Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Strollers at Paul Bunyan Land. The park, originally known as Paul Bunyan Center, was founded in 1950 by Sherm Levis. It was built around the statue of Paul that Levis and Roy Kuemicheal had purchased the previous year from the Chicago and North Western Transportation Company, which constructed them for an exhibit at the Chicago Railroad Fair. [1]
The Northland Arboretum is a 583-acre non-profit arboretum and nature reserve in Brainerd, Minnesota, United States.. The arboretum was founded in 1972 when the Brainerd Landfill closed; that original 40-acre (160,000 m 2) landfill site now supports a grassland.
May 23, 1980 (326 Laurel St. Brainerd: Long-serving government center, consisting of a 1916 jail/sheriff's residence (now a museum) and a courthouse (built 1919–20) further noted as Crow Wing County's most prominent public building and an exemplary fruit of the City Beautiful movement.
Burgeoning artist Cole Knippen, 17, of Ottoville, Putnam County, was selling his oil landscape paintings at Arts in the Park at Lakeview Park in Port Clinton on Saturday and Sunday.
Gichi-Zibii Center for the Arts: Brainerd: 1,200 January 2009 Ames Center: Burnsville: 1,014 1988 Paisley Park: Chanhassen: 1,850 2010 AMSOIL Arena: Duluth: 9,264 1966 Duluth Entertainment Convention Center: 5,333 (Arena) 2,400 (Symphony Hall) 1910 NorShor Theatre: 700 2010s Bayfront Festival Park 15,000 1935 Hibbing Memorial Building Hibbing ...
Bane Park is a park located in Brainerd, Minnesota, United States.It has a hockey rink, open rink, warming house, playground and baseball fields.From 1933 to 1935, it served as the home ballpark for three minor league baseball teams: the Brainerd Muskies (1933), the Brainerd-Little Falls Muskies (1934) and the Brainerd Blues (1935).
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Franklin Junior High School is a historic former school building in Brainerd, Minnesota, United States. The core sections were built in 1932 and extensions were added on in 1954 and 1962. The school closed in 2005. In 2008 the building reopened as the Franklin Arts Center, which leases residential, work, and commercial space to local artists. [2]