Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Steelville Normal Business Institute was originally at Vichy. It was moved to Steelville with the help of John T. Woodruff of Springfield and Professor Hayes and opened during the latter part of 1890. The first newspaper in Steelville, Steelville Crawford Missouri, was established on May 4, 1874, by Thomas Roberts. The paper was printed in ...
It is located on the Meramec River, approximately ten miles south of Steelville, along Missouri Route M. [2] Cook Station had its start in the 1870s when the St. Louis and San Francisco was extended to that point. [3] The community was named after C. C. Cook, a local resident who paid the railroad company in exchange for the naming rights. [3]
On July 14, 2021, KLUQ changed its call sign to KRTK. It began carrying conservative talk shows as "RealTalk 93.3" along with sister station KVMO. KWUL-AM-FM continued to broadcast Americana music as "K-WOLF". With the expansion of "Real Talk" to other frequencies, in November 2021, the group of stations were called "The Real Talk Radio Network."
KRTE-FM (107.3 MHz) is a conservative talk radio station serving the city of Rolla, Missouri.. Originally licensed to serve Cuba, Missouri, in February 2007, the license holder applied to change the city of license to Steelville, Missouri, which was the location of KQQX, a station owned by Twenty-One Sound Communications.
Route 8 begins its run in St. James concurrent with Route 68 just south of the interchange with I-44. The two routes are concurrent for approximately 4 miles before Route 68 splits from Route 8 and heads southeast to Salem while Route 8 runs east to Steelville, passing Maramec Spring Park in the process.
Cherry Valley is an unincorporated community in Crawford County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. [1]The community is at the intersection of Cherry Valley Road with Missouri Route BB.
Snelson-Brinker House was a historic home located near Steelville, Crawford County, Missouri.It was built by Levi Lane Snelson in 1834, as a one-story, double-pen log dwelling, and sold to John B. Brinker in 1837.
The stream headwaters are at 1] and its confluence with Whittenburg Creek just east of Steelville is at [ 2 ] The name may be a transfer from the Yadkin River in North Carolina.