Results for L
Women's Rights National Historic Park - M'Clintock House
Welcome to one of the few national parks dedicated to a so...
The Dempsey Building
William H. Dempsey built this building in 1896 at 41 Virgi...
Saint John Evangelical Lutheran Church
Saint John Evangelical
Lutheran Church • Buil...
The Lincolns at Knob Creek
Abraham and his sister attended the local school, located ...
Camp Ford - Naval Prisoners
Camp Ford had the distinction of having the most naval pri...
The Solitude
Designed and built in 1784 as a riverside villa by John Pe...
Camp Ford - Prisoners from Louisiana
In June 1863, CS General Richard Taylor commenced a camp...
Camp Ford - Establishment of the Camp
In March 1862, the movement of the Confederate army in ...
USS West Virginia Memorial
At 0758, 7 December 1941,
near this spot at Bert Fo...
FDR's Salute
to the Officers and Men ... USS "San Francisco"'
I...
Results for L
Women's Rights National Historic Park - M'Clintock House
Welcome to one of the few national parks dedicated to a social movement - women's rights.
Here in Seneca Falls and Waterloo, in living rooms and on front porches, in private and in public, a group of five women started ...
The Dempsey Building
William H. Dempsey built this building in 1896 at 41 Virginia Street. The two story building became a three story at the request of Seneca Masonic Lodge #113. The Lodge paid $2,500 for the third floor. This floor became the ...
Saint John Evangelical Lutheran Church
Saint John Evangelical
Lutheran Church • Built 1871
New Fane, Wisconsin
Has Been Placed on the
National Register
of Historic Places
by the United States
Department of the Interior
Marker is on Kettle Moraine Scenic Drive (County Highway S) near Youth Camp Road (County Highway DD), on the ...
The Lincolns at Knob Creek
Abraham and his sister attended the local school, located two miles northeast of here. Two teachers, Zachariah Riney and Caleb Hazel, gave young Abraham his first formal schooling. Lincoln’s classroom education, however, would not last. The demands of the frontier ...
Camp Ford - Naval Prisoners
Camp Ford had the distinction of having the most naval prisoners of any camp, North or South. There was no coordination between the branches, with each responsible for arranging the exchange of their men. By the fall of 1864, the ...
The Solitude
Designed and built in 1784 as a riverside villa by John Penn, Jr., it served as a model for country houses of the Federal period (c. 1775 – 1830). Administered by the Philadelphia Zoo since 1874, the original Adam Style ...
Camp Ford - Prisoners from Louisiana
In June 1863, CS General Richard Taylor commenced a campaign in South Louisiana that resulted in the capture of a number of Union troops in the Morgan City area. The enlisted men were paroled, but the officers were detained ...
Camp Ford - Establishment of the Camp
In March 1862, the movement of the Confederate army in Northern Arkansas to the Mississippi River left the northern frontier of the Trans-Mississippi virtually defenseless. Immediate efforts in Texas were made to raise new regiments for service in Arkansas. ...
USS West Virginia Memorial
At 0758, 7 December 1941,
near this spot at Bert Fox 6
the USS West Virginia
moored outboard the USS Tennessee
was damaged and sunk by enemy bombs and torpedoes.
As the West Virginia settled to the bottom
she forced the Tennessee against the ...
FDR's Salute
to the Officers and Men ... USS "San Francisco"'
In Salute
to the Officers and Men, living and dead, of the
U.S.S. “San Francisco”
a warship named for our city, which though
sorely wounded, emerged triumphantly from the
Battle of ...