search

Results for C

N.C. and Rebecca Burns House / Lovelace House

This home was built for N.C. and Rebecca Burns in 1894. It changed hands and was owned by several others including Frank Lovelace. Lovelace was a railroad man from Missouri and moved in to this house with his wife and ...

photo_library
H.J. Cox House

This beautiful “Double L” home was built in 1899. The property was originally two lots in 1914, with the Dick Jones residence located within the picket fence to the north. Herbert Joseph Cox, author of “Random Lengths” and clerk at ...

photo_library
J.C. Goodale-E.M Jarnigan House

This house was built (c. 1885) for J.C. Goodale’s family, with select lumber from the mill he operated in Coburg which he eventually sold to Booth-Kelly in 1899. On March 1, 1903, Doctor Milton Emerson Jarnigan from Tennessee moved into ...

photo_library
IOOF Hall – Coburg

The original Independent Order of Odd Fellows Hall was built 1886, and housed the Grange, Free Masons, IOOF, the Rebecca, and Good Templars, which held their meetings upstairs, and the ground floor was used for all church services. When the ...

photo_library
Grange Hall-Coburg

Organized March 11, 1915, the first Grange building was built in 1939 after the original IOOF Hall, which housed the Grange, burned down in 1937. This was the site of the original IOOF Hall. The IOOF and the Rebecca held ...

photo_library
Smith House – Coburg

Built in 1870 and also known as the Depot House, this Gothic structure was once the site of the town’s Pony Express (c.1871), a stagecoach stop, and later the railroad depot (c.1882).

photo_library
John Harte McGraw

The bronze statue standing in McGraw Place near Westlake Center, bordered by Stewart Street, Fifth Avenue and Westlake Avenue, is a tribute to the late John Harte McGraw, an instrumental figure in Seattle's history. The statue was funded by the Seattle Chamber ...

photo_library
Coburg Oregon

Coburg began in 1847, when John Diamond and Jacob Spores settled near the site of a Kalapooya Indian village on the McKenzie River. The Donation Land Act drew early pioneers to farm the fertile soil. It was the Willamette of ...

photo_library
Monastic island

Monastery (Ukr. Monastyrsky Ostrow) — island on the Dnieper river in Dnepropetrovsk. Since the XVII century the island was called Monastery, in the nineteenth century — Burakovsky, Bogomolovskoye, 1926-2015, Komsomol.

On the island is Dnipropetrovsk zoo, ...

Camas (Sx̣ʷéʔli)

The Kalispel Tribe’s Pend Oreille Valley homelands are rich in natural resources. The river bottoms, forested hillsides, and mountains held an abundance of game species, ranging from water fowl to caribou.

Buffalo hunts to the plains east of the continental divide ...

photo_library photo_library
menu
more_vert