Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hotel Washington, also known as the Washington Tower, is a historic hotel building located at Indianapolis, Indiana.It was built in 1912, and is a 17-story, rectangular, Beaux-Arts style steel frame and masonry building.
The 260 area code covers the northeast section of Indiana, including Fort Wayne and Angola. Prior to January 2002, the entire northern part of Indiana was under the 219 area code. Population growth and increases in cell phone numbers resulted in the 219 region being split into 3 sections.
Paradise Inn is a historic hotel built in 1916 at 5,400-foot (1,600 m) on the south slope of Mount Rainier in Mount Rainier National Park in Washington, United States. The inn is named after Paradise , the area of the mountain in which it is located.
Washington is a city in Daviess County, Indiana, United States.The population was 12,017 at the time of the 2020 census.The city is the county seat of Daviess County. [6] It is also the principal city of the Washington, Indiana Micropolitan Statistical Area, which comprises all of Daviess County and had an estimated 2017 population of 31,648.
Paoli Peaks is an alpine ski resort located in Paoli Township, Orange County, near Paoli, Indiana. Paoli Peaks is for skiers, snowboarders, snowbladers, and tubers (with the addition of their tubing hill in the 2006-2007 season). Paoli Peaks is built on a natural hill at a 900 ft (270 m). elevation with a vertical drop of 300 ft (91 m).
Robert C. Graham House, also known as Mimi's House and the Kelly-Graham House, is a historic home located at Washington, Daviess County, Indiana. It was built in 1912, and is a large two-story, Prairie School style glazed red brick dwelling. It has a low pitched hipped roof with wide overhanging eaves and covered with green Spanish tile.
In the last decades of the 19th century, the area was a resort with a forty-room inn. In the 1930s a man named Joseph Frisz acquired the land in order to protect it and purchased more land around. His heirs sold the land in 1947 to the holding company "Save the Shades", who in turn gave the land to the state to create Indiana's 15th state park.
According to the 2010 census, the township has a total area of 45.12 square miles (116.9 km 2), of which 44.09 square miles (114.2 km 2) (or 97.72%) is land and 1.03 square miles (2.7 km 2) (or 2.28%) is water. [3] The White River defines the township's northern border, as well as the northern border of Pike County.