Transportation Several highways pass through Rootstown Township—
SR 5,
SR 44, and
I-76. Public transportation is provided by the Portage Area Regional Transportation Authority (PARTA), which provides routes to
Kent,
Ravenna, and other parts of Portage County.
Education Rootstown Township is served by the
Rootstown Local School District, which includes an elementary school for grades Pre-K–5, a middle school for grades 6–8, and
Rootstown High School for grades 9–12. All three schools are located on a central campus on
State Route 44 just north of the town center. Across the street from the Rootstown Schools campus is the campus of
Northeast Ohio Medical University (NEOMED). NEOMED is a medical, pharmacy, and dental school with an enrollment of approximately 1,000 students. The NEOMED campus is also home to
Bio-Med Science Academy, a
science, technology, engineering, math, and medical (STEM+M) academy for students from Portage County and the surrounding area in grades K–12. Grades 7–12 are housed in Rootstown, while lower grades meet at campuses in Ravenna and Shalersville.
Cemeteries There are three cemeteries in Rootstown Township: the Old Cemetery, St. Peter of the Fields Cemetery, and Homeland Cemetery.
Old Cemetery The first death in Rootstown Township was on August 31, 1808, with the death of 51-year-old Nathan Chapman, Sr. This cemetery was used until 1897 when a fire destroyed the township records. The last known burial at the Old Cemetery was in 1999.
St. Peter of the Fields Cemetery • Established in 1867 with the first burial, this cemetery was dedicated holy ground for the Catholics of the parish of St. Peter of the Fields Church. • The Old Section started in 1867, the Sacred Heart in 1941, and the Holy Angels, the newest section named in 2002, made up the resting grounds. A shrine and altar were built in 1941 and were re-built larger in 2001 to accommodate mass celebration there. • A new church was established in 2006.
Homeland Cemetery • Land was purchased and cleared for the new cemetery around 1890. • The shrubs along the front were planted in 1950. • In 2001–2002 Rootstown Township developed more land into burial plots and put the cemetery records on computer discs. ==People==