Lebanon
The City of Lebanon is a city of slightly over 20,000 residents and serves as the county seat of perhaps one of the most affluent counties in the State of Ohio, often contested with Delaware County for the top rank statewide. The downtown area of the City of Lebanon is home to places of significant interest, including the historic Lebanon, Mason, and Monroe Railroad and the Golden Lamb, the latter of which hosts the Black Horse Tavern as well as a combination of hotel and restaurant amenities within the primary space of the area downtown. While the downtown area is often quiet throughout the year, the occasional festivals and events can disrupt the silence of the historic city, which is also renowned for comparatively lower costs, a stark contrast from the Mason and West Chester area prices. The local culture of Lebanon, Ohio, can also be influenced over the summer by the Lebanon Country Music Festival, typically in June, and the Lebanon Blues Festival, always attached primarily to early August, each year. Third Fridays on Mulberry are also of significance in June, July, and August of every year, and the culture festival hosted by the Harmon Museum may also close a portion of Broadway between Main Street and South Street early in the summer of every year. Early in the autumn of every year is typically the Lebanon Country AppleFest attached to the area of the Countryside YMCA, and early in December of every year is the Lebanon Horse-Drawn Carriage Parade and the Christmas Festival of every year.
Waynesville/Harveysburg
Waynesville is home to an extensive network of German heritage, culminating at the Sauerkraut Festival every second full weekend of October. Harveysburg is also notable in the autumn, but for the Ohio Renaissance Festival located conveniently in the Greater Cincinnati area with a fair proximity to Columbus.
Elsewhere
Warren County, Ohio, is also home to communities including Franklin, Carlisle, Springboro, Morrow, South Lebanon, Maineville, and Mason. Kings Island is located within the county, and additional associated attractions may include, but are often not limited to, the attractions of the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Fort Ancient.