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This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:Unincorporated communities in Idaho. It includes unincorporated communities that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent.
IDL operates under the Idaho State Board of Land Commissioners and is the administrative arm of the Idaho Oil and Gas Conservation Commission. [3] The Idaho Department of Lands staffs 16 offices and manages 2.5 million acres under a constitutional mandate on State Trust Lands to maximize long term returns. These returns help fund Idaho public ...
The Discovery Land Company is an American real estate development company and hospitality operator based in Scottsdale, Arizona. Founded in 1994 by Michael Meldman, the company mainly operates private residential communities and clubs in North America. [1] [2] In 2022, the company made public that they will follow an international expansion ...
PotlatchDeltic Corporation [2] (originally Potlatch Corp) is an American diversified forest products company based in Spokane, Washington.. It manufactures and sells lumber, panels and particleboard and receives revenue from other assets such as mineral rights and the leasing of land as well as the sale of land considered expendable.
Lava Lake Land & Livestock is a lamb producer located between the Pioneer Mountains and Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve in South Central Idaho. The ranch consists of 24,000 acres (97 km 2) of private land and over 900,000 acres (3,600 km 2) of lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), United States Forest Service, National Park Service, and the Idaho ...
Jackson is a village in Dakota County, Nebraska, United States. It is part of the Sioux City , IA –NE– SD Metropolitan Statistical Area . The population was 223 at the 2010 census .
The log house and caretaker's lodge were designed by architect Jan Wilking of Casper, Wyoming and were built in 1946 in what was then U.S. Forest Service land for the Brinkerhoff family. [2] After the creation of Grand Teton National Park, the National Park Service acquired the property and used it for VIP housing. [ 3 ]
Range land, once free, now had to be leased or bought from the homesteaders. The Nebraska Land and Feeding Company borrowed $200,000 ($3,893,991.77 current) from the New York Trust Company through a first mortgage on the Spade Land. The ranch survived until the depression of 1922-1923, during which time the mortgages on the land were foreclosed.