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April 7, 1998 (310 West 11th Street: Vancouver: 7: Clark County Courthouse: Clark County Courthouse: April 11, 2014 (1200 Franklin Street: Vancouver: 8: Clark County Poor Farm – Southwestern Washington Experiment Station
Schools in Vancouver, Washington (1 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Vancouver, Washington" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total.
Fire Station No. 1 (Tacoma, Washington) Fire Station No. 2 (Tacoma, Washington) Fire Station No. 5 (Tacoma, Washington) Fire Station No. 10 (Tacoma, Washington) Fire Station No. 14 (Tacoma, Washington) Fire Station No. 15 (Tacoma, Washington) Fire Station No. 18 (Seattle) Fire Station No. 23 (Seattle) Fire Station No. 25 (Seattle) Fireboat Station
The Clark County Historical Museum, Vancouver, Washington, is located in a 1909 Carnegie library and is operated by the Clark County Historical Society, established in 1917. It opened at the old Carnegie Library building on May 24, 1964. [2] The first museum director was Joe Pagel. [2]
It includes combination buildings, such as city halls or other government buildings that include a fire station. This list is intended to include all historic fire stations which have formally been listed on historic registers, as well as modern ones notable for their architecture or other reasons.
They are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The historic Lowell M. Hidden and W. Foster Hidden houses have helped shaped the face of Vancouver, Washington. [2] The Hidden family has been present in Vancouver since the 1860s with Lowell Mason Hidden being the first to arrive from New England in 1864. [3]
First American National Bank Building, Port Townsend; Fox Theatre, Centralia, 1930; Kelso Theater, Kelso, 1923; Klickitat County Courthouse, Goldendale, 1942 [1] Larson Building, Yakima; Loudon Brothers Dairy Building, Ellensburg, 1930s [1] National Bank of Ellensburg (now 420 Loft), Ellensburg, 1937 [1] North Bend Theatre, North Bend, 1941
The Vancouver Fire Department (VFD) provides fire protection and emergency medical services to the city of Vancouver and, by contract to Clark County Fire District 5, in Washington, United States. The VFD's response area is 89.2 square miles (231 km 2 ) with a population of over 297,400. [ 5 ]