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West Valley. Avondale. ... Peoria. Johnny Osuna Memorial Park Cemetery [134] Sun City – includes Sun City, ... Valley View Cemetery [215] Cleator ...
On July 13, 2017, Times Media Group acquired West Valley View, [11] a free weekly newspaper that covers the West Valley cities and towns of Avondale, Buckeye, Goodyear, Litchfield Park, Tolleson and Tonopah. It has a controlled circulation of 75,000+ and is published every Wednesday.
The West Valley View replaced the original newspaper serving Avondale/Goodyear which was known as the Westside Enterprise and later the Westsider. The View is not related to those publications other than it covers some of the same communities and that Freireich's parents were owners of the Enterprise for a couple of years in the '60s.
The West Valley is a region within the Phoenix metropolitan area, in central Arizona. State Farm Stadium in Glendale It is located west of the Phoenix city limits, within Maricopa County, Arizona .
John F. Long (17 May 1920 – 29 February 2008) was a real-estate developer, philanthropist, and late-date pioneer of the West Valley of the Phoenix metropolitan area.He is most often remembered for being the founder and primary developer of Maryvale, an urban village spanning Phoenix and Glendale.
The Glendale Herald and Valley Printers Building – It was built in 1920. The structure is located at 5430 Glendale Ave. The structure is located at 5430 Glendale Ave. The "Glendale Herald" began operations in 1926 and continued to do so until 1963, when it ceased to operate.
Gila Bend Station was located 17 miles (27 km) east of Murderer's Grave Station and 40 miles (64 km) west of Maricopa Wells Station across the waterless Forty Mile Desert. In 1859, Desert Station was established with its own well on West Prong Waterman Wash, roughly midway across the Forty Mile Desert. Also two tanks were established, one ...
Harold Albert "Pete" Vonachen, Jr. (August 31, 1925 – June 10, 2013) was an American businessman and Minor league baseball team owner. Born in Peoria, Illinois, he was often dubbed "Peoria's Mr. Baseball, [1] although this was usually only done for press consumption.