Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Elevator on north side of 63rd Street west of Lexington Avenue. Elevator at northwest corner of 63rd Street and Third Avenue; Roosevelt Island: Elevators at station house. South Ferry* Elevator at SW corner of Whitehall and State Streets. Note: N, R, and W platforms are not ADA-compliant. Times Square–42nd Street
Location of Ada County in Idaho. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Ada County, Idaho. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Ada County, Idaho, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National ...
1–174 Air Defense Artillery (ADA) 174th ADAB Cincinnati, Ohio: Ohio Army National Guard: AN/TWQ-1 Avenger: 2-174 ADA 174th ADAB McConnelsville, Ohio: Ohio Army National Guard AN/TWQ-1 Avenger 1–188 ADA Separate battalion Grand Forks, North Dakota: North Dakota Army National Guard: AN/TWQ-1 Avenger 1–204 ADA Separate battalion Newton ...
The intersection, widely known as Crazy Corner, is where Mississippi Avenue and E Arlington Street, two state highways and a busy railroad converge. The spot has been the site of numerous fatality ...
33rd Street (Baltimore), Maryland, an east–west parkway; 33rd Street Railroad Bridge in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; 33rd Street Records, an independent record label based in Greenbrae, California; Thirty-third Street Bridge in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
The McSwain Theatre is a 560-seat former cinema, and present day theater and music venue, located in Ada, Pontotoc County, Oklahoma.. The theatre was founded in 1920 by Foster McSwain, as a venue for silent films and vaudeville performances, and after 1935 for talkies movies and local movie premieres.
The H. W. Wilson Company. ISBN 0-8242-0930-3. The first electric elevator successfully operated was installed in 1889 by Otis Brothers and Company in the Demarest Building, Fifth Avenue and 33rd Street, New York City. Madsen, Axel (2002). John Jacob Astor. Wiley Press. ISBN 9780471009351. Martinez, Mark Anthony (2009). The Myth of the Free Market.
Together, the two moved to a new location on 42nd Street a few months later, which they called "Glad Tidings Hall". Burgess and Brown married in 1909. Both the local church and the worldwide mission work began to grow. In 1914, the congregation moved into an existing church building at 325 West 33rd Street, near Pennsylvania Station.