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Elgin Milk Condensing Company
Gail Borden, pioneer in the food preservative industry, es...
Elgin National Watch Company
From 1866 to 1966 this site was occupied by the Elgin Nati...
Founding of Pi Beta Phi Fraternity
On April 28, 1867, the National Women's Fraternity Movemen...
Wyatt Earp Birthplace
This property
has been placed on the
Na...
The Prophet's Last Ride
On the morning of June 24, 1844, Joseph Smith and his brot...
Site of Original Post Cemetery
This ground was Fort Clark’s military cemetery from 1856 t...
Filippone Building
Italian stonemasons Giovanni B. Filippone (1845-1917) and ...
Partrick Building
In 1885 Dr. William Partrick commissioned adjoining commer...
Paris Fish Hatchery
Opening in 1881, the Paris Fish Hatchery was the state's s...
Cypress-Davis Methodist Episcopal Church
Named for Cypress Creek and at other times called Davis fo...
Results for P
Elgin Milk Condensing Company
Gail Borden, pioneer in the food preservative industry, established a milk condensing plant on this site in 1865. His discovery incorporated a process by which water was evaporated from milk, and sugar added as a preservative. This process, patented in ...
Elgin National Watch Company
From 1866 to 1966 this site was occupied by the Elgin National Watch Company. This was the first watch factory built west of the Alleghenies and grew to become the world's largest. During its lifetime over 60 million 'Elgin' watches ...
Founding of Pi Beta Phi Fraternity
On April 28, 1867, the National Women's Fraternity Movement began here in the home of Jacob Holt. In a second floor bedroom, shared by Ada Bruen and Libbie Brook, twelve Monmouth College co-eds founded I.C. Sorosis, known today by its ...
Wyatt Earp Birthplace
This property
has been placed on the
National Register
of Historic Places
By the United States
Department of the Interior
Wyatt Earp
Birthplace
March 19, 1848
Marker is on South 3rd Street south of East 3rd Avenue, on the right when traveling south.
Courtesy hmdb.org
The Prophet's Last Ride
On the morning of June 24, 1844, Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum left their families, homes, and fellow Saints for the last time. Traveling on horseback, they paused on this bluff. Joseph looked admiringly at the unfinished temple and ...
Site of Original Post Cemetery
This ground was Fort Clark’s military cemetery from 1856 to the 1880s. One of the first burials was 2nd Lt. Brayton C. Ives, 1st Inf., a West Point graduate who died here on June 27, 1857. Succeeding burials included dozens ...
Filippone Building
Italian stonemasons Giovanni B. Filippone (1845-1917) and Giovanni Cassinelli purchased property here in 1883-85 and in 1885 built the six-sided portion of this limestone block building. Filippone became sole owner in 1887 and operated a general store on the first ...
Partrick Building
In 1885 Dr. William Partrick commissioned adjoining commercial spaces at this site, operating a drug store in the single story and a dry goods store and hotel in the two-story section. Later outbuildings included a beer vault, windmill, elevated tank ...
Paris Fish Hatchery
Opening in 1881, the Paris Fish Hatchery was the state's second fish-rearing agency. This area was selected because of its abundant sources of water and excellent railroad connections. The Paris Fish Hatchery was a major supplier of salmon and brown ...
Cypress-Davis Methodist Episcopal Church
Named for Cypress Creek and at other times called Davis for the pioneer Davis family, ancestors of the Emerson family of Somerville, this church stood in the Center Point community on land owned now (1996) by James H. Shelton, great-great-grandson ...