Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Hamilton Heights Historic District is a national historic district in Hamilton Heights, New York, New York. It consists of 192 contributing residential rowhouses, apartment buildings, and churches built between about 1886 and 1931. Most are three and four story brick rowhouses set behind raised stone terraces.
Alcy-Ball; Barton Heights; Boxtown; Bunker Hill; Coro Lake; Diamond Estates; Dixie Heights; Dukestown; Elliston Heights; Emerald Estates; French Fort; Gaslight Square
The boundaries of South Memphis were defined as follows: On the east, south and west the boundaries are the same as the South Memphis tract, and on the north the boundary line commences in the center of the Mississippi River, opposite the rise of Union Street; thence east with the center of Union Street, as at present laid off until the same ...
The property’s historic consideration was approved by the State Review in May 2022, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places later that year. The Tri State Iron Works | 61 Keel Ave.
Hamilton Heights/Sugar Hill Northeast HD: October 23, 2001 Hamilton Heights/Sugar Hill Northwest HD : June 18, 2002 Sugar Hill is a National Historic District in the Harlem and Hamilton Heights [ 3 ] neighborhoods of Manhattan , New York City , [ 4 ] bounded by West 155th Street to the north, West 145th Street to the south, Edgecombe Avenue to ...
Tallest residential building in Memphis. 10 Lincoln American Tower: 290/88 22 1924 Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. 11 White Station Tower: 280/85 22 1965 12 St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Outpatient Clinic Building: 265/81 15 2026 Topped out 13 Exchange Building: 264/80 20 1910 Listed on the National Register of ...
North Memphis flourished during the 19th and 20th centuries. Klondike and Smokey City are two of the oldest African American elite communities [2] in Memphis. [3] Historic neighborhoods like Speedway Terrace, Vollintine-Evergreen, and Shelby Forest were home to wealthy families and a vibrant manufacturing industry.
The first station in the district was on Calhoun Street, built c. 1855 by the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad.It was replaced by a newer Calhoun Street Station that was demolished when Memphis Central Station (originally Grand Central Station) was built on the same site in 1912–1914 by the Illinois Central Railroad and a subsidiary, the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad that ran south ...