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Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: KML; ... Great Yarmouth: House: 1644: 27 June 1953 1245803: 25 South Quay. More images. Notes ...
In 1897, Yarmouth had a stock yard across the tracks from the depot, two grain elevators, and the Starker Brother's Lumber Yard and Corn Cribs. The post office was across the street from a bank, and there was a Baptist and a Methodist Episcopal church, along with perhaps 20 houses. Many of the vacant lots were owned by the Narrow Gauge Land ...
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Madison County, Iowa, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map.
The house was torn down in 1945; [4] the existing building, at today's 366, has since been widened. It formerly housed Peck's pool hall, [5] Harriman's IGA Foodliner, and Turner's Television sales and service business. Edgar Read Smith's grocery store, later that of Sam York, was located to the east of the Parsons residence.
Great Yarmouth Row Houses were wealthy merchants' residences located on South Quay in the town of Great Yarmouth in the English county of Norfolk.Originally built as one family's dwelling, the properties were later sub-divided into tenements and became part of the town's distinctive "Rows"', a network of narrow alleyways linking Yarmouth's three main thoroughfares.
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: KML; ... Great Yarmouth: House: 1596: 27 June 1953 1271611: 4 South Quay. More images. Notes ...
The Dunsmore House is a historic building in Waterloo, Iowa, United States. Thomas Chadwick, a master stonemason originally from England, built this house from native rusticated limestone about 1866. It is one of the earliest extant houses, and the only house made of limestone block still extant in the Waterloo-Cedar Falls area. [2]
The property on which the house sits was purchased by William A. Clark, a Muscatine real estate and loan broker, in 1871. He lived in the house that had been built there previously until this house was completed in 1882. [3] It was designed by Chicago architect Lorenzo D. Cleveland and built by George D. Magoon, a local contractor. Clark ...