Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Voters backed establishment of Miller Park in 1887 - Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois newspaper) Miller Park Collection , McLean County Museum of History 40°28′04″N 89°00′17″W / 40.46778°N 89.00472°W / 40.46778; -89
Original file (2,887 × 4,339 pixels, file size: 1.35 MB, MIME type: application/pdf) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Bloomington is a city in and the county seat of McLean County, Illinois, United States.The 2020 census showed the city had a population of 78,680, [5] making it the 13th-most populous city in Illinois and the fifth-most populous outside the Chicago metropolitan area. [6]
Lithograph of the Franklin Square Monument by Haldeman Marble Works. On April 26, 1856, David Davis, William F. Flagg, and William H. Allin donated a 590-by-330-foot parcel of land to the city of Bloomington, asking that the park be “...used as a place of public resort, pastime and recreation, for citizens and strangers forever.”
The zoo was started when a circus lion cub ended up on James T. Miller's farm around 1900, and was eventually given to the city of Bloomington. [3] The lion, later named "Big Jim", died on March 26, 1912. After Big Jim's death, funds were raised to construct the Koetthoefer Animal Building by Bloomington architect Arthur L. Pillsbury.
Illinois Central: The main trail that runs north-south through the Bloomington-Normal area. The trailhead starts north of Normal at the Kerrick Parking and Access Point ( 40°33′14.4″N 88°59′17.3″W / 40.554000°N 88.988139°W / 40.554000; -88.988139 ) and ends after 6.5 miles at Croxton Ave, Bloomington ( 40°28′9.0″N ...
Bloomington–Normal, officially known as the Bloomington, Illinois Metropolitan Statistical Area, is a metropolitan statistical area in Central Illinois anchored by the twin municipalities of Bloomington and Normal.
Originally, the buildings' upper floor served as offices for lawyers who tried cases in the original wood-frame courthouse. [11] The Kersey H. Fell Building of 1856 is one of downtown Bloomington's oldest structures. [3] The Fell Building housed the office of local attorney Kersey Fell.