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2-block remnant of Bangor's old downtown, [20] including the 1875 Holmlund Funeral Parlor, [21] the 1898 Bangor Variety Store, [22] the 1898 Queen Anne-style Dowe Clothing Store, [23] the 1899 Romanesque Revival-style Bangor Opera House, [24] the 1900 Italianate-style Elsen House Hotel, [25] and the 1963 Contemporary-style Bangor Police Dept. [26]
1906 2.5-story Queen Anne home, with a 2-story round veranda with Neoclassical columns in place of the typical corner tower. [9] Albert and his brother William ran a hardware store/carriage shop/implement dealership, a garage, Reo dealership, and music store. [10] 3: Monroe County Courthouse: Monroe County Courthouse
The original part of the Wing–Allore House, dating from approximately 1829, is a two-story, red brick, gable-front Italianate structure. Smaller additions were built on the side and rear at some point during ht 19th century, and further additions, mostly complementary flat-roofed structures, were added after 1939 when the house was converted to a funeral parlor.
Braun Colonial Funeral Home and Ambulance Service was founded in Cahokia in 1971 by Frank Braun, who owned and operated the business. The Braun Family Funeral Home in Columbia was established in 2010.
Hudson's finest Queen Anne home, built in 1884, with a three-story octagonal tower. [15] Phipps was an executive of the North Wisconsin Railway [54] and a philanthropist. 29: Second Street Commercial District: Second Street Commercial District: October 4, 1984 : Roughly 1st, 2nd, Walnut, and Locust Sts.
Coffee beans are hitting record high prices not seen in nearly 50 years after difficult growing seasons among some of the world's top producing regions. Earlier this week, the Wall Street Journal ...
CBS News journalist slams media, says most underreported 2024 story was Biden’s ‘obvious cognitive decline’
Home with 4-story tower and porte cochere, designed by Waters in High Victorian Gothic style with some Queen Anne decoration and built in 1883. Sherry was a lumberman with interests in northeastern and central Wisconsin. The house was later the home of Hugh Strange of the Strange Lumber Company. [111] 72: Smith School: September 16, 2021