Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Langlade County was created on March 3, 1879, as New County. It was renamed Langlade County, in honor of Charles de Langlade, on February 20, 1880, and fully organized on February 19, 1881. [3] The county's original borders extended northward from the top of Shawano County up to the Michigan state line. Between 1881 and 1885, the borders of ...
AdventHealth Porter entrance to its cancer care center. On February 16, 1930, Porter Sanitarium Hospital opened with 100 beds.It was named after businessman Henry M. Porter who was inspired to give $1 million and 40 acres to the Seventh-day Adventist Church after being treated at two sanatoriums owned by the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
Pages in category "Langlade County, Wisconsin" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. ... Langlade County Public Transit; V. Van Ostrand ...
ANTIGO − A 69-year-old Langlade County man is being held on a $500,000 cash bail after being charged Thursday with taking money from the town of Ackley and the Rural Fire Control while he was ...
This page was last edited on 3 December 2024, at 06:56 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Wisconsin Valley Library Service (WVLS) is a library system made up of 25 public libraries and hundreds of non-public libraries across seven counties in north-central Wisconsin. These include the counties of Clark , Forest , Langlade , Lincoln , Marathon , Oneida , and Taylor . [ 1 ]
CoreSite, a subsidiary of American Tower, owns carrier-neutral data centers and provides colocation and peering services.. As of June 24, 2022 the company owned 27 operating data center facilities in 10 markets comprising over 4.6 million net rentable square feet.
The earliest county record office in the modern sense was the Bedfordshire Record Office, established by George Herbert Fowler in 1913. To some extent it was operating within established traditions set by the London-based Public Record Office (now The National Archives ), which first opened in 1838, or by other repositories overseas.