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Plymouth: 3-story hotel designed by Charles Hilpertshauser in Queen Anne style and built in 1892 for H. C. Laack. It had a sample room where salesmen showed their wares, and stood across the street from the Plymouth Cheese Exchange. [60] [61] 22: Henry H. Huson House and Water Tower: Henry H. Huson House and Water Tower
Plymouth is developing its third business park in partnership with the Plymouth Industrial Development Corporation. [26] The new park, east of the city limits, will offer rail access, improved lots from 1 to 25 acres in size and loan and incentive programs through the county. It will join existing parks on the north and south sides of the city.
Hotel Laack is a historic three-story building in Plymouth, Wisconsin.It was built as a hotel for businessman Henry Christopher Laack in 1892, and designed in the Queen Anne style by architect Charles Hilpertshauser. [2]
'New possibilities' The Grade II* listed building was first owned by William Parker, the mayor of Plymouth from 1601-1602. In 1807 the building was extended to the rear and the front used as a shop.
Plymouth is a town in Sheboygan County, Wisconsin. The population was 3,115 at the time of the 2000 census. It is included in the Sheboygan, Wisconsin Metropolitan Statistical Area. The City of Plymouth is located within the town, but is politically independent. The unincorporated community of New Paris is also located in the town.
Located in eastern Wisconsin, the district comprises much of Sheboygan County and parts of southeast Manitowoc County and northeast Fond du Lac County. It includes the cities of Sheboygan Falls, Plymouth, and Kiel, and the villages of Oostburg, Elkhart Lake, Howards Grove, and Kohler.
Camp Anokijig is a residential youth summer camp located in Plymouth, Wisconsin on Little Elkhart Lake. Founded in 1926 by the Racine YMCA, Camp Anokijig is now independently owned and operated by the non-profit group Friends of Camp Anokijig, and operates year-round.
Rawley Point is named after Peter Rowley, who established a trading post in the area in 1835. [4] [5] Some accounts say that a light was established here as early as 1853, a 75 feet (23 m) tall arrangement of four poles holding a lantern; this was succeeded by a wooden house and tower.