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Bullfrogs and Butterflies II (AKA Bullfrogs and Butterflies Part II: God Loves Fun) (1985) is the second album in the Dove Award winning Christian children's series called Bullfrogs and Butterflies. It is set in Agapeland , and is an offshoot of the Agapeland album.
In March 1945, John Murphey and Rev. George W. Ferguson sold the property to Mr. and Mrs. Howard Morgan for $110,000. The new owners announced plans to operate a desert resort hotel on the property, then consisting of 80 acres. [5] By December 1945, the property was operating as the Hacienda del Sol Ranch Hotel. [6]
Candle is a Christian kids' band that is best known for their Agapeland-related children's albums Music Machine and Bullfrogs and Butterflies. They recorded children's albums for Sparrow Records' Birdwing branch. The band won the 1988 Dove Award "Children's Music Album of the Year" for their album Bullfrogs and Butterflies III. [1]
The Wigwam Hotel originally served only as guest housing for executives of the Goodyear Tire Company when they visited their cotton farms located in the area. Goodyear executive and primary overseer of the company’s cotton production, Paul W. Litchfield, built the hotel on his land in what is now Litchfield Park.
Sanctuary on Camelback Mountain is a privately owned resort and spa located in Paradise Valley, Arizona. The resort, which opened in 2001, is located on 53 acres on the north face of Camelback Mountain. [1] It has 105 mountain and spa casitas as well as a collection of private homes. [2]
Royal Palms Resort and Spa is a historic hotel in Phoenix, Arizona. It was built in Spanish Colonial style in 1929 as a retirement home for New York businessman Delos Cooke, who died unexpectedly in 1931, [1] and his wife. [2] It opened as a hotel in 1948. [3] [4] It is a member of the Historic Hotels of America program of the National Trust ...
From 1984 to 2002, the Francisco Grande operated as a destination golf resort. The course was 5,224 yards from the front tees and a long 7,545 yards from the championship tees. In 2003, the resort was closed for renovations which cost approximately $8.5 million. It reopened in 2005.
The San Carlos Hotel project was finally begun by Charles Harris and Dwight D. Heard who purchased the property from the Babbitts. Harris and Heard formed the Hotel San Carlos Company and construction began in 1927. The hotel was designed by nationally known architect George Whitecross Richie in the Italian Renaissance style.