Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The station c. 1894 Map of the fire station being built, 1891. Engine House No. 5 was constructed in 1894 to serve as a fire station for the South End, at a time when fire engines were horse-drawn. [6] The station was designed by John Flynn and cost $15,000. [3] It was constructed at a time when fire stations were needed every few blocks.
Anaem Omot is on the border of Menominee County, Michigan and Marinette County, Wisconsin, and is listed in both counties. 3: Bijou Theatre Building: Bijou Theatre Building: March 11, 1993 : 1722-1726 Main St. Marinette
The original Wisconsin location of the restaurant, in Marinette, opened on May 19, 1972. [2] [3] [5] [6] The Marinette business was sold to Badger Bay Holding Corporation in November 2004, [2] when its agent, Keith Dau, purchased the company from the brothers. [5] [7] In May 2018 it was sold again, to Jim and April Hansen. [4]
Although 90% of the food served at FYR touches fire (and, yes, the wood is also Ohio-sourced, from the Appalachian foothills), you won't find deep, dark grill marks or thick, sweet sauces.
Captain Pleasant Higgenbotham Fire Station 2646 E. Fifth Avenue In use 21 1959–present Station 21 Eastmoor Fire Station 3294 E. Main Street In use 22 1959–present Station 22 Lieutenant Jack Russ Southgate Fire Station 3069 Parsons Avenue In use 23 1959–present Station 23 Big Walnut Fire Station
An Ansul restaurant fire suppression system pull station in a hospital cafeteria in Port Charlotte, Florida. ANSUL is the registered trade name for Ansul's products and is often used in conjunction with the trade name for their specific products, such as ANSUL SENTRY fire extinguishers. [12]
The early economy of Marinette was based on the lumber industry. The Milwaukee Road entered Marinette in 1883. It built a spur from the mainline at Crivitz, Wisconsin to Marinette and Menominee, Michigan. As the number of passengers declined on the Milwaukee Road after World War II, it ceased passenger trains to Marinette and Menominee.
Fire Station No. 2 (1901), Athens, Georgia, a gridiron-shaped station included in the Cobbham Historic District [16] Fire Station No. 6, Atlanta, Georgia, included in the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park; Fire Station No. 11 (Atlanta, Georgia), listed on the NRHP in Georgia; Fire Station 19 (Atlanta, Georgia)