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Larimore is a city in Grand Forks County, North Dakota, United States. It is located three miles south of the junction of U.S. Route 2 and North Dakota Highway 18. Larimore is part of the "Grand Forks, ND-MN Metropolitan Statistical Area" or "Greater Grand Forks". The population was 1,260 at the 2020 census. [3]
Larimore may refer to: Larimore (surname) Larimore, North Dakota; Larimore House, historic house in Florence, Alabama; Wilson Larimore House, historic house in St ...
Bakke is a Norwegian surname that may refer to Allan Bakke (born 1940), American anaesthesiologist; Arve Bakke (born 1952), Norwegian trade unionist; Bill Bakke (born 1946), American ski jumper; Bo Bakke (born 1955), Norwegian curler; Brenda Bakke (born 1963), American actress; Christine Bakke (born 1971), American LGBT activist
Larimore is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Emma Larimore (1855–1943), American educator, writer, and editor; Eugene Earle Larimore, a.k.a. Earle Larrimore (1899–1947), American stage and film actor; Thomas Larimore (fl. 1677–1706), English privateer and pirate
Map of the United States with North Dakota highlighted. North Dakota is a state located in the Midwestern United States.All incorporated communities in North Dakota are considered cities, regardless of population; there are no towns, villages, or hamlets in the state.
Bakke Church (Trondheim), a church in Trondheim municipality in Sør-Trøndelag county, Norway; Bakke Church (Vest-Agder), a church in Flekkefjord municipality in ...
The Larimore City Hall is a building in Larimore, North Dakota that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. It "may be described as a two-and-a-half story rectangular structure of red-painted buff brick which rises to a hipped roof."
Wilson L. Larimore had worked as a planter, and he had invented a new design of scythe cradle for cutting hemp. [6] [4] Larimore purchased the land in the 1840s for about $10–$12 per acre, the land was forested meadowland at the confluence of the Mississippi River and Missouri River. [2] By 1850, the Larimore's had owned 14 enslaved people. [2]