Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
SOUTH BEND ― After a couple of years of ownership, Navarre Hospitality Group is aiming to sell The Bucket restaurant at 1212 S. Ironwood Drive. The longstanding restaurant, known for its burgers ...
SOUTH BEND — Following a prior failed attempt to relocate the historic Pierre Navarre Cabin, The History Museum earned approval Monday to move the structure to its campus in downtown South Bend ...
Leeper Park is named for David R. Leeper who was elected Mayor of South Bend in 1892. The Navarre Cabin, home of Pierre Navarre, an early settler of South Bend, was relocated to the park in 1904, [2] and relocated out of the park in 2024. [3] [4] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000. [1]
For transportation around the South Bend metro area, there is the St. Joseph Valley Parkway, designated in places as US 20, US 31, and State Road 331, which bypasses South Bend to the south and west, and connects to Michigan to the north and the greater Elkhart area to the east. The Indiana Toll Road (Interstates 80 and 90) passes through ...
They include the original three-story, brick Singer Manufacturing Company building (1868), Singer Manufacturing Company / South Bend Lathe complex (c. 1870–1875, and later), and Singer Manufacturing Company Employees Club Room / Supply Building (1893). [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. [1]
Navarre's Christmas in Bethlehem on Nov. 10 and 11 is to include a community parade, Santa Claus visit and a business open house. Christmas in Navarre returning with new name and activities Skip ...
Navarre Corporation was an American public distribution and publishing company founded in 1983 by Eric H. Paulson. The company was headquartered in New Hope, Minnesota . Navarre owned three subsidiary companies: a software publisher, Encore, Inc. ; a distributor, Navarre Entertainment Media ; and a Japanese anime distributor, Funimation , which ...
Tippecanoe Place is a house on West Washington Street in South Bend, Indiana, United States. Built in 1889, it was the residence of Clement Studebaker, a co-founder of the Studebaker vehicle manufacturing firm. Studebaker lived in the house from 1889 until his 1901 death. [3]