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Avondale is a city in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States, adjacent to Phoenix. As of the 2020 census , the population of the city was 89,334, [ 3 ] up from 76,238 in 2010 and 35,883 in 2000. Avondale, incorporated in 1946, has experienced rapid residential and commercial growth in the years since 1980.
This is a list, which includes a photographic gallery, of some of the remaining structures and monuments, of historic significance in Avondale, a city in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States, adjacent to Phoenix, Arizona.Farming was the main industry in Avondale in the late 1890s. Avondale was incorporated in 1946.
In September 2007, Macquarie Leisure Trust acquired Goodlife Health Clubs for $60 million. [2] At the time, Goodlife had 18 health clubs across Queensland, Victoria and New South Wales. [ 4 ] In March 2008, Macquarie Leisure purchased the Zest Health Clubs chain for $7.4 million, allowing it to expand Goodlife to South Australia and grow its ...
Waddell is an unincorporated community in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States, northwest of the city of Phoenix.Waddell is named after Donald Ware Waddell, a native of Ohio, who was a partner in the New York City investment firm of Brandon, Gordon and Waddell.
The Tucson, Cornelia and Gila Bend Railroad went from the Southern Pacific's (now Union Pacific's) Gila Subdivision in Gila Bend, Arizona to Ajo, Arizona. [1]The railroad was incorporated in 1915 [2] for use by the New Cornelia mine at Ajo.
Litchfield Park is bordered to the southeast by Avondale, to the west by Goodyear, and to the north by Glendale. According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has a total area of 3.3 square miles (8.5 km 2 ), of which 0.03 square miles (0.08 km 2 ), or 0.94%, are water.
The location was named Camp McDowell, and later renamed Fort McDowell in 1867 when established by the California Volunteers on the Verde River in 1865. It was named for Major General Irvin McDowell.
The E. Payne Palmer House is a Gordon-Van Tine "Brentwood" model of a catalog kit house, or pre-cut house, that was built in 1925 on Central Avenue in Phoenix, Arizona.. The Colonial Revival style "Brentwood" kit house was featured on the cover of the Gordon-Van Tine catalog from the mid to late 1920s.