Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Previous reporting by the Star-Telegram shows the silos and grain elevator date to 1924, when Fort Worth was considered the grain capital of the Southwest, according to an archivist at the Fort ...
The Great Northern Elevator was a grain storage facility at 250 Ganson Street in Buffalo, New York.The elevator was located on the City Ship Canal and at the time of its completion in 1897, the elevator was the world's largest. [1]
American Grain Complex, also known as "The American", Russell-Miller Milling Co. Elevator, and Peavey Co. Elevator, is a historic grain elevator and flour milling complex located in South Buffalo, Buffalo, Erie County, New York. The complex consists of three contributing buildings and two contributing structures.
Marine A grain elevator, also part of the "elevator alley" and across from the Lake & Rail Grain Elevator. The Standard Elevator , was named after the Standard Milling Company and built in 1926. Wollenberg Grain and Seed Elevator , wooden "country style" elevator formerly located in Buffalo, New York; destroyed by fire in October 2006.
A Monday fire at a nearly 100-year-old grain silo described by Worth Heights residents as an “eyesore” is under investigation, according to the Fort Worth Fire Department.
In a move that will enable the company to reinvest in its U.S. grain business, Minnetonka-based Cargill is selling a group of elevators in five states to Inver Grove Heights-based CHS Inc. Cargill ...
The first grain elevator operated by steam to transfer and store grain for commercial purposes was designed by Robert Dunbar and made by Jewett and Root for Joseph Dart, Buffalo, NY, in 1842. The first cargo of corn was unloaded on June 22, 1843, from the South America.
By 1887, Buffalo had 43 grain elevators worth around $8,000,000 (equivalent to $237,995,134 in 2023) that could transfer 4,000,000 grain bushels daily. [21] Dart's grain elevator invention was considered state of the art by The Buffalo Commercial newspaper at the end of the nineteenth century, which it regarded "second in importance [to ...