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Ewing Yard with some SD-400 and SD-460 cars. Metro Transit, the public transit operator in the Greater St. Louis area, operates two rail yards for the MetroLink light rail system, four bus depots for MetroBus and Metro Call-A-Ride services, and one streetcar barn for the Loop Trolley.
Scruggs, Vandervoort & Barney was a department store founded in St. Louis, Missouri in 1850, by M.V.L. McClelland and Richard Scruggs as McClelland, Scruggs & Company. [1] The company started out as a Dry goods store, with the first store opened on North 4th street in downtown St. Louis, later expanding. In 1860, William L. Vandervoort joined ...
Location of Barry County in Missouri. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Barry County, Missouri. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Barry County, Missouri, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many ...
Barney's had been a local institution since the 1940s, first located in Aliquippa's Plan 12 neighborhood then moving to Raccoon Street, off the Aliquippa exit of Interstate 376, in 2008.
Pulaskifield is an unincorporated community located in Capps Creek Township, Barry County, Missouri, United States.The area was originally known as Bricefield [3] (named for J. Brice Hudson whose father owned the land on which the general store of August Dombroski (first postmaster) was located and in which the post office was established in 1893); archaically misspelled Brassfield or Brycefield.
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In 1832, Wiggins sold the Wiggins Ferry Service and 800 acres (3.2 km 2) of land in East St. Louis, including Bloody Island, to new owners, who began developing a rail yard on the Illinois property. In 1870, the ferry began porting rail cars across the river one car at a time until the 1874 completion of the Eads Bridge .
In 1851, Barney was hired as a contractor at Hinkley & Drury's, a Boston-based company which made locomotives. [1] He traveled for his work with the firm, visiting locales such as St. Louis, Missouri. [3]: 93 In the late 1850s, Barney moved to Connecticut, where he worked for a gun manufacturer, producing Spencer carbines. He later worked for ...