Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The original plot map of Peoria included east and west streets (from south to north) Monroe, Madison, Jefferson, Washington, Jackson, Lincoln, Grant, and Van Buren. Streets going north and south were (from west to east) Almond (present-day 85th Avenue), Peach (present-day 84th Avenue), Orange (present-day 83rd Avenue), Vine (present-day 82nd ...
Peoria Presbyterian Church – Built in 1899 the church is the oldest building in the original Peoria Townsite. The church is located at 10236 83rd. Ave. (NRHP) The Peoria Central School – The school was a two-room school built in 1906. It is currently occupied by the Peoria Arizona Historical Society Museum located at 10304 N. 83rd Ave. (NRHP)
Peoria City Hall [7] 419 Fulton Street 1895-1898 February 1991 February 6, 1973 Peoria Mineral Springs and Residence [5] 701 W Dr. Martin Luther King Jr Drive c. 1843 June 1994 March 5, 1982 Peoria Women’s Club [7] 301 NE Madison Avenue 1893 April 2013 N/A Pettengill-Morron House [5] 1212 W Moss Avenue 1868 December 2021 April 2, 1976 ...
Peoria's mighty Main Street. Downtown Peoria is seen from Main Street and Crescent Avenue in the 1950s. The Polk's Peoria City Directory for 1956 listed over 500 businesses and offices on Main ...
The streets are near tourist attractions — the Peoria Civic Center, Dozer Park and the Peoria riverfront — but there is little in that section of downtown to entice a leisurely stroll.
Arizona. Populated places and locales Peoria (Maricopa County) — named for Peoria, Illinois, by settlers from there [2] — P.O. 4 August 1888 to date; Streets Peoria Avenue — Phoenix metropolitan area
Pages in category "Geography of Peoria, Arizona" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. I. Indian Mesa; L.
Peoria is the oldest European settlement in Illinois, as explorers first ventured up the Illinois River from the Mississippi. The lands that eventually would become Peoria were first settled by Europeans in 1680, when French explorers René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle and Henri de Tonti constructed Fort Crevecoeur. [7]