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Rockwell Park is a public park in Bristol, Connecticut. Located in a residential area west of downtown Bristol, it includes open spaces and woodlands on either side of the Pequabuck River . Park amenities include a swimming pool, sports fields, and a playground.
Muzzy Field is a stadium in Bristol, Connecticut adjacent to Rockwell Park. In 1912, it was given to the Public Welfare Association [2] in the city of Bristol by Commissioner Adrian Muzzy in memory of his two sons, [3] for the express purpose of amateur athletics, [1] officially opening on 8 July 1914, [4] for both baseball and football.
Rockwell Mound has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1987. The mound is located in Rockwell Park, on North Orange Street in the Illinois River city of Havana in Mason County. Rockwell Mound is one of the site that the Register has denoted as being "address restricted" because of its special sensitivity. [1]
Rockwell Park at the northern end of Orange St. [9 40°18′18″N 90°03′49″W / 40.30500°N 90.06361°W / 40.30500; -90.06361 ( Rockwell Havana
Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center is a cancer research and treatment center located in Buffalo, New York. Founded by surgeon Roswell Park in 1898, the center was the first in the United States to specifically focus on cancer research.
Rockwell organized a "White People's March" on September 10, 1966, in Gage Park, which attracted about 300 people. [citation needed] This was an unusually large amount of support for Rockwell, who was rarely taken seriously elsewhere in the country. As Sean Maschmann wrote, "It took a full decade for Rockwell to gain something more than ...
Rockwell Gardens was a Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) public housing project located in the East Garfield Park neighborhood on the Near West Side of Chicago, Illinois, United States. [2] It was the first public housing development in the United States to be constructed using both federal and state funds. [ 3 ]
In 1911, Rockwell donated 80 acres of land adjoining his Brightwood Hall residence for the construction of Rockwell Park, which was the city's only public park until 1933. [7] Rockwell donated an additional 15 acres in 1920 for a playground in the park. [8] In 1919, Rockwell donated 12 acres of undeveloped land, formerly known as Dunbar Meadows ...