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Jackson County Courthouse in Kansas City, Missouri is located at 415 East 12th Street in Downtown Kansas City and houses judicial and administrative offices for the western portion of the county. It was built in 1934, designed by Wight and Wight in an Art Deco style.
The Court operates out of the Robert J. Dole United States Courthouse in Kansas City, Kansas, the Frank Carlson Federal Building in Topeka, and the United States Courthouse in Wichita. The District of Kansas was created in 1861, replacing the territorial court that preceded it, and President Abraham Lincoln appointed Archibald Williams as the ...
United States Circuit Court: 1902–1959 1948–1959 Razed in 1962. n/a Wyandotte County Court Services Building: Kansas City: 812 North 7th Street: D. Kan. 1959–1994 Now in use by Wyandotte County. n/a Robert J. Dole U.S. Court House: Kansas City: 500 State Avenue: D. Kan. 1994–present: U.S. Sen. Bob Dole: U.S. Court House & Post Office ...
Parliament House Hotel was an 11-story, 237-room hotel which occupied the west side of 20th Street South between 4th and 5th Avenues (420 South 20th Street) from 1964 to 2008 in Birmingham, Alabama.
Milton Jameson Payne (October 29, 1829 – July 17, 1900) was one of the founders of the Kansas City Enterprise and served as the Mayor of Kansas City, Missouri for six one-year terms. He was also the city's youngest mayor, first elected in 1855, at the age of 26.
The 10th Judicial District of Kansas held five separate judicial swearing-in ceremonies recently to fill three new district judge positions and two vacancies from recent retirements of magistrate ...
As the first major desegregation case in Kansas City, the deliberations stirred the burgeoning Civil Rights Movement. Plans have been made to renovate the entire building to accommodate new, nonfederal tenants as part of an upcoming outlease program. [2] The U.S. Post Office and Courthouse was listed on the National Register of Historic Places ...
Situated on a city block bounded by E. 11th Street, E. 12th Street, Oak Street, and Locust Street, this 29-story structure was designed by Wight and Wight in the Neo-Classic and Beaux-Arts architectural style and built to replace and expand an earlier city hall. It is the third city hall since the incorporation of the City of Kansas in 1853.