Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fort Street Presbyterian Church† 631 West Fort Street Detroit: March 3, 1971: Fort Wayne† 6325 West Jefferson Avenue Detroit: February 19, 1958: Elizabeth Denison Forth Home Site: 328 Macomb Detroit: December 14, 1976: Fox Indian Massacre Informational Site Corner of Lake Point and Windmill Point roads Grosse Pointe Park: April 11, 1977 ...
Fort Wayne Performing Arts Theatre: November 25, 2024 : 303 East Main Street: Fort Wayne: Now known as the Arts United Center 26: Fort Wayne Printing Company Building: Fort Wayne Printing Company Building: August 24, 1988
In 1833, all the county courts in all counties in the territory of Michigan except Wayne were abolished and replaced by one circuit court of the territory of Michigan. [2] In 1836, the state was divided into 3 circuits. The 1850 Michigan Constitution made the office of circuit court judges elected officials and set the term of office to six (6 ...
Each of the five court rooms has its own color scheme. Atop the building is a 255-foot (78 m)-high copper-clad domed rotunda, itself topped by a 14-foot (4.3 m) statue wind vane of Lady Liberty . The larger than life statue has feet that would wear a woman's shoe size of 28.
Skyline of Fort Wayne (2014). From 1930–1962, Fort Wayne, Indiana , was home to the tallest building in Indiana—the Lincoln Bank Tower . Today, the tallest building in the city is the 27- story Indiana Michigan Power Center , which rises 442 feet (135 m) and was completed in 1982.
Elm Court may refer to: Elm Court (Lenox and Stockbridge, Massachusetts), straddles Lenox/Stockbridge line, is listed on the NRHP in Massachusetts; Elm Court (Butler, Pennsylvania), listed on the NRHP in Butler County, Pennsylvania; Elm Court (Newport, Rhode Island), a Gilded Age mansion in Newport. Elm Street Court, Urbana, Illinois
The Wayne County Building is a monumental government structure located at 600 Randolph Street in Downtown Detroit, Michigan. It formerly contained the Wayne County administrative offices – now located in the Guardian Building at 500 Griswold Street – and its courthouse .
By the 1920s, Fort Wayne was an important city in the Midwest and consequently required federal services. Officials planned for a post office, federal office building, and federal courthouse. In 1928, Congress authorized funds for the acquisition of a site through the Public Buildings Act of 1926, which appropriated resources for federal ...