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The state will buy a Park Avenue office building on the south side of Des Moines and will vacate the glass-tinted, problem-plagued Wallace Building. Iowa Capitol complex's Henry A. Wallace ...
The Wallace's moved into this house on the corner of 16th and Center Streets when they moved to Des Moines in 1892. Josephine continued to live in the house until 1923. The Wallace family continued to own the house until 1940. By the 1950s the house was divided into 11 apartments and continued to serve this purpose until the early 1970s.
He would go on to be the editor of the Iowa Homestead, a leading farm publication in Des Moines, and found Wallace's Farmer. The two-story frame, Italianate, house features a hip roof, and ornamental iron work on the roof, above the main entry porch, and above the side window bay. At one time it had a wrap around porch. [2] The house was listed ...
Wallace's sons had been publishing The Farm and Dairy since 1893, and he joined in its operation; the Wallace name was added in 1895, and the publication's name was shorted to Wallaces' Farmer in 1898. The Iowa Homestead and Wallaces' Farmer were bitter rivals, and Wallace family ultimately bought out The Iowa Homestead in 1929. [1]
Published in 2000, “American Dreamer: A Life of Henry A. Wallace,” by former U.S. Sen. John Culver and former Des Moines Register reporter John Hyde, also explores the controversy, which led ...
A long-time incumbent faces a challenger to represent Iowa's House District 39, which includes Pleasant Hill and part of northeast Des Moines.
The Palace Site is a ca. 7,000-year-old archeological site in Des Moines, Iowa with evidence for some of the oldest houses west of the Mississippi valley and the oldest human burial in Iowa. [1] Since 2011, the site has yielded 6,000 or more artifacts, which included human skeletons.
Two Republicans, a Democrat and a Libertarian are running to represent the district. Where they stand on the issues: