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It was called "Depot Camp," because it stored supplies, and "McCaslin Brook Farm" because of the horse barn and fields. [5] The company operated the camp until 1929. [7] In 1949 the Holt Lumber Company gave the camp to the Oconto Historical Society. The McCaslin Lions Club stabilized and restored the bunk house and cook house in the 1970s. [7]
This historic property, which is located on Allen's Valley Road, within Dublin Township, Fulton County, Pennsylvania, includes a gristmill and house that were built in 1840. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. [1] It is also a contributing property to the Burnt Cabins Historic District. [3]
Dublin Township is a township in Fulton County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 1,196 at the 2020 census. [2] ... The historic grist mill at Burnt Cabins.
Gothic Revival-style church built 1848-1851 by Episcopal congregation - the oldest church in continuous use in Rock County and one of the oldest surviving stone Gothic churches in Wisconsin. 125: Stark-Clint House: Stark-Clint House: September 13, 1985 : Creek Rd.
Drohman Cabin: September 28, 1981 : Helena Rd. Arena: 1.5-story cabin built around 1850, with some walls built of hand-hewn oak logs joined by dovetail notches - a German style. Other walls are wattle-and-daub, which is very unusual in Wisconsin. Moved from Madison in 1989.
Real estate moves. Marshall’s political rise is rooted in Great Bend, a city of about 15,000 in Barton County. He worked as an obstetrician-gynecologist, delivering by his own count more than ...
In 1884 the Northern Wisconsin Lumber Company bought the land that would become Forest Lodge, and by 1888 the company had built a logging camp there, on the south side of a bay of Lake Namekagon. Soon the timber was cut and in 1889 Crawford Livingston and some hunters and fishermen from Chicago leased the land around the camp as a hunting retreat.
Burnt Cabins is a historic unincorporated community in Dublin Township, Fulton County, Pennsylvania, United States, at the foot of Tuscarora Mountain. It is approximately three miles west of the Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel on I-76 (Pennsylvania Turnpike) and the turnpike runs within 100 yards of the village. U.S. Route 522 also runs through the ...