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The City of Danville's Historic Preservation Commission (HPC) approves new historic districts and landmarks. It was created in 1990 and is recognized as a Certified Local Government by the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. [1]
Danville is the principal city of the Danville Micropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses all of Danville and Vermilion County. As of the census [ 96 ] of 2020, there were 29,204 people, 11,595 households, and 13,484 housing units.
May 30, 1979 (4 miles (6.4 km) west of downtown Danville: 3: Danville Historic District: Danville Historic District: April 11, 1973 (Roughly bounded by Main, Green, and Paxton Sts., and Memorial Hospital; also Jefferson Ave., Chestnut Pl., Grove, Chambers, and the 100 blocks of Ross and Holbrook Sts.
Danville Public Library is a library in Danville, Illinois, formed in 1883 by consolidating several existing collections. Originally it existed in rented space in buildings in downtown Danville. On November 7, 1904, a new Carnegie library opened and served for the next 91 years.
Sears, which previously had a store in downtown Danville, was offered an incentive by the city to move to the mall in the early 1990s. [6] Target closed in 1997 due to low sales, [7] and by 1999 had become a Hobby Lobby. [8] J. C. Penney closed its Danville store in 2001 along with two others in Illinois. [9]
Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Danville, Illinois" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total.
U.S. Representative and Danville resident Joseph Gurney Cannon used his political influence to establish the Danville Branch, which brought money and jobs to the city. The campus served as both a medical facility and a planned community for the area's veterans, and it included housing, veteran-run shops, community halls, a school and library ...