Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Iowa is located along the eastern edge of Calcasieu Parish at (30.237433, -93.014191 The eastern border of the town is the Jefferson Davis Parish line.. According to the United States Census Bureau, the town of Iowa has a total area of 3.17 square miles (8.22 km 2), of which 3.15 square miles (8.15 km 2) is land and 0.03 square miles (0.07 km 2), or 0.80%, is water.
Prairie La Porte, meaning "the door to the prairie," was the first name given to Guttenberg by French explorers in 1673. [3] The Guttenberg area was a site of Sac and Fox campgrounds until 1823. The Louisiana Purchase of 1803 transferred ownership to the United States and the Black Hawk Purchase of 1833 finally opened the area for legal settlement.
It was completed for about $150,000 around the year 1910, but he died before it was finished. His wife and stepson lived in the residence until 1926 when it was sold to the Grand Lodge of Iowa, AF & AM, and became the Iowa Masonic Nursing Home. Joseph Bettendorf, born in 1864, built this 28-room house from 1914 to 1915.
Lacassine (French: La Cassine) is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Jefferson Davis Parish in the U.S. state of Louisiana. As of the 2010 census the population was 480. [2]
Calcasieu Parish (/ ˈ k æ l k ə ˌ ʃ uː /; French: Paroisse de Calcasieu) is a parish located on the southwestern border of the U.S. state of Louisiana.As of the 2020 census, the population was 216,785. [1]
Class 4A Iowa boys state basketball tournament schedule. State quarterfinals, Wednesday, March 6. No. 1 Cedar Rapids Kennedy vs. No. 8 Dallas Center-Grimes — 10:30 a.m.
The modern Iowa High School was founded in 1919, [2] and the first modern, brick school building in Iowa was constructed in 1920. [5] To accomplish this, the Calcasieu Parish School Board in December 1919 sold $15,000 in bonds to The Hanchett Bond Company of Chicago .
Hamburg is a city in Fremont County, Iowa, United States, that is the most southwestern city in Iowa, hugging the borders of Missouri to the south and Nebraska to the west. It is situated between the Nishnabotna and Missouri rivers. The population was 890 at the time of the 2020 census. [3] It derives its name from the German city of Hamburg