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Nugents or B. Nugent & Brother Dry Goods Co. was a department store in Downtown St. Louis, Missouri at the southeast corner of Washington Avenue and Broadway. It was the first downtown department store in the United States to open a suburban branch. The dry goods store was founded in 1869 by Byron Nugent (d. 1908) in Mount Vernon, Illinois. He ...
Cotton Belt Freight Depot. / 38.64083°N 90.18250°W / 38.64083; -90.18250. The Cotton Belt Freight Depot is a former freight depot of the St. Louis Southwestern Railway in the Near North Riverfront neighborhood of St. Louis, Missouri. It was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 2004 and named "Best Old Building ...
August 31, 2000 (original), April 24, 2007 (boundary increase) Lucas Avenue Industrial Historic District is an American historic district bounded by Washington, Delmar, 20th & 21 Streets, St. Louis, Missouri. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.
1907 Dorris Motor Car Company Building. 1907 Dorris Motor Car Company Building. February 10, 2000. (#00000084) 4063–4065 Forest Park Ave. 38°38′10″N 90°14′48″W / 38.636244°N 90.246731°W / 38.636244; -90.246731 (1907 Dorris Motor Car Company Building) 2. 5882 Cabanne Courtyard Apartment Building.
formerly the St. Louis Mart and Terminal Warehouse 106: St. Louis News Company: St. Louis News Company: September 16, 2010 : 1008–1010 Locust St. 107: St. Louis Post-Dispatch Building: St. Louis Post-Dispatch Building
National Supermarkets was a grocery chain in both the St. Louis, Missouri, and New Orleans, Louisiana, areas of the United States. Both firms were owned by Loblaw Companies of Canada, but in June 1995, they were sold by Loblaw to Schnucks Markets. [1] Immediately after that, per the FTC, Schnucks sold the National New Orleans division to ...
The founder of the company was Edward C. Simmons, who started the company in 1874 and retired in 1898. [2][3][4] The founder's son, George Welch Simmons, started working his way up through the company in 1901, with a salary of $20 a week for driving trucks to the St. Louis warehouse. In 1904, he became the general manager and then later the ...
The International Fur Exchange Building, at 2 S. Fourth St. in St. Louis, Missouri, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1998. The original building is a seven-story commercial building, on a 125 by 150 feet (38 m × 46 m) plan, designed by architect George W. Hellmuth. It was built during 1919–20.