search

Results for L

Caras Park/Missoula Mills Millstone

Missoula’s beginnings can be traced to the Clark Fork riverfront that is now Caras Park. In 1860, town founders C. P. Higgins and Francis L. Worden established a trading post in Hell ...

photo_library photo_library
Indian Camp Plantation

The plantation home, built in the 1850s, became the site of the Louisiana State Leprosarium in 1894. The U.S. Public Health Service acquired it in 1921. It is now known as the National Hansen's Disease Center.

Erected by the Department of ...

photo_library
The National Hansen's Disease Museum and Archives

Visitors come to the National Hansen's Disease Museum (NHDM) to experience the story of Carville, the only National Leprosarium (leprosy hospital) in the United States. Starting in 1894, patients, doctors and other health care professionals lived, worked, and made medical ...

photo_library
Brick Block/Montgomery Ward

Main Street and Higgins Avenue is one of Missoula’s busiest intersections and it has been since the town’s earliest days. So it should come as little surprise that town founders Francis L. Worden and C. P. Higgins chose to locate ...

photo_library photo_library
Babs Apartments/Garden City Commercial College

Set behind Missoula’s Hip Strip commercial district on the south end of the Higgins Avenue Bridge, it’s hard to miss the Babs building. Built in 1905 and designed by Missoula architect A. J. Gibson, this Queen Anne-style Victorian landmark features ...

photo_library photo_library
1909 Missoula Free Speech Fight

The corner of Higgins Avenue and West Front Street, known today as “Free Speech Corner,” marks the location of an important victory in the fight for national free speech rights. The Free Speech Fight in Missoula began in the fall ...

photo_library photo_library
Atlantic Hotel

With the arrival of the Northern Pacific Railroad in the 1880s, Missoula became a regional transportation hub. The increase in visitor traffic through Missoula necessitated the construction of new hotels near the recently constructed Northern Pacific Depot, among these, the ...

photo_library photo_library
Cubo Line

Following Carolina Governor James Moore’s raid on St. Augustine, the city developed one of the most formidable defense systems in the colonial world. This system included forts, settlements and defensive lines. One of these lines, the Cubo Line was constructed ...

photo_library
Plaza de la Constitution

The plaza sits in the center of downtown St. Augustine, originally called the Plaza de Arms. It was constructed as a part of the town plan drafted in 1596. Like many Spanish coastal communities, the plaza sits on the bay ...

photo_library photo_library
Castillo de San Marcos

The Castillo de San Marcos was the 10th fort built in St. Augustine. Flooding, fire, and the subtropical climate destroyed the nine previous forts. The construction of the fort occurred for two reasons: pirate Robert Searles’ English-sanctioned attack on St. ...

photo_library
menu
more_vert