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Fort Wayne Performing Arts Theatre: November 25, 2024 : 303 East Main Street: Fort Wayne: Now known as the Arts United Center 26: Fort Wayne Printing Company Building: Fort Wayne Printing Company Building: August 24, 1988
Fort Street Presbyterian Church† 631 West Fort Street Detroit: March 3, 1971: Fort Wayne† 6325 West Jefferson Avenue Detroit: February 19, 1958: Elizabeth Denison Forth Home Site: 328 Macomb Detroit: December 14, 1976: Fox Indian Massacre Informational Site Corner of Lake Point and Windmill Point roads Grosse Pointe Park: April 11, 1977 ...
The district encompasses 582 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, 1 contributing structure, and 1 contributing object in a predominantly residential section of Fort Wayne. The area was developed from about 1915 to 1963, and includes notable examples of Colonial Revival , Tudor Revival , and Bungalow / American Craftsman style ...
War Memorial Coliseum was known foremost as the home of the NBA's Fort Wayne Pistons for five seasons (1952–57) as well as the 1953 NBA All-Star Game and 1955 and 1956 NBA Finals. After the Pistons moved to Detroit in 1957, the facility continued to host at least one of their games every season from the 1958–59 to 1966–67 campaigns.
Each of the five court rooms has its own color scheme. Atop the building is a 255-foot (78 m)-high copper-clad domed rotunda, itself topped by a 14-foot (4.3 m) statue wind vane of Lady Liberty . The larger than life statue has feet that would wear a woman's shoe size of 28.
The property was sold by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fort Wayne–South Bend to the YWCA of Fort Wayne in the 1970s. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. [1] in 1978 the property was purchased by the Fort Wayne YWCA and housed the largest women's shelter in Indiana.
Located in the Greektown district, the twelve-story Brutalist architecture building, designed by Eberle M. Smith, was completed in 1970 and is named for jurist and politician Frank Murphy, who was a Recorder's Court judge, Mayor of Detroit, Governor of Michigan, United States Attorney General and Associate Justice of the United States Supreme ...
The Bonstelle Theatre is a theater and former synagogue owned by Wayne State University, located at 3424 Woodward Avenue (the southeast corner of Woodward and Eliot) in the Midtown Woodward Historic District of Detroit, Michigan. [2] It was built in 1902 as the Temple Beth-El, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. [1]