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By deed bearing date 16 December 1639 he mortified and disposed a tenement of land on the west side of the old West Port of Glasgow with yard and tenements there, for the building of one perfyte hospital for entertainment of the poor, aged, decrepit men to be placed therein, for whose maintenance after the hospital should be built he also mortified certain bonds amounting to the principal sum ...
200 South Tryon is a 299 feet (91 m) tall high-rise in Charlotte, North Carolina. [1] It was completed in 1961 and has 18 floors. It is the 19th tallest building in the city. Gerald D. Hines Interests purchased what was then called the BB&T Building in December 1998 and began a renovation process that added another floor [2] which was completed ...
Savona Mill, also known as Savona Manufacturing Company, Alfred Cotton Mill, and Old Dominion Box Company, is a historic textile mill located at Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. The building consists of four sections, three of which are historic.
The company was founded by James Addison Jones in the 1890s. [1] One of Jones' early landmark projects was the twelve-story Independence Building, Charlotte's first "skyscraper" and the soon to be first office of J.A. Jones Construction. [2] In 1930, the company won a major contract to build a new military airbase in the Canal Zone in Panama. [3]
Charlotte Supply Company Building was a historic warehouse building located at Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. It was built in 1924–1925, and was a four-story, brick building measuring 40 feet wide and 127 feet deep. The building sat on a full basement and was designed by the architecture firm Lockwood, Greene and Company. [2]
The second son of Charlotte and George, Prince Frederick Augustus was born on August 16, 1763. He had a career in the army, and his father appointed him Commander-in-Chief in 1795 (he resigned in ...
King George III. Born: June 4, 1738. Died: January 29, 1820. King George III was born Prince George William Frederick of Wales, and he was 23 years old when he married Charlotte.
Glatfelter's previous president and CEO, George Henry Glatfelter II, is the great-great grandson of the founder, Philip Henry Glatfelter (1837–1907), who also founded York Ice Company, which became York Heating and Air Conditioning. [4]