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150 yd (140 m) A high-end EF1 tornado uprooted and snapped many trees, downed some power lines, and damaged chicken houses and roofs in the Pelahatchie area. This tornado prompted a PDS warning [15] and caused an indirect injury when a train ran into a downed tree. [5] [12] EF0 W of Vina: Franklin: AL
The Woodward & Lothrop Service Warehouse is a historic warehouse located in the NoMa neighborhood of Washington, D.C. It was designated a District of Columbia Historic Landmark in 1993, [2] and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. [3]
The shore from Vesey Street north to King Street was infilled during the mid-19th century, and docks were constructed west of West Street. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] A wholesale market called the Washington Market was established on the future Barclay–Vesey Building block in 1812 [ 9 ] or 1813. [ 10 ]
This district consists of three properties on the block of High Street between Allyn and Asylum Streets: the Judd and Root Building, the Batterson Block (each also listed separately), and the Capitol Building. 74: John and Isabella Hooker House: John and Isabella Hooker House: November 29, 1979 : 140 Hawthorn St.
140 New Montgomery Street is a 26-floor Art Deco mixed-use office tower located in San Francisco's South of Market district, close to the St. Regis Museum Tower and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. [2]
Map of Swampoodle in Washington, D.C. in 1893. A geographic approximation can only be evaluated as it was never clearly defined. Originally, the northeastern part of Washington, D.C. above Judiciary Square was known as "English Hill" from E Street NE/NW on the South and 4th Street NW on the west all the way to Boundary Road.
140 Wilson Street, S Salem: 66: McCallister–Gash Farmhouse ... 250 Winter St. NE Salem: 109: John Stauffer House and Barn ...
In the 1830s, the B&O Railroad constructed its Washington Branch, which entered the city of Washington at roughly 9th and Boundary Streets and proceeded through the neighborhood down I Street NE and Delaware Avenue NE to the New Jersey Avenue Station located between the current Union Station (built in 1907) and the Capitol. [7]