Results for L
Dundee Memorial Park Streetcar Wall
Dundee, Omaha's first suburb, was connected to down...
Marlinton: Heritage
Marlinton
“There ain’t no G in MARLINTON!”…so...
Hal Price Headley
1888 - 1962
Hal Price Headley embodied the image of ...
Col. E. R. Bradley
1859 - 1946
The activities of Col. E. R. Bradley ran...
James Ben Ali Haggin
1821 - 1914
A Kentucky-born grandson of a Turkish Ar...
Sinking of the Maple Leaf
Approximately 15 miles up river from this point, the Union...
Henry Clay
1777 - 1852
Visitors familiar with Lexington's Ashla...
James M. Woolworth
1829 - 1906
Born in 1829 in Onondaga County, New Yor...
Samuel D. Riddle
1861 - 1951
"Lots of men might have a million dollar...
Ellis Hospital
Built 1893 on this site,replacing 1885 Dispensary.
Results for L
Dundee Memorial Park Streetcar Wall
Dundee, Omaha's first suburb, was connected to downtown by the streetcar. Dundee was literally the end-of-the-line. The streetcars reversed their course just west of this site. In 1891, a steam driven "trolley" and then a horse-drawn car brought people free ...
Marlinton: Heritage
Marlinton
“There ain’t no G in MARLINTON!”…so wrote Andrew Price, the first mayor of Marlinton. The town gets its name from Jacob Marlin who arrived here in 1749 with Stephen Sewell and built a cabin near the mouth off the Greenbrier ...
Hal Price Headley
1888 - 1962
Hal Price Headley embodied the image of the Bluegrass horseman. He was sophisticated in business, but always a man of agriculture, raising tobacco as well as Thoroughbreds. His lasting legacy to Lexington was his instrumental role in formation ...
Col. E. R. Bradley
1859 - 1946
The activities of Col. E. R. Bradley ranged from operating Palm Beach's Beach Club casino to staging charity race days for orphans. A product of a burgeoning nation in the 19th century, Bradley worked in steel mills in ...
James Ben Ali Haggin
1821 - 1914
A Kentucky-born grandson of a Turkish Army officer, James Ben Ali Haggin was lured west by the Gold Rush. He and his partners eventually owned South Dakora's Homestake Mine---the richest gold vein in North America. Haggin's group also ...
Sinking of the Maple Leaf
Approximately 15 miles up river from this point, the Union transport Maple Leaf was destroyed by a Confederate mine during the early morning hours of April 1, 1864. The Maple Leaf sank to the bottom of the St. Johns River ...
Henry Clay
1777 - 1852
Visitors familiar with Lexington's Ashland, the home of Henry Clay, know it as a graceful old house, with lovely gardens and grounds. In an earlier time, when Henry Clay built it to some 2,000 acres, Ashland was also ...
James M. Woolworth
1829 - 1906
Born in 1829 in Onondaga County, New York, Mr. Woolworth graduated with high honors from Hamilton College in 1849, and took up the study of law. After two years practicing in Syracuse, New York, he determined to go ...
Samuel D. Riddle
1861 - 1951
"Lots of men might have a million dollars, but only one man can have Man o' war," said Will Harbut, the faithful groom of the great stallion. The one man who had Man o' War was Samuel D. ...
Ellis Hospital
Built 1893 on this site,replacing 1885 Dispensary.
It became City Hall Annex
in 1906 as hospital moved
to Nott Street location.
Marker is at the intersection of Jay Street and Liberty Street, on the right when traveling north on Jay ...