on his path to becoming a player for the Brooklyn Dodgers have been storified in countless entertainment mediums.
A book all about Robinson that Miller read in her youth — simply titled “Who Was Jackie Robinson?” — unknowingly laid the groundwork for her of where she could look to when in any need of inspiration.
Robinson wore 42 for the Dodgers. The number has been retired across MLB since 1997. And it wasn’t available for Miller to wear when she joined Springboro’s softball team because there were no jersey options that had it.
But it was the number she had already chosen for herself to wear and she wanted to make it happen.
Going into her junior season, Miller asked head coach Rodney Coffey about the possibility of getting 42. During her freshman and sophomore years she wore 44 as it was the closest number printed.
Her request was granted. Miller said Coffey got jerseys numbered 42 made for her to wear during games.
“That meant a lot for me that it was specially made because I just didn’t feel right having the number 44 because 42 is my number for so many years,” Miller said.
What the number meansIt wasn’t the first choice for Miller to go with 42 on the back of her jersey.
Her mother wore the number six when she played and that’s what Miller wanted to wear as well. But her youth team didn’t have that ready as an option for her, so instead she chose nine since it was “the upside down version of that.”
The next team she joined didn’t have either number available.
That was when she had just finished reading “Who Was Jackie Robinson?”.
“When I came home from school, my dad was like, ‘Hey, you have to pick a number but they don’t have nine or six available,’” she said. “I remember that in the book I read that they retired number 42 in MLB because of the impact he made and I know that they didn’t do that in softball. So I told my dad that I just wanted to be number 42 and it’s just stuck ever since.”
Miller said that decision and season sparked everything for her. It helped she performed well, she said, to help make it a special number she wanted to continue wearing.
Keeping 42 helps Miller push herself through moments of adversity. She said when she needs to, she will recall the moments of adversity Robinson faced from the world and how he pushed through it to become, as she described him, “one of the best MLB players” ever.
She said that anything she faces on the softball field or elsewhere may seem trivial compared to what Robinson endured, but she took his story to heart. She admires him and believes it motivates her to push through any rough patch put in front of her.
“Everyone always asks me about it and they’re like, ‘well, I don’t know why you have that number because it doesn’t really mean anything to you.’ I tell them I get it, but when I was little it meant something to me and I just have kept that number for the rest of my life and it means a lot to me to have this number today.”
Leaving her legacyMiller is a career .518 hitter for Springboro through her 81-game career that has at least a dozen or so left to be played. During her junior year she set single season records for hits (54), doubles (18) and RBI (49).
She has 112 career RBIs, which is seven away from setting another new school record. Miller also has an opportunity to approach career records for doubles, home runs, and slugging percentage closer to the end of the season.
For as much of an impact she makes for the Panthers on the diamond, Coffey said her teammates recognize her impact off of it.
He said a constant discussion with the team involves asking, ‘What did you get and what are you giving your program?’ And through Miller’s four years, Coffey said her own growth into an example her peers respect has allowed her to give back to the program a ton.
“She was unanimously chosen to be one of our leaders and has just done an incredible job,” he said. “Last year was just such a pivotal year. We had a lot of seniors, and she was kind of looked at by the incoming new varsity players we added as the leader. She had already played that level of ball with the intensity and what she did to help build a culture.”
Springboro athletic director Austin Rhoads, who previously coached baseball at Lakota West and Princeton, has gotten to watch some of the best hitters come through the school. Sophie Weber, Addie Burdick, and now Miller, he said, can be placed directly in the conversation with them.
“Being around the game, you can just tell the sound off the bat when a player is special, and when Bella gets one, it just sounds different,” he said.
Robinson is a symbol of the way baseball used to be played. In his career, he is the only player in MLB history to hit at least 100 home runs, steal at least 100 bases and draw more than double the amount of walks compared to strikeouts at the plate.
There have been countless others who have finished careers with higher statistical numbers in different categories. His symbolic legacy emboldening future generations is how Miller hopes future Springboro players will similarly view her for motivational goals.
She said she believes no matter which records she may end up setting, she hopes someone goes out and tries to beat her numbers and use them as the basis of what they could also accomplish.
“It means a lot to me. That’s all I’ve ever really wanted so far in life is to come here and make an impact.”
Just like one book made an impact on Miller’s mindset in life.
DDN Link:
https://t.co/DsJoKzZaC3
Update! It's Official!
Chick-fil-A Coming To Austin Landing!
A new 5,033-square-foot Chick-fil-A is planned for the Austin Crossing development in Miami Township, located at 10322 Springboro Pike (SR 741), across from the main Austin Landing development.
The project is moving forward, featuring a drive-thru, with construction expected to start in 2026, creating approximately 50 new jobs.
An Austin Landing developer committed land for new commercial project:
Here are the first tenants: Chick-fil-A, Chase Bank, Flying Ace Car Wash, Dutch Bros Coffee and others.
Photos may differ from Austin Landing final construction.
Discipline, Commitment, and Passion.
Gymnasts are defined by a combination of intense physical prowess and specific mental attributes required to succeed in a high-pressure, high-precision sport.
Meet Cindy Mullen, a freshman that attends CHESS Christian School, in Springboro.
Cindy is a dedicated gymnast whose discipline, commitment, and passion require time, focus, and intentional balance. Her proud parents are Patty and Randy Mullen.
She recently competed at Level 10 USAG gymnastics Regionals. Top gymnasts from Region 5 which include Michigan, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio compete, and the top seven from each age category, represent the Region at Nationals.
At Nationals (May 6-10) at the Oklahoma City Convention Center, they compete as a team and individual against all level 10s in the nation. These young ladies are aiming to attend and compete at a Division 1 School.
Cindy was also able to make the team for the second year (last year she went to L9 Eastern Nationals).