Results for F
Cohen Brothers Manufacturing Company, Clothiers
Historic Third Ward Walking Tour Site 55
This prop...
Early Religious Life
The earliest religious gatherings were held in private hom...
Fort Winchester
Ohio Revolutionary Memorial Trail
Wayne • Harrison
Powder Magazine Flags
When the Powder Magazine was built in 1712,...
15th Illinois Infantry
Burial Place
Burial Place
15th Illinois Infant...
Confederate Cemetery
Here are buried 155 soldiers of the Army of Tennessee who ...
Founders and Proprietors Monument
1640 - 1935
In memory of the courageous men
w...
12th Illinois Infantry - 13th Missouri Infantry
McArthur's Brigade - W.H.L. Wallace's Division
U.S.<...
Cooperation and Conflict on the Trail
Many diaries of travelers on the Oregon-California ...
Fort Defiance
Anthony Wayne Parkway
The arrival of the Legion of...
Results for F
Cohen Brothers Manufacturing Company, Clothiers
Historic Third Ward Walking Tour Site 55
This property has been
placed on the
National Register
of Historic Places
Designed by
Charles Crane
Tour Site 55
1910
Marker is on Chicago Street near Broadway, on the right when traveling east.
...Early Religious Life
The earliest religious gatherings were held in private homes, schools, or public buildings until the individual congregations organized and constructed structures. Congregations formed quickly: the Methodists in 1807, the Presbyterians in 1821, and the Baptists in 1834. In 1824, three ...
Fort Winchester
Ohio Revolutionary Memorial Trail
Wayne • Harrison
Winchester • Clay
Bird
1780 • Marches • 1813
— • —
Fort
Win-
chester
Marker is at the intersection of Fort Street and Washington Avenue, on the right when traveling west on Fort Street.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Powder Magazine Flags
When the Powder Magazine was built in 1712, South Carolina was a proprietary colony owned by eight British aristocrats. Seven years later, the colonists peacefully overthrew the Lords Proprietor and South Carolina became a royal colony. The flags flying ...
15th Illinois Infantry
Burial Place
Burial Place
15th Illinois Infantry
Bodies removed
to
Nat'l Cemetery.
Marker can be reached from Cavalry Road 0.3 miles west of Hamburg-Savannah Road, on the left when traveling west.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Confederate Cemetery
Here are buried 155 soldiers of the Army of Tennessee who died in hospitals during the mobilization for Bragg's Kentucky campaign of Sept. - Oct., 1862. Their graves, formerly distinguished by wooden markers giving name, rank and organization, are now ...
Founders and Proprietors Monument
1640 - 1935
In memory of the courageous men
who founded the first settlement of
the Town of Greenwich
in the Connecticut Colony
July 18-1640
Everardus Bogardus •
John Bowers •
Robert Feaks •
Jeffre Ferris •
Angell Husted •
Robert Husted •
Andrew Messenger ...
12th Illinois Infantry - 13th Missouri Infantry
McArthur's Brigade - W.H.L. Wallace's Division
U.S.
Army of the Tennessee.
12th Illinois Infantry,
13th Missouri Infantry,
McArthur's (2d) Brigade,
W.H.L. Wallace's (2d) Division.
At about 10 a.m. April 7, 1862 these regiments advanced from this position and engaged the enemy that was sheltered behind a breastwork ...
Cooperation and Conflict on the Trail
Many diaries of travelers on the Oregon-California Trail speak of good relations with Native Americans. Indians helped travelers by delivering their letters, pulling their wagons up steep banks, teaching them about edible plants, and keeping watch at night. Rather than ...
Fort Defiance
Anthony Wayne Parkway
The arrival of the Legion of the United States at this point on August 8, 1794 marked the end of General Anthony Wayne's difficult march, through swamps and forests, from Fort GreeneVille. On this site, in the ...