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The Downtown Woodland Historic District is a historic district in Woodland, California. The district encompasses roughly 370 acres (1.5 km 2 ) and 59 contributing buildings. [ 2 ] It is a California Historical Landmark and is listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places .
A site on the corner of Main and College Street was chosen, where just ten years earlier a hotel by the name of Byrns Hotel had been condemned and demolished. [5] Hotel Woodland was thus made real. In the 25 years since his first project in Woodland, this would be Weeks' 14th project and last major work in the city. [3] [4]
Woodland Hills Dessert menu at Kate Mantilini, December 30, 2012 Kate Mantilini was a restaurant in Beverly Hills, California , at 9101 Wilshire Boulevard at the corner of Doheny Drive, two blocks from the headquarters of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences .
During the 1970s and 1980s many Woodland residents began to restore historic residences south of Main Street. [4] In 1972 Robert McWhirk purchased the Gable Mansion from the Gable estate and spent twenty years rehabilitating it. [2] The house is decorated with murals, which have been repainted. [5]
The Odd Fellows Lodge in Woodland formed in 1863 and had 207 members and two associated chapters of the Rebekahs at the time its building was constructed. [2] The building is located in the Downtown Historic District of Woodland, California, on the Southwest corner of Main Street and Third Street, with its primary address on record at 725 Main ...
The building was designed in 1913 by architect W.H. Weeks, architect of many other landmarks in Woodland such as the Woodland Opera House and the Yolo County Courthouse. Construction bids were accepted and Earle L. Younger of San Jose (later a Woodland resident) was the lowest bidder.
The Daily Democrat is the daily newspaper in Woodland, California and Yolo County, California. The paper is owned by Digital First Media. Its headquarters are located in Woodland on Main Street in Woodland's Historic Downtown. It has four reporters and editors on staff.
The Doggie Diner Heads, as found in 2017. The most notable feature of the Doggie Diner chain was the sign: a 10-foot-tall (3.0 m) [5] rotating fiberglass head of a wide-eyed, grinning dachshund, wearing a bow tie and chef's hat.