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New Town is a city in Mountrail County, North Dakota.The population was 2,764 at the time of the 2020 census, [3] making it the 18th largest city in North Dakota. New Town was platted in 1950 as a replacement site for the residents of Sanish and Van Hook, as these towns were scheduled to be flooded by the creation of Lake Sakakawea, a reservoir to provide water for irrigation.
Roughly bounded by Sugar Valley Rd., Cassville Rd. and Pettit Creek, Wingfoot Trail and Litchfield St. 34°10′44″N 84°49′09″W / 34.178889°N 84.819167°W / 34.178889; -84.819167 ( ATCO-Goodyear Mill and Mill Village Historic
Unnamed county road across the Sheyenne River, approximately 8 miles north and 1 mile east of Cooperstown 47°34′22″N 98°05′37″W / 47.572778°N 98.093611°W / 47.572778; -98.093611 ( Romness
Oct. 21—GRAND FORKS — Hundreds of community members assembled at the North Dakota Mill on Thursday to commemorate the facility's 100th anniversary. Vance Taylor, CEO and president of the North ...
The most recent listings, in 2010, are the University of North Dakota Historic District and WPA Stone Structures in Memorial Park and Calvary Cemetery, and in 2011, The Kegs Drive-In. A large number of the listings were prepared by Dr. Norene Roberts, of North Dakota State University. Additional notes for many are archived at the university. [3]
In 1867 the county seat was moved to Cartersville and the second courthouse was built in 1873. It proved to be unsatisfactory because court proceedings had to be halted while trains passed by on the nearby railroad. In 1992 a courthouse annex known as the Frank Moore Administration and Judicial Center was completed. While the 1902 building is ...
Mike Pedersen plays the pipe organ on Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024, at the Nora Store near Alcester, South Dakota. He has been hosting a Christmas sing-a-long for 35 years. A hobby becomes so much more
The Evans Site (32MN301) is a Native American site located in northwestern North Dakota north of New Town. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. [1] The site is a multicomponent campsite. It was surveyed by archaeologists Fred E. Schneider and Jeff Kinney in the late 1970s. [2]