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Danville is in western Montgomery County, on the north side of Interstate 70/U.S. Route 40, with access from Exit 170, Missouri Route 161. I-70 leads west 45 miles (72 km) to Columbia and east 80 miles (130 km) to St. Louis, while Route 161 leads north 5 miles (8 km) to Montgomery City. There is a combined gas station-food store-lunch counter ...
A Washington, D.C. man has been charged with murder after police say he stabbed his grandmother to death and then texted a photograph of her dead body to other family members last Friday.
A post office called Bland has been in operation since 1877. [6] The town is named in honor of U.S. Congressman Richard Parks Bland, a United States Representative from various districts in south central Missouri. [7] Bland was a practicing attorney in Rolla in neighboring Phelps County. In 2020, the Indie film SCP: Overlord was filmed
Kippax Plantation was the home of Colonel Robert Bolling (1646–1709). Bolling married Jane Rolfe , who was the granddaughter of Pocahontas and John Rolfe . Their only child, John Bolling was born at Kippax in 1676, and settled nearby at Cobbs Plantation, just west of Point of Rocks across the Appomattox River in what is now Chesterfield County .
Danville Township is an inactive township in Montgomery County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. [ 1 ] Danville Township takes its name from the community of Danville, Missouri .
When Bland offered to return his money, "Smith told Sonya that he did not want the money. ... Former funeral home owner Jimmy D. Davis Jr. was charged in September 2021 with embezzlement for ...
Ravenswood, also known as the Leonard Home, is a historic home and farm and national historic district located near Bunceton, Cooper County, Missouri. It was built in 1880, and is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, eclectic Italianate/Second Empire style brick mansion. It has a low-angle Mansard roof covered with asphalt on top and grey, slate shingles on ...
William Thomas Bland was born on January 21, 1861, in Weston, the county seat of Lewis County, Virginia (in what would soon become West Virginia) [1] to Columbia Ann Madison Jackson Duncan and her second husband, Dr. William John Bland (1816-1897). William T. Bland was descended from the First Families of Virginia.