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Cedar Hills is a census-designated place and neighborhood in Washington County, Oregon, United States south of U.S. Route 26 and west of Oregon Route 217 and within the Portland metropolitan area. Construction began in 1946.
Douglass lived in this house, which he named Cedar Hill, from 1877–1878 until his death in 1895. Perched on a hilltop, the site offers a sweeping view of the U.S. Capitol and the Washington, D.C., skyline. In 2017 the site was used to represent Washington, D.C., on its America the Beautiful quarter.
The Kintner-Mcgrain House, also known as Cedar Glade, is on the National Register of Historic Places, located north of downtown Corydon, Indiana. It attained the "Cedar Glade" name due to the giant red cedars Jacob Kintner, the builder, planted in front of the house. It was built in 1808 by Jacob Kintner and his wife Agnes Crist, the same year ...
Julie Boyd speaks in support of removing books from the young reader sections that violate the Hamilton East Public Library board's controversial policy, which included reshelving books to the ...
Cedar Hills Crossing has been in operation since 1969, and is located approximately between the intersection of SW Cedar Hills Boulevard and Walker Road and the intersection of SW Cedar Hills Boulevard and Hall Boulevard. [3] The current name was adopted in September 2002 when C.E. John Company began the redevelopment of the Mall.
Cedar Hill (Central Park), a hill in Central Park, New York City; Cedar Hill (Warwick, Rhode Island), a historic summer estate; Cedar Hill (Buena Vista, Virginia), a house and farm listed on the NRHP; Cedar Hill, Anacostia, Washington, D.C., now known as Frederick Douglass National Historic Site; Cedar Hill Yard, a railroad yard in the Cedar ...
Hannon Library, Southern Oregon University, Ashland; CCC Library, Clackamas Community College, Clackamas; Branford Price Millar Library at Portland State University The Valley Library, Oregon State University, Corvallis; Knight Library, University of Oregon, Eugene; Pierce Library, Eastern Oregon University, La Grande
Eliza died on Thursday, April 24, 1845, and on Friday, September 29, 1848, William Rockhill married Elizabeth Hill (1820–1859). Elizabeth died on Monday, May 9, 1859, and William's fourth and final marriage was to Emily Waugh (1824-1903), who may have been the younger sister of Eliza Waugh. (Currently, the parents of those women are unknown.)