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Spanish Lake is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in St. Louis County, Missouri, United States. The population was 18,413 at the 2020 census. The population was 18,413 at the 2020 census.
Spanish Lake is a lake located in [[Unincorporated North County St. Louis County, Missouri in the U.S. state of Missouri. [ 1 ] Spanish Lake was named because the Spanish Governor Zénon Trudeau used it as a place of rest and retirement.
Spanish Lake is a 2014 American documentary film directed by Phillip Andrew Morton and co-produced by Phillip Andrew Morton and Matt Jordan Smith. The film premiered theatrically in St. Louis, Missouri on June 13, 2014. [ 1 ]
Spanish Lake Township is a township in St. Louis County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. [1] Its population was 35,967 as of the 2010 census. [2] References
Admission to the conservation area was free as of 2011. A parking lot and graveled overlook, completed in 2002, provided access to the river confluence, and a visitor center, completed in 2004, stood close to the entrance. [3] The conservation area is located across the Missouri River from the Jones-Confluence Point State Park. [1]
Spanish Lake Centre, a peak of the Flourmill Volcanoes in British Columbia, Canada; A Populated Place. Spanish Lake, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis in the United States; Spanish Lake community, a village in Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana; Other uses. Spanish Lake, a film about the city in Missouri; The Spanish Lake is a nickname given to the ...
The National Personnel Records Center(s) (NPRC) is an agency of the National Archives and Records Administration, created in 1966.It is part of the United States National Archives federal records center system and is divided into two large Federal Records Centers located in St. Louis, Missouri, and Valmeyer, Illinois.
Likewise, the civilian records counterpart was renamed from the Civilian Personnel Records Center to the "NPRC Annex". The term "National Personnel Records Center" may now refer to both the physical military records building in Spanish Lake, as well as an overall term for the National Archives federal records complexes located in St. Louis. [11]