Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Gothic Chapel at Crown Hill Cemetery. Gothic chapel – Indianapolis architect Diedrich A. Bohlen designed the High Victorian Gothic-style chapel and vault, which were built east of the National Cemetery in 1875 at an initial cost of $38,922. They replaced an earlier vault that was used as temporary storage for bodies awaiting burial.
Diedrich Bohlen designed several major projects in Indianapolis before his death in 1890, including Crown Hill Cemetery's Gothic Chapel (1877); [29] [30] Saint Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church (1883) at McCarty and New Jersey Streets; [31] and Emmanuel Church (1883), later renamed Lockerbie Square United Methodist Church, at East and New York ...
B. Erwin Baker; Lucien Barbour; James Baskett; Paddy Baumann; Joe Rand Beckett; Tony Bettenhausen Jr. Albert J. Beveridge; Catherine Eddy Beveridge; Tom Binford
Title Artist Year Location/GPS coordinates Material Dimensions Owner Image Abel D. Streight [1]: 1902 Crown Hill Cemetery: Bronze, granite: Bust: 34 × 31 × 16 in.; Monument: 13 × 12 1 ⁄ 2 × 8 ft.
Historic district adjacent to Central Avenue Corridor in South Los Angeles; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles Multiple Property Submission (MPS) 2: 52nd Place Historic District: 52nd Place Historic District: June 11, 2009 : Along E. 52nd Place [6
When the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Board was formed in 1962, its first-designated sites were HCM #1 (Leonis Adobe) and HCM #2 (Bolton Hall), both located in the San Fernando/Crescenta Valleys. The oldest building in the Valley is the Convento Building at the Mission San Fernando Rey de España , which was built between 1808 and 1822.
Crown Hill Cemetery (disambiguation) This page was last edited on 15 April 2018, at 21:06 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Forthmann House, 2014. National Historic Landmarks: South Los Angeles includes some of the city's most historic sites, including three National Historic Landmarks.The sites receiving this high designation are: (1) the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, built in 1923, and used as the principal site of the 1932 and 1984 Summer Olympic Games; [2] (2) the Watts Towers (HCM #15), a collection of 17 ...