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The road starts near the south edge of the county at State Road 234 just over a mile south of Wallace.It passes north through the town of Hillsboro, where it is concurrent with Main Street and U.S. Route 136, then crosses Interstate 74 just north of Hillsboro and continues through the towns of Mellott and Newtown, and terminates at State Road 28 east of Attica.
The Plainfield Halfway House is a historic building in Plainfield, Illinois. Plainfield was first settled in the 1820s by a group seeking to convert the local Pottawatomie to Christianity . Squire L. F. Arnold, the first postmaster of Plainfield, owned the tract of land on which the building stands.
6726 S. White Lick Creek Rd., southeast of Plainfield 39°39′55″N 86°20′36″W / 39.665278°N 86.343333°W / 39.665278; -86.343333 ( Kellum-Jessup-Chandler Guilford Township
Plainfield, Illinois was founded in August 1834 by Chester Ingersoll, who platted a town just north of the 1828 settlement of Walker's Corners. In December that year, Levi Arnold bought the land directly north of Ingersoll's and began to subdivide it; this area would later become the historic district.
Wallace, originally named Jacksonville, [4] is a town located in Jackson Township, Fountain County, Indiana, United States. At the 2010 census, the town had a total population of 105. At the 2010 census, the town had a total population of 105.
The district encompasses 174 contributing buildings in the central business district and surrounding residential area of Plainfield. The district developed between about 1840 and 1959 and includes notable examples of Greek Revival , Gothic Revival , Italianate , Queen Anne , and Bungalow / American Craftsman style architecture.
Main St. from the alley S of Henry St. to William St., Farmland, Indiana Coordinates 40°11′27″N 85°07′42″W / 40.19083°N 85.12833°W / 40.19083; -85
Little is known about Flanders, other than that he was the first constable of Plainfield. By the time of his death, he had amassed a 300-acre (120 ha) land holding. The three surviving Flanders children received a one-third share in the building. [1] Only two buildings remain in Plainfield that were constructed before the Flanders House.