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Location of Thayer, Missouri ... The median age in the city was 42.7 years. 23.5% of residents were under the age of 18; 8.8% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 20.3 ...
Location City or town Description 1: Central Cole Camp Historic District: April 11, 2002 : Roughly consists of the 100 blocks of E. and W. Main St., most of Maple St., 105 E. Butterfield, 106 N. Olive, and 107 N. Boonville
Oregon County is a county located in the southern portion of the U.S. state of Missouri.As of the 2020 census, the population was 8,635. [1] Its county seat is Alton. [2] The county was officially organized on February 14, 1845, and was named for the Oregon Territory in the northwestern United States.
Thayer Township is an inactive township in Oregon County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. [1] Thayer Township took its name from the community of Thayer, Missouri. [2]
Notable routes that are intersected include U.S. Route 160 and U.S. Route 60 in Howell County, Interstate 44 at Rolla, U.S. Route 50 (which it shares a concurrency with into Jefferson City south of the Missouri River until it reaches the junction with U.S. 54), US Route 54 (which it overlaps in Jefferson City from the junction with U.S. Route ...
U.S. Highway 63 Business is a business route in Thayer, Missouri. the route begins on a concurrency with Missouri Route 142 after about half a mile route 142 leaves the concurrency, then business 63 continues along the west side of Thayer. North of Thayer the route terminates at US 63 and the southern terminus of Missouri Route 19
Montgomery City: 210.551: 338.849: Route 161 south – Danville: Southern end of Route 161 overlap: 210.626: 338.970: Route 161 north – Middletown: Northern end of Route 161 overlap: Audrain: Scotts Corner: 227.636: 366.345: US 54 west / Route BB east – Mexico, Middletown: Southern end of US 54 overlap: Bassinger Corner: 235.792: 379.470
Kidder is a city in northwest Caldwell County, Missouri.The population was 267 at the 2020 census. [4]The city was laid out in 1860 by H.B. Kidder of the Kidder Land Company in Boston, [5] which was seeking to encourage non-slave owning European immigrants to settle along the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad which at the time was the furthest west railroad in the United States.