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Northrup, King and Co. was founded in 1884 as Northrup, Braslan and Company. Its founders, Jesse E. Northrup and Charles E. Braslan, moved to Minneapolis from the Eastern United States . They chose Minneapolis because they believed seeds grown in the North were resilient and productive, and because they viewed Minneapolis as an ideal ...
The Northeast Minneapolis Arts Association (or NEMAA) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization of working artists and allies based in Northeast Minneapolis, in the U.S. state of Minnesota. Founded by a small collective of artists in 1995, today NEMAA has more than 1,000 members including artists, students, community friends, non-profit ...
Northeast is a defined community in the U.S. city of Minneapolis that is composed of 13 smaller neighborhoods whose street addresses end in "NE". Unofficially it also includes the neighborhoods of the University community which have "NE" addresses, and the entirety of the Old Saint Anthony business district, which sits on the dividing line of "NE" and "SE" addresses.
Lind Hall. Housed most of the university's English department until they moved to Pillsbury Hall.Currently, the building is home to the College of Science and Engineering, after a major renovation completed in 2023, [6] providing 57,500 square feet of space for the Industrial and Systems Engineering department and additional space for the Computer Science & Engineering departments. [7]
The original building may have burned during King Philip's War, which destroyed most of the houses in the state in the 1670s. [3] Later owners made additions to the structure. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. The house is owned by the Bogue family.
Northrup-Gilbert House, a historic home located at Phoenix in Oswego County, New York; Northrup Hill School District 10, a historic one-room school building located at Rathbone in Steuben County, New York; Palmer-Northrup House, an historic site at 7919 Post Road in North Kingstown, Rhode Island
The ground-floor front windows are taller than those of the second floor, and are topped by a shallow projecting cornices. [2] The house is estimated to have been built c. 1845–55, and was probably around the time of Nathaniel Clark's marriage in 1844. Clark was the son of Rev. Amos Clark, who lived across the street in a 1729 house.
The Stahl House, Case Study House #22. The Case Study Houses were experiments in American residential architecture sponsored by Arts & Architecture magazine, which commissioned major architects of the day to design and build inexpensive and efficient model homes for the United States residential housing boom caused by the end of World War II and the return of millions of soldiers.