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Several counties conduct farm tours. Here are options in the surrounding area. No RSVP required or cost to participate.
At Vicious Biscuit Montrose celebrations, the official ribbon cutting will be at 9 a.m. Thursday. Friday morning, the first 100 guests will receive a free Vicious Biscuit entree each month for a ...
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Medina County, Ohio, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.
Medina: When Medina came into existence following the construction of the Erie Canal, this strip from the canal to the railroad tracks was the first area of the village. Its buildings, from the 1830s to the 1940s, are relics of Medina's industrial peak years. [13] The district was later expanded slightly to include the Medina Railroad Museum ...
Byne Blueberry Farms is an organic blueberry farm in Waynesboro, Georgia.It is one of the earliest and most famous organic farms in the United States. [1] Byne Blueberry Farms was started in 1980, before there was a National Organic Program, when owner Dick Byne became the first commercial blueberry grower in the Central Savannah River Area. [1]
The U-pick blueberry fields will officially open Saturday, June 29. Admission costs $5 per person, cash only; kids 1 and under are free. Eight different varieties of blueberries will be available ...
Other notable buildings include the United Fire Company aka the Jessup house (c. 1855), Montrose Theater (c. 1920), Lyons Building at 13 Public Avenue, Sayre Building (1894), Loomis Building (1893), Masonic Lodge, Phoenix Block (1854), Tarbell Hotel (1914, 1870), William H. Cooper House (1860), Susquehanna County Historical Society and Free ...
The square of farm buildings also includes a corn crib and piggery built by the late 1940s [3] John's third wife Margaret died in 1886, and he married Thursa Rice Lawrence. John and Thursa moved to nearby Belleville in 1906 and died shortly after. Some time before that, John's son Marcus bought the farm.