Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The district includes some significant buildings in Farmington: [2] Governor Fred M. Warner House, a symmetric, block shaped house with a low hipped roof topped by a cupola, built in 1867. The Masonic Lodge (formerly Township Hall), a two-story building with towers, corbels, arched doorways and a mansard roof in patterned slate, completed in 1876.
On this day 2102 will power the very first steam passenger excursion from the railroad's Nesquehoning Campus to Tunkhannock for the borough's 43rd Annual Founder's Day Festival.
Bowdon is located near the Georgia-Alabama state line at 33° 32′ 22″ N, 85° 15′ 21″ W (33.539444 N, -85.255833 W). [10] The main highways through the city are Georgia State Routes 100 and 166. GA-100 runs through the city from north to south, leading north 16 mi (26 km) to Tallapoosa and south 11 mi (18 km) to Ephesus.
Founder's Day, Founders Day, or Founders' Day and variations may refer to: Founder's Day (Rome), better known as the Parilia, a festival in ancient Rome eventually taken to honor the city's founding; Founders' Day (Ghana), a public holiday in Ghana; Founder's Day (Music Festival) an annual campus festival at Vassar College
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
This week, we’ve got a look ahead at the second annual South Coast Harvest Festival in Westport. Plus, concerts, exploring the outdoors, film screenings, and other special events.
Farmington is a city in Oakland County in the U.S. state of Michigan.A northwestern suburb of Detroit, Farmington is located roughly 20 miles (32.2 km) from downtown Detroit, and is surrounded on most sides by the larger city of Farmington Hills.
Bowdon College, established as Bowdon Collegiate Institution in 1856, was a college in Bowdon, Georgia and Georgia's first co-educational institution. It joined the state university system and was renamed Bowden State Normal and Industrial College. [1] After being removed from the state system in 1933, the college closed in 1936.