Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The firm of Misener & Lamkin operated a circulating library in Boise City in the 1860s. [6] The firm, later known as Brown & Lamkin and then as H.H. Lamkin, managed the library from a bookstore at the Boise City post office. [7] And a library operated at Fort Boise as early as 1867, but it was not a public library. [8]
Carnegie Libraries: Their History and Impact on American Public Library Development. Chicago: American Library Association. ISBN 0-8389-0022-4. Jones, Theodore (1997). Carnegie Libraries Across America. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-14422-3. Note: The above references, while all authoritative, are not entirely mutually consistent.
Utah-based co-owner Steve Lin is aiming for an end-of-year launch for Ombu Korean BBQ, 3023 N. Cole Road. And Hot Pot, 3035 N. Cole Road, is planned in March 2024, Lin said in a spring phone ...
Boise Airport 36th & Shasta: Has Saturday service 21 Cole/Glenwood Towne Square Mall Gary & Bunch: Has Saturday service 24 Ustick/Maple Grove Towne Square Mall The Village at Meridian 28 Cole/Victory Towne Square Mall Pro Tech at Frank Church High School 29 Overland Main Street Station Boise State Transit Center: Towne Square Mall: Has Saturday ...
The foundation proposed a combined museum and new Boise Public Library, but again the plan was rejected. [5] In 2012, city planners approved construction of a $70 million facility that included an urban park, a 57,000-square-foot (5,300 m 2 ) building, and the tractor exhibit.
The Carnegie Public Library in Boise was built for $25,000 in 1905. It was paid for by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. The city and the Columbian Club, a women’s group, added $5,000 for furnishings.
A children's book checked out from the Boise, Idaho, public library in 1910 vanished for 111 years only to be returned anonymously, library officials said. Overdue book returned anonymously to ...
November 20, 1978 (9th and Main Sts. Boise: 7: Marion Allsup House: November 17, 1982 (1601 N. 10th: Boise: One-story cottage designed by Tourtellotte and Co., having the least elaborate design of their surviving works to be included in a group listing.