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Hermon, Los Angeles. / 34.103906; -118.185077. Hermon is a neighborhood in the northeast area of Los Angeles. It was established in 1903 and became part of Los Angeles in 1912.
Mount Hermon is an unincorporated community in northwestern Washington Parish, Louisiana, United States.It is the home of the Yellow Jackets of Mount Hermon High School.The Mile Branch Settlement at the Washington Parish Free Fair is the current home of the old one room school house that was originally built by the pioneers of Mount Hermon, Louisiana.
Mount Hermon's summit straddles the border between Lebanon and Syria. Mount Hermon (Arabic: جبل الشيخ or جبل حرمون / ALA-LC: Jabal al-Shaykh ('Mountain of the Sheikh ') or Jabal Haramun; Hebrew: הַר חֶרְמוֹן, Har Ḥermōn) is a mountain cluster constituting the southern end of the Anti-Lebanon mountain range.
Get the Mount Hermon, LA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
LA 438: 37.78: 60.80 Mt. Hermon: Angie — — LA 439: 12.71: 20.45 Sheridan: Bogalusa — — LA 440: 27.56: 44.35 LA 441 north of Greensburg: LA 10 west of Franklinton: 1955: current exit 57 on I-55 LA 441: 43.744: 70.399 LA 42 west of Springfield: Mississippi state line north of Easleyville: 1955: current LA 442: 23.22: 37.37 LA 63 north of ...
Mount Hermon High School. Mount Hermon High School is located in Mount Hermon, Louisiana, United States. The high school is currently housed out of the same facility as the Mount Hermon elementary and junior high schools. The first Mount Hermon School, constructed in the mid-19th century, held classes in a log cabin near the Mount Hermon Cemetery.
Evergreen Plantation. April 27, 1992. Wallace. 30°01′37″N 90°38′22″W / 30.02690°N 90.63958°W / 30.02690; -90.63958 (Evergreen Plantation) St. John the Baptist. Composed of 39 buildings, Evergreen Plantation is an intact major antebellum plantation complex of the Southern United States. [6][7] Open to visitors.
Mount Hermon (2,814 metres or 9,232 feet high) was suggested by J. Lightfoot (1602–1675) and R. H. Fuller (1915–2007) [2] for two reasons: It is the highest site in the area [given that the Transfiguration took place on "a high mountain" (Matthew 17:1)], and it is located near Caesarea Philippi (Matthew 16:13), where the previous events reportedly took place.