Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Terrace is an unincorporated community in Chippewa Falls Township, Pope County, Minnesota, United States. [2] The community was settled in the 1870s around the Terrace Mill . In 1982, a historic district of early buildings and structures was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Terrace Historic District for having local ...
The Terrace Mill Historic District consists of the 1903 mill, 1903 Stone Arch Bridge, 1915 Steel Beam Highway Bridge, Mill Dam possibly dating to 1882, and 1930 Miller's House. The historic district is significant for exemplifying the small, rural milling operations once common in Minnesota, particularly for retaining all the elements of a ...
Eat Street is the newest of Minneapolis's commercial districts, named in the late 1990s by the Whittier Alliance to promote the international variety of restaurants along Nicollet Avenue South between Grant St. and 29th St. [25] Nicollet was historically a central commercial district in the Whittier neighborhood, but the end of the streetcar ...
This mill complex was the second-largest flour mill in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The original mill was built in 1874 by Cadwallader C. Washburn, but destroyed in an explosion in 1878, killing 18. The mill was later rebuilt, and for nearly 50 years, the Washburn "A" Mill was the most technologically advanced and the largest mill in the world.
The Mill District is an redeveloped former industrial within Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, and a part of the larger Downtown East neighborhood. The area contains several former flour mills left over from the days when Minneapolis was the flour milling capital of the world. With almost none of the mills still active, a number of these ...
This list includes notable permanent geographic sections in Minneapolis, such as unofficial neighborhood, commercial districts, residential areas, and other defined places. The list excludes streets, venues, transit stops, trails, government facilities, lakes, parks, and events.
Minneapolis and St. Louis Railroad Wheelhouse [1878- ~1960] Minneapolis Cotton Mill/Excelsior Flour Mill [41] [1870-1900s] Minneapolis Eastern Railroad Trestle Piers [1890-1962] Minneapolis Flour Mill/Washburn Crosby "D" Mill [1865, 1881-1931] Minneapolis Mill Co. Gatehouse & Power Canal [1858, 1867, 1885-1960]
One of the hotel's lounges, the Minnesota Terrace, hosted musicians such as Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, Tommy Dorsey, Gene Krupa and Lawrence Welk. [5] In the 1930s the Nicollet was managed by the National Hotel Management Company, with hotel industry pioneer Ralph Hitz as the NHM president. Hitz raised the profile of the Nicollet with his unique ...