Warren, city, Trumbull county, northeastern Ohio, U.S. It lies along the Mahoning River and is part of the Youngstown metropolitan complex. Settled (1799) by Ephraim Quinby, a stockholder in the Connecticut Land Company, it was named for Moses Warren, a surveyor. Warren became the seat of the Western Reserve, and in 1803 it was made the county seat. After the completion (1840) of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal from Pittsburgh to Akron (there connecting with the Ohio and Erie Canal), Warren developed as an inland port. The city’s prosperity grew with the discovery of coal in the Mahoning valley and the development of the local iron industry after 1870. Warren’s proximity to Youngstown and the subsequent arrival of two transcontinental highways and the Ohio Turnpike were also stimulants to growth.
The city’s diversified industries now include automotive and basic steel production and the manufacture of industrial equipment and electrical products. The Trumbull campus of Kent State University was founded in 1954. Packard Music Hall and the John Stark Edwards House (1807), the oldest dwelling in the former Western Reserve, are in the city. Inc. village, 1834; city, 1869. Pop. (2000) 46,832; Youngstown-Warren-Boardman Metro Area, 602,964; (2010) 41,557; Youngstown-Warren-Boardman Metro Area, 565,773.