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The Williams–Woodland Park Local Historic District was established in 1985 and is a national historic district located at Fort Wayne, Indiana.The district encompasses 287 contributing buildings in a predominantly residential section of Fort Wayne located approximately one mile south of downtown.
May 28, 1976 (715 S. Calhoun St. Fort Wayne: 3: John H. Bass Mansion: John H. Bass Mansion: June 2, 1982 (2701 Spring St. Fort Wayne: 4: Becker House: Becker House
Fort Wayne Park and Boulevard System Historic District is a national historic district located at Fort Wayne, Indiana.The district encompasses 34 contributing buildings, 61 contributing sites, 70 contributing structures, and 15 contributing objects in 11 public parks, four parkways, and ten boulevards associated with the parkway and boulevard system in Fort Wayne.
Fort Wayne city, Indiana – Racial and ethnic composition Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos may be of any race. Race / Ethnicity (NH = Non-Hispanic) Pop 2000 [108] Pop 2010 [109] Pop 2020 [106 ...
The Beaux-Arts architecture-style structure includes such features as four 25-by-45-foot (7.6 m × 13.7 m) murals by Charles Holloway, twenty-eight different kinds of scagliola covering 15,000 square feet (1,400 m 2), bas-reliefs and art glass.
Kensington Park's developer, W.E. Doud, consciously emulated the nearby Forest Park development that includes the present day Forest Park Boulevard Historic District. [3]: 4 Kensington Park and other nearby developments proceeded following a City Beautiful plan for the city of Fort Wayne by city planner and architect George Kessler that became ...
The Rivergreenway is the backbone of burgeoning Fort Wayne Trails network in Fort Wayne, Indiana and the surrounding area. The Rivergreenway consists of 26-miles [1] of connected trails through a linear park following alongside or near the City's three rivers: St. Joseph River, St. Marys River, and Maumee River.
An earlier (2010) designation of the Fort Wayne Park and Boulevard System Historic District includes rights of way on all of Anthony Boulevard to Vance Avenue. This was done though even though the original Kessler plan ended at present-day State Street, because the period of significance was held to continue from Kessler's original plan to 1955 ...