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The back room of the Station Hotel in 2014, original home of the Crawdaddy Club. The Crawdaddy Club was a music venue in Richmond, Surrey, England, which opened in 1963. The Rolling Stones were its house band in its first year and were followed by The Yardbirds. Several other notable British blues and rhythm and blues acts also played there.
Healing Place Church Baton Rouge: LA Mike Haman 12,000 [citation needed] Non-denominational Yes (13) Hickory Grove Baptist Church: Charlotte: NC Clint Pressley 11,900 [citation needed] Southern Baptist Convention: Yes (3) Hope City Church Houston: TX Jeremy and Jennifer Foster 12,000 [citation needed] Non-denominational: Yes (4) Hope Community ...
This template is used to identify a stub about a church or other Christian place of worship in Iowa. It uses {{ asbox }}, which is a meta-template designed to ease the process of creating and maintaining stub templates.
As their membership declined, Quakers in Iowa decided to concentrate on a few fundamental tenets of their faith, but gave way on their traditional concerns about simplicity and restraint. [2] This more elaborate building replaced a simple 2½-story, brick and stone structure that was completed in 1865.
The Spring Creek Meeting House-H Street Mission was an historic building in Oskaloosa, Iowa, United States. The frame building was built sometime after an 1878 fire destroyed the original meeting house. It was relocated from its original rural location to this site in 1895. [2]
Hose Station No. 4 is located in the Village of East Davenport in Davenport, Iowa, United States. It is a contributing property of the Davenport Village Historic District that has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1980. [2] The fire station was individually listed on the Davenport Register of Historic Properties in ...
Before Trump’s appearance in Fort Dodge, Iowa, in November, Baptist minister Patrick Wiedemeier, who supported Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s presidential campaign in 2016, led the audience in prayer ...
Yering is a closed railway station, located up from Macintyre Lane, Yering, Victoria, Australia, on the now-closed Healesville line. The station was opened on 15 May 1888, when the partly-completed line was opened as far as Yarra Glen. The station was closed on 9 December 1980, when passenger train services ceased on the Healesville line.