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City or town Description 1 ... Illinois State Bank Building: August 16, 1984 ... 101 N. Mill Street and 101 E.-100 W. Illinois St. Greenup: 3: Thornton Ward Estate ...
The city is served by a full-time police department, [16] a parks and recreation department, [17] public works department, [18] and building department. [19] The city maintains a full-time teen center in cooperation with Warren Township, its own park system and bike trails. [20]
Terrace: Well-preserved example of the small communities that grew up around Minnesota's rural mills in the latter 19th century, with 13 contributing properties built 1870s–1930 including a church, school, general store, mill, and houses. [14] 11: Terrace Mill Historic District: Terrace Mill Historic District
The Terrace Mill Historic District consists of the 1903 mill, 1903 Stone Arch Bridge, 1915 Steel Beam Highway Bridge, Mill Dam possibly dating to 1882, and 1930 Miller's House. The historic district is significant for exemplifying the small, rural milling operations once common in Minnesota, particularly for retaining all the elements of a ...
1928 Gothic Tudor Revival/Neo-Plateresque commercial building built for utility magnate Samuel Insull. [9] 79: Ragdale: Ragdale: June 3, 1976 : 1230 North Green Bay Road: Lake Forest: 80: Ravinia Park Historic District: Ravinia Park Historic District: September 29, 1982
The building features Chicago's last remaining cast iron façade Harker Hall: Urbana: 1877 College building Oldest building in use on the campus of the University of Illinois: Manhattan Building: Chicago: 1889–1891 Commercial Oldest surviving skyscraper in the world. Currently residential condominiums.
At the northwest corner of Kent & Park Streets in City Park in downtown Streator, Illinois is a statue to Reuben Soderstrom (1888–1970), erected and dedicated on Labor Day 2012. Soderstrom, born in Minnesota to immigrant Swedish parents, was an Illinois state representative, elected as a Republican, from 1918 to 1936.
Mill Springs Overshot Waterwheel located at Mill Springs Park. The current mill built in 1877 on the site of a previous mill. Currently owned and operated as a park by the United States Army Corps of Engineers. The wheel has a diameter of 40 feet, 10 inches, and a breast of three feet.