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State Road 1 (SR 1) is a north–south state highway in eastern Indiana, consisting of two segments. Its southern segment begins at U.S. Highway 50 and Interstate 275 in east-central Dearborn County , just east of Lawrenceburg , and ends at Interstate 469 south of Fort Wayne .
The News-Dispatch of Michigan City was established in 1938 through the merger of the Michigan City News and the Michigan City Evening Dispatch. [1] [2] In September 2007, Small Newspaper Group sold the La Porte Herald-Argus to Paxton Media Group. [3]
By 1835, the settlement had grown to the extent that La Porte was incorporated as a town. A newspaper was established in 1836. La Porte Medical School, the first of its kind in the Midwest, was founded in 1842. By 1852, La Porte had become a well-established settlement of considerable size for its time and vicinity, with 5,000 residents.
Route information; Maintained by INDOT: Existed: October 1, 1926 [1] –present: Southern section; Length: 14.91 mi (24.00 km) South end: SR 56 near Scottsburg: North end: SR 250 near Brownstown: Northern section; Length: 179.7 mi (289.2 km) South end: I-69 in Martinsville: Major intersections: I-70 near Monrovia US 40 in Belleville US 36 in ...
Kingsbury is a town in Washington Township, LaPorte County, Indiana, just northwest of the intersection of U.S. Route 35 and U.S. Route 6.The town was founded in 1835 [4] and incorporated on March 3, 1941.
The 9th Regiment organized and mustered into service at Indianapolis, 25 April 1861, for three months service. At the end of the three months service, the 9th returned and went into rendezvous at Camp Colfax, under the command of Col. Robert H. Milroy. (Abstracted from information in files of La Porte County Historical Society, Inc., La Porte, IN)
In the early to mid 1940s, SR 4 was added to the state road system between La Porte and Lakeville, while the eastern segment was added in the late 1940s, running from SR 327 to U.S. Highway 27 (US 27). The segment of roadway east of I-69 was removed from the state road system in the early 1970s.
Coalisland (Irish: Oileán an Ghuail) [1] is a small town in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, with a population of 5,682 in the 2011 Census. [3] Four miles from Lough Neagh, it was formerly a centre for coal mining. Coalisland was established around the Coalisland Canal in the 17th century due to the discovery of coal deposits in the region.