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At Vale Park, it connects to the Vale Park trail to Valparaiso Street 1 mile (1.6 km). A new bike loop 3 miles (4.8 km) is being built that circles north along Valparaiso Street to Bullseye Lake Rd, east to Cumberland Crossing (not open to the public (2008), south to Vale Park, turning west to on Vale Park to return to the corner of Vale Park ...
The Haste-Crumpacker House, in Valparaiso, Indiana, was built in 1887. [2]According to the National Park Service: The Haste-Crumpacker House is a locally outstanding example of Late Victorian Eclectic architecture.
Within Indiana Dunes National Park. 31: David Garland Rose House: David Garland Rose House: July 17, 1980 : 156 Garfield St. Valparaiso: The David Garland Rose House was built circa 1860 in Valparaiso, Indiana, USA.
In 1907, William Emmett Urschel began experimental work on a gooseberry stemmer. [1] Urschel received his first patent for the Gooseberry Snipper in 1908. In 1910, Urschel founded the Urschel Gooseberry Snipper Factory, a small two-story wooden shop at 158 South Napoleon in Valparaiso, Indiana, located next to his residence and in an area populated with gooseberry farmers.
In the 1980s, the new owner, Northern Indiana Bank, added the neighboring property, the remains of the Specht, Finney, Skinner Store on the east for additional banking services. [6] Banking consolidation of the 1990s and early 21st Century has seen the building changing ownership. It remains a downtown bank.
This outstanding Gothic Revival style church was constructed in 1891. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church is now a condominium rebuilt in 2010 from its early twentieth-century roots. The Valparaiso High School is an elementary school. [1] The Washington Street area remains as one of Valparaiso's most cohesive and architecturally significant ...
Emory G. Bauer Field is a baseball venue in Valparaiso, Indiana, United States. It is home to the Valparaiso Beacons baseball team of the NCAA Division I Missouri Valley Conference. [1] Opened in 1970, it has a capacity of 500 spectators. [2]
Charles S. and Mary McGill House is a historic home located at Valparaiso, Porter County, Indiana. It was built in 1926, and is a two-story, Z-shaped Tudor Revival style brick dwelling. It has a steeply pitched cross-hipped roof and features stuccoed areas with half-timbering and massive chimneys.