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James Haines Farm is a historic home and farm located in Pike Township, Jay County, Indiana. The farmhouse was built in 1884, and is a two-story, Italianate style brick dwelling. It sits on a limestone block foundation, has a low pitched hipped roof, and features a five-sided projecting bay.
The Brookside estate contained extensive gardens and a deer park. Bass bred Clydesdale horses and Galloway cattle; the farm supplied milk for much of Fort Wayne. Bass died in 1922 and is buried in Lindenwood Cemetery. A popular story says that Bass is still at Brookside, and someone is in the library, he will help them find the book they seek.
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As of 20 June 2015, the 68-acre Jeffboat shipyard is owned by American Commercial Lines Inc. (ACL), a company also based in Jeffersonville, Indiana. Mark Knoy is the CEO. In turn, Platinum Equity owns ACL, the largest inland shipbuilder in the United States, building both river barges and ocean barges.
Farm World is a weekly United States farming technology magazine that has been published 51 weeks a year, every Wednesday, since 1955 [1] and is owned by MidCountry Media, Inc., who bought it from Daily Mail and General Trust in 2009. The magazine has its headquarters both in Indiana and Illinois. [2]
Farm Progress is the publisher of 22 farming and ranching magazines. The company's oldest publication began in 1819. Farm Progress Companies is owned by Informa. Farm Progress has the oldest known continuously published magazine [citation needed], Prairie Farmer, which was launched in 1841. The company publishes 18 regional magazines with local ...
Designed and built in 1971 by Capt. Dennis Trone, the Julia Belle was the last boat built by Dubuque Boat & Boiler Works of Dubuque, Iowa. The boat's steam engines were built in 1915 by the Gillett and Eaton Company and originally installed on the central wheel ferryboat City of Baton Rouge. The engines have logged well over a million miles.
The magazine helps small producers in the United States and around the world turn their hobby into a viable business. Focused on the modern " back-to-the-land movement ", the magazine is designed to appeal to older Gen Xers , Baby Boomers and the growing population in between who are in tune with organic growing methods and lifestyle.