Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Worthington's private, parochial schools include: Worthington Christian School, which serves grades K-8. St. Mary's Elementary School, which serves grades K-6. Worthington's local higher education institution is Minnesota West Community and Technical College. Minnesota West's Worthington campus is a two-year college that offers associate ...
Map of Worthington Township - 1914 Map of Nobles County in 1882 [3] Main Street, Worthington - 1895. According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 28.6 square miles (74.1 km 2), all land. The main geographic feature in Worthington Township is Lake Okabena. Okabena means "home of the heron" is the Sioux language.
On July 1, 1995, Worthington Community College became a member institution of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system. 43°37′20″N 95°37′38″W / 43.6221862°N 95.6272322°W / 43.6221862; -95.6272322
Worthington: One of the largest and finest 20th-century hotels in southwest Minnesota, built 1911–1912; a major vote of confidence in Worthington's economic future by local entrepreneur Peter Thompson. [9] 6: Dr. E.A. Kilbride Clinic: Dr. E.A. Kilbride Clinic: November 23, 1977 : 701 11th Street
The Worthington & Sioux Falls Railway was established in 1876. This led to rapid settlement in Rushmore , Adrian , and the western portions of the county. The 1860 census of Nobles County showed 11 families, 35 persons, (3 from Norway , 3 from Bavaria , 1 from Ireland and the rest from the eastern states). [ 6 ]
About 1988, Larry Wood, of the Minnesota Valley Transportation, Inc. (MNVA), bought the line and named it the Buffalo Ridge Railroad (BFRR). The BFRR operated until June 1992. The track speed was 10 mph. The line remained closed until July 1993. The railroad operated between Agate Junction, just west of Worthington, MN, to Sioux Falls, SD.
Punjab Board of Investment & Trade (PBIT) was established in 2009 by Salmaan Taseer, the governor of Punjab.The first vice chairman and CEO was Haroon Khawaja. [1] PBIT is a government-owned company that is operated and managed by a Board of Directors (BOD) composed of members from the government and the private sector.
Board Established City Website Refs Catholic Board of Education, Pakistan: 1961 Karachi [47] Lahore [48] [49] Diocesan board of education, Pakistan 1960 Islamabad, Rawalpindi [50] [51] Presbyterian Education Board Pakistan Lahore, Punjab