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Fort Wayne Performing Arts Theatre: November 25, 2024 : 303 East Main Street: Fort Wayne: Now known as the Arts United Center 26: Fort Wayne Printing Company Building: Fort Wayne Printing Company Building: August 24, 1988
Sheldrake taught at the University of London (1984–94) where he was also co-director and then director of the Institute of Spirituality at Heythrop College. He later taught at the University of Cambridge (1992–97), Durham University (as William Leech Professorial Fellow 2003-08) and as honorary professor and postgraduate research supervisor ...
24394 County Road 40, southwest of Goshen: Harrison Township: 31: St. John of the Cross Episcopal Church, Rectory and Cemetery: St. John of the Cross Episcopal Church, Rectory and Cemetery: September 17, 1980 : 601 and 611 E. Vistula Rd.
Anthony Wayne, exhibits the birth of Fort Wayne with General "Mad" Anthony Wayne's ordering of a fort to be built at the three rivers, October 22, 1794. An Emerging City , includes a model of and parts of the Wabash and Erie Canal , attributed to turning the city into a boom-town in the 19th century.
The congregation's third synagogue was completed in 1917, located at the corner of Wayne and Fairfield Streets; [6] and it moved to 5200 Old Mill Road in 1961. [2] In 1995, the synagogue hired a new rabbi, Sandford Kopnick, [ 12 ] and Rabbi Meir Bargeron commenced on July 1, 2020 as the congregation's 24th spiritual leader.
The seminary remained in Springfield until the synod reorganized its system of pastoral training and merged the program of Concordia Senior College of Fort Wayne with Concordia College in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In 1976, the seminary returned to Fort Wayne, where it inherited the Senior College's award-winning campus, designed by Eero Saarinen.
The Bass Mansion, also known as Brookside, is an administrative building and historic structure at the University of Saint Francis located in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The hand-carved, sandstone mansion was the private residence of industrialist John Henry Bass from 1902 to 1944.
The district encompasses 18 contributing buildings and 1 contributing structure in the central business district of Fort Wayne. The area was developed between about 1868 and 1943, and includes notable examples of Renaissance Revival , Romanesque Revival , and Italianate style commercial architecture.