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Sports venues in Memphis, Tennessee (1 C, 19 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Memphis, Tennessee" The following 52 pages are in this category, out of 52 total.
Legislative Yuan Building: 1919 Legislative Yuan: Tajikistan: Parliament House: Thailand: Sappaya-Sapasathan: 2019 The National Assembly of Thailand (Senate and House of Representatives). From 1932 to 1974 the legislature met at the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall, 1974 to 2018 at the Parliament House of Thailand and 2018 at the TOT Public Company ...
The building at 201 Poplar was first opened in 1981. [1] In October 2018, the building was renamed the Walter L. Bailey Jr. Criminal Justice Center, after the former county commissioner. [ 2 ] In 2018, the county began a $50-million renovation of the entire 12 floor building.
This is a list of state prisons in Tennessee. The only federal prison in Tennessee is Federal Correctional Institution, Memphis in Shelby County, although there is a Residential Reentry Management operated by the Bureau of Prisons in Nashville. This list also does not include county jails located in the state of Tennessee.
Schools in Shelby County, Tennessee (1 C, 14 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Shelby County, Tennessee" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
The Tennessee House of Representatives 86th district in the United States is one of 99 legislative districts included in the lower house of the Tennessee General Assembly. The district represents the western part of Shelby County, which includes Downtown Memphis, Beale Street, South Memphis, Benjestown, Northaven, and parts of the city of ...
In May 2022, the Memphis and Shelby County Land use and Control Board approved plans to convert the site into a 126-unit apartment building. Parkview was built in 1923 as a 165-room apartment hotel.
Shelby County was established by European-American migrants in 1819 and named for Isaac Shelby, the former governor of Kentucky who had helped negotiate the land acquisition. [1] From 1827 to 1868, the county seat was located in then called Raleigh, Tennessee (now part of Memphis), on the Wolf River. [5]