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Grant Deming's Forest Hill Allotment Historic District is an area located fully within the corporate limits of Cleveland Heights, Ohio. The district is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The district includes more than 650 major structures, including a predominance of single-family houses and a much smaller number of two-family houses. Coventry Library, a branch of Cleveland Heights-University Heights Public Library, is also included in the district. It should not be confused with the Forest Hill Historic District along the border between Cleveland Heights and East Cleveland, Ohio. John D. Rockefeller's summer home, Forest Hill, located in East Cleveland in what is now Forest Hill Park, was the namesake for both.

Grant Deming was born in Sarnia, Ontario, Canada. He arrived in Cleveland, Ohio, with his brothers, who formed the Deming Brothers Realty Company. The Demings developed and promoted the Grantwood allotment on the east side of Doan Street (soon renamed East 105th Street) in 1905. Grant Deming soon opened a separate company called Deming Realty Company, which laid out a series of residential allotments to either side of Lee Road in Cleveland Heights, including Hyde Park, Forest Hill, and Minor Heights. The largest of these developments was Forest Hill. Deming purchased most of the land for Forest Hill from John D. Rockefeller Jr. and James B. Haycox. The latter operated a dairy farm and quarry along Lee Road. Deming hired engineer Fred Pease to lay out Forest Hill's street plan, which adopted curvilinear streets that created a naturalistic setting. Such layouts borrowed from the English landscape and emulated earlier plans found in rural cemeteries like Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts, urban parks such as New York's Central Park and Brooklyn's Prospect Park, and prototypical planned suburbs, including Llewellyn Park in East Orange, New Jersey, and Riverside, Illinois. Pease later laid out the planned suburb of Shaker Heights, Ohio.

Forest Hill opened in 1909, and its first few houses date to 1909 and 1910. The original main entrance to the allotment was located where Lincoln Boulevard and Woodward Avenue meet on Euclid Heights Boulevard. Pairs of stone pylons topped by iron street markers lined this entrance, and a small sales office stood immediately to the west of the intersection. A second sales office stood just outside the allotment on the southwest corner of Lee and Superior roads.