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The most notable of the industrial facilities is the National Historic Landmark Crane and Company Old Stone Mill Rag Room, the oldest surviving building on the Crane premises. [2] Extending east along Main Street from the industrial complex are a number of late 19th century houses, most of which were built by or for executives of the Crane company.
The Crane and Company Old Stone Mill Rag Room is one of the oldest surviving buildings (built in 1844) of Crane & Co., one of the oldest papermaking businesses in Berkshire County, Massachusetts. [2] It is located in southwestern Dalton , on a site where paper has been manufactured since the early 19th century.
Crane Park is a 30 hectare public park next to the River Crane in western Twickenham. The park north of the river is in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, and the south in the London Borough of Hounslow. [1] It is part of The Crane Corridor Site of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation, and includes two Local Nature Reserves ...
[c] From this point, the Crane turns gradually east and passes through Crane Park, Twickenham. In Crane Park is the site of the Hounslow Powder Mills which were built in the 16th century and continued to make gunpowder until 1927. The mills have disappeared, but the Shot Tower still stands nearby. [5] The large millpool on an island above the ...
In 1971, the Cranford Historical Society marked the farm and village home of Josiah Crane, Sr. (1791–1873) in what is now Josiah Crane Park on the Rahway River at the corner of Springfield and North Union Avenue. [23] Crane, Sr. built what is now the Crane-Phillips House as a honeymoon cottage for his son, Josiah Crane, Jr.
The main panel at the Crane Petroglyph Heritage Site. A closer view. The holes are cupules, which served some unknown ritual purpose. Another view, taken in 2002. The Crane Petroglyph Heritage Site [1] is the largest known petroglyph site in the Verde Valley of central Arizona, and one of the best-preserved.
View of Centennial Mills from The Fields Park in 2014. The Centennial Mills, originally known as the Crown Mills, is a complex of twelve buildings along the Willamette River in Portland, Oregon's Pearl District, [1] in the United States. The Portland Development Commission, later renamed Prosper Portland, acquired Centennial Mills in 2000.
The B & D Mills was a Mill constructed in 1902 Grapevine, Texas and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places under the Cotton Belt Rail Road Historic District. [2] Kirby Buckner and W. D. Deacon bought the mill in 1933 and changed it into a feed manufacturing complex. [3]