Results for F
Walterscheid Pump Factory and Machine Shop Building
Built 1900 and 1901
Historic Address: 122/124 N. M...
Brokers Office and Warehouse Company Building
Built 1929
Built For The Grant-Billingsley
Plumas County’s First School House
This is the original pioneer school house
Erected i...
Nathaniel J. Frederick House
(Front text)
Nathaniel J. Frederick (1877-193...
Chief Justice John Marshall
Civil War to Civil Rights
A bronze likeness of Chi...
Confederate Grand Assault
“All was disorder and excitement; the field was full of me...
Spanish Road to Santa Fe, 1808
Most direct road from San Antonio to Santa Fe, during Span...
Home of Aaron Dickinson
1863
Home of Aaron Dickinson, black...
Old Ball Family Burial Ground
This is one of Arlington’s oldest family burial grounds. E...
Flour and Grain Exchange
Originally a meeting hall for the Boston Chamber of Commer...
Results for F
Walterscheid Pump Factory and Machine Shop Building
Built 1900 and 1901
Historic Address: 122/124 N. Mead
Current Address: 116 N. Mead
Marker is on Mead Street, on the right when traveling north.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Brokers Office and Warehouse Company Building
Built 1929
Built For The Grant-Billingsley
Fruit Company
(Fourth of 4 Buildings)
Architect: Glenn H. Thomas, Wichita, KS.
Renovated In 2004 For Condominiums
Historic Address: 145 N. Rock Island
Current Address: 151 N. Rock Island
Marker is at the intersection ...
Plumas County’s First School House
This is the original pioneer school house
Erected in 1857
————
Trustees – J.W. Thompson & J.C. Church
Teacher – Mr. S.A. Ballou – Nineteen scholars
Marker can be reached from Fairgrounds Road south of Lee Road.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Nathaniel J. Frederick House
(Front text)
Nathaniel J. Frederick (1877-1938), educator, lawyer, newspaper editor, and civil rights activist, lived here from 1904 until his death. This house was built in 1903 by Cap J. Carroll, a prominent businessman and city official whose daughter Corrine married ...
Chief Justice John Marshall
Civil War to Civil Rights
A bronze likeness of Chief Justice John Marshall, visible on your way to the next Heritage Trail sign, keeps watch over John Marshall Park to your right. Marshall is remembered for molding the U.S. Supreme ...
Confederate Grand Assault
“All was disorder and excitement; the field was full of men running for their very lives, and it was almost impossible to make any resistance to the tide of humanity pressing down upon us.”
John E. Stewart, 44th New York
General James ...
Spanish Road to Santa Fe, 1808
Most direct road from San Antonio to Santa Fe, during Spanish era in Texas, 1519-1821. Charted for closer ties between Mexico City and New Mexico, after American explorer Zebulon Pike blazed trail from U.S. to New Mexico. Spanish road of ...
Home of Aaron Dickinson
1863
Home of Aaron Dickinson, blacksmith
and his wife Elizabeth
Home of J. Teller Schoolcraft while he was
Mayor of Schenectady (1914-1915)
Site of store owned by John Prince (New York
State Assembly member, after whom Princetown
was named) ...
Old Ball Family Burial Ground
This is one of Arlington’s oldest family burial grounds. Ensign John Ball (1748- 1814), a veteran of the American Revolution (Sixth Virginia Infantry), is buried here. John Ball was the son of Moses Ball, who was one of the pioneer ...
Flour and Grain Exchange
Originally a meeting hall for the Boston Chamber of Commerce, the Exchange was built on land donated by streetcar magnate Henry M. Whitney and completed in 1892. Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge designed the tiered arches and rock-faced masonry which exemplify ...