Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Citizens of Tombstone believed that Behan and Sadie were married, but Behan was a known womanizer and had sex with prostitutes and other women. In early 1881, Sadie ended the relationship after she came home and found Behan in bed with the wife of a friend [68] and kicked him out, [69] although she used the Behan surname through the end of that ...
Interstate 64 (I-64) in the US state of Virginia runs east–west through the middle of the state from West Virginia to the Hampton Roads region, for a total of 299 miles (481 km). From the West Virginia state line to Chesapeake , it passes through the major cities of Lexington , Staunton , Charlottesville , the state capital of Richmond ...
Map with O.K. Corral highlighted yellow and the gunfight location highlighted green The Earps and Doc Holliday walked west on Fremont Street, looking for the Cowboys. After passing the rear entrance to the O.K. Corral, they found the Cowboys gathered in a narrow 15–20 feet (4.6–6.1 m) wide lot [ 15 ] adjacent to C. S. Fly 's 12-room ...
The tombstone, from 1627, was erected at the Jamestown settlement following the death of Sir George Yeardley, a colonial governor of Virginia. Mystery surrounding 400-year-old Jamestown gravestone ...
The following highways in Virginia have been known as State Route 64: State Route 64 (Virginia 1933-1940), Tennessee to Lebanon, Virginia; State Route 64 (Virginia 1940-1958), now part of State Route 63; Interstate 64 in Virginia, 1957–present
State Route 63 extended south along current secondary SR 758 from US 58 between Beech Spring and Jonesville across the Powell River on Flanary Bridge to the Tennessee state line, continuing as an unnumbered county road in the direction of Tennessee State Route 63 at Mulberry Gap. 6.2 miles (10.0 km) of road, a majority of the route, was added to the state highway system in 1928 as State Route ...
The Alhambra Saloon of Tombstone, Arizona Territory, in an engraving of a picture taken by C.S. Fly. The image first appeared in The Arizona Quarterly Illustrated in July 1880. Mary ("Mollie") (née McKie) Goodrich Fly was a photographer before she married C.S. Fly in San Francisco. They arrived in Tombstone, Arizona Territory in December 1879.
U.S. Route 6 is known as the Grand Army of the Republic Highway for its entire length. [1] At the final encampment in 1949, the Post Office Department issued a three-cent commemorative postage stamp. [2] Two years later, it printed a virtually identical stamp for the final reunion of the United Confederate Veterans. [3]