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The Miracle Mile Historic District follows the alignment of the following extant arterials: Stone Avenue, Drachman Street, Oracle Road, and Miracle Mile. Also included in the district and associated with the highway site is a two block segment of Main Avenue lined with trucking transfer warehouses and roadside commercial buildings, as well as ...
The Miracle Mile development was initially anchored by the May Company Department Store with its landmark 1939 Streamline Moderne building on the west [7] and the E. Clem Wilson Building on the east, then Los Angeles's tallest commercial building. The Wilson Building had a dirigible mast on top and was home to a number of businesses and ...
Miracle Mile Shops in the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada; Miracle Mile, a shopping area in Stockton, California; Miracle Mile, a shopping area in St. Louis Park, Minnesota "Miracle Mile", South Main Street in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, so named for a string of lottery-winning tickets sold there; Miracle Mile Road, the ...
A new coffee shop opened at Stockton's Miracle Mile. Here's what you should know about Groundstack Coffee. Groundstack Coffee, new coffee shop opens at Stockton's Miracle Mile
Stockton is a city in and the county seat of San Joaquin County in the Central Valley of the U.S. state of California. [19] It is the most populous city in the county, the 11th-most populous city in California and the 60th-most populous city in the United States.
Miracle Mile is a 1.5-mile (2.4 km) stretch of Wilshire Boulevard between Fairfax and Highland Avenues. In the early 1920s, Wilshire Boulevard west of Western Avenue was an unpaved farm road, extending through dairy farms and bean fields. Developer A. W. Ross saw the area's potential and developed Wilshire as a commercial district to rival ...
Official 1854 map of the State of California – shows the early route of the Stockton–Los Angeles Road. Map of routes and crossings in the San Joaquin Valley including the Stockton-Mariposa Road, 1851–1852 — from Events after the Mariposa Indian War, from Sam Ward in the Gold Rush (1861, 1949) by Samuel Ward
Rancho La Brea was a 4,439-acre (17.96 km 2) Mexican land grant in present-day Los Angeles County, California, given in 1828 to Antonio Jose Rocha and Nemisio Dominguez by José Antonio Carrillo, the alcalde of Los Angeles.