Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This is the only work in Iowa by the American sculptor Daniel Chester French. [2] The cast bronze sculpture stands along the edge of Fairview Cemetery as a tribute to Ruth Anne Dodge, the wife of railroad magnate Grenville M. Dodge. The 8.5-foot (2.6 m) tall angel holds a water basin and is wreathed in laurel. Its pedestal is a representation ...
Council Bluffs was founded in the late 1840s as Kanesville by Mormons. When Brigham Young called all people of the faith outside of Utah to Salt Lake City in 1852, the community ceased to be majority Mormon. It was renamed Council Bluffs in 1853. The buildings here are among the earliest extant commercial buildings in the city. [2]
Location of Pottawattamie County in Iowa. ... Council Bluffs Free Public Library. January 27, 1999 : 200 Pearl St. Council Bluffs: 11: Council Bluffs Telephone ...
Des Moines Area Council: Des Moines: Iowa: 1927: 1932: Merged with Tri-Valley 778, Tall Corn Area 169 and Central Iowa 658: Tall Corn Area 177 177: Des Moines Council: Des Moines: Iowa: 1914: 1926: Polk and Jasper Counties 177 147: Des Plaines Valley Council: La Grange: Illinois: 1993: 2014: Merged with Calumet Council, Chicago Area Council ...
The request is scheduled to go to the Peoria City Council for a final vote on Aug. 22. This was the second time Empire Lounge LLC was brought before the commission in just under a year.
Roughly bounded by Worth, High School Ave., Clark Ave., and the western side of Bluff St., Council Bluffs, Iowa: Coordinates: Area: 32 acres (13 ha) Architectural style: Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals Late 19th and Early 20th Century American Movements
Aub’s Lounge, a banana bread and poetry lounge near Howard Amon Park in Richland, will offering a free creative writing workshop Saturday, Aug. 17 in conjunction with the Tri-Cities Diversity ...
The Jean and Inez Bregant House, also known as The Little Peoples' House, is a historic building located in Council Bluffs, Iowa, United States. The Bregants were little people who worked as Vaudeville performers. [2] This 1½-story Craftsman was one of the few houses built in the United States for little people. [3]