Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Foster Hall, also known as Melodeon Hall, is located on the campus of Park Tudor School at 7200 N. College Ave. in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Tudor Revival style building was designed by Robert Frost Daggett and built in 1927. It is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, stone building with a steeply pitched slate gable roof with seven gables. It features leaded ...
The Indianapolis 500 is known as the world's largest single-day sporting event Indiana State Fair in 2015. The Idle; IMSA Battle on the Bricks; InConJunction; Indiana 9/11 Memorial
Hinkle Fieldhouse (named Butler Fieldhouse from 1928 until 1966) is a basketball arena on the campus of Butler University in Indianapolis, Indiana.Completed in early 1928, it was the largest basketball arena in the United States until 1950.
In the large airy Farmhouse restaurant, the classic fried chicken is gloriously juicy and crispy; and the bacon-wrapped meatloaf ($22), chicken pot pie ($18), steaks, ribs and stone pizza are popular.
Foster Hall (Prairie View, Texas), formerly listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Waller County, Texas, removed 1994. Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Foster Hall .
Old Northside was a prominent residential neighborhood in the late 19th century, when many of Indianapolis' wealthier residents built mansions in the area. Old Northside was home to Benjamin Harrison (23rd President of the United States), Ovid Butler (founder of Butler University ) and other notable figures, including magnates of the L.S. Ayres ...
Rev. Dr. Carlos Perkins, who will become a City-County Councillor in 2024, speaks during the Democratic watch party Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2023, at Kountry Kitchen's 910 North Event Center in Indianapolis.
Foster's Tavern was built by Anthony Foster, with construction beginning in 1801 and taking seven years or more to complete. The house is made from locally manufactured bricks, and features tied chimneys (separate chimneys joined by a wall or facade) at each end of a gable roof, hand carved woodwork (including bowed mantels and stair scrollwork), blown-glass windowpanes, soapstone hearths ...