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1961: New Bloomfield Post Office moved into new building next door. 1965: New and separate elementary school opened in January for elementary grades, special education, library, and music room. High school remained in 1917 building. 1983: New US Highway 54 reroutes traffic to area east of New Bloomfield; old Hwy 54 becomes State Road AE.
The Stars and Stripes Museum located at Bloomfield, Missouri, The first permanent settlement at Bloomfield was made in 1824 at the site of a previous Native American community. [6] Bloomfield was platted in 1835. [7] The community was named from the wildflowers in the vicinity. [8] A post office called Bloomfield has been in operation since ...
Guthrie is an unincorporated community in western Callaway County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. [1] The community lies at the intersection of Missouri routes J and Y. New Bloomfield lies two miles south on Route J and the Pine Ridge Recreation Area of the Mark Twain National Forest along Cedar Creek is four miles east on Route Y. [2]
New Bloomfield may refer to: New Bloomfield, Missouri, a town in Callaway County; New Bloomfield, Pennsylvania, a borough in Perry County
On December 23, 2006, a young couple living in a neighbourhood in New Bloomfield, Missouri, were brutally murdered by a relative inside their house. [2] [3]On that day itself, both Sarah and Benjamin Bonnie, aged 25 and 28 respectively, received a call from Sarah's cousin, 34-year-old Brian Joseph Dorsey, who owed money to drug dealers looking for him and he wanted to borrow money from Sarah.
KFDR (channel 25) is a religious television station licensed to Jefferson City, Missouri, United States, serving the Columbia–Jefferson City market as an owned-and-operated station of the Christian Television Network (CTN). The station's transmitter is located near New Bloomfield, Missouri.
Zadock is an unincorporated community in northern Stoddard County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. [1] The community lies north of the Castor River, approximately seven miles north of Bloomfield, [2] in the Township of Pike. It is elevated at 427 feet and is located in the Central Time Zone. [3]
A post office called Aid was established in 1904, and remained in operation until 1949. [3] The original owner of the town site gave the community the first name of his son, Aid Cooper. [4] In 1925, Aid had 110 inhabitants. [5]