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It was the tallest building of any kind in the state until 1962 and the tallest in Fort Wayne until the Fort Wayne National Bank Building (known as National City Center from 1999 to 2009 and as PNC Center since 2009) was built in 1970. [2] Art Deco finial and ornamentation on the Lincoln Bank Tower
Roughly bounded by Norfolk Ave. to the north, Lima Rd., Spy Run Ave. Extended, and N. Clinton St. to the east, Jacobs St. to the south, and the former Penn Central right-of-way to the west 41°06′04″N 85°08′27″W / 41.101111°N 85.140833°W / 41.101111; -85.140833 ( Brookview-Irvington Park Historic
The Beaux-Arts architecture-style structure includes such features as four 25-by-45-foot (7.6 m × 13.7 m) murals by Charles Holloway, twenty-eight different kinds of scagliola covering 15,000 square feet (1,400 m 2), bas-reliefs and art glass.
1122 South Clinton Street: 1860–1887: 192 / 59: 2 Saint Mary's Catholic Church: 1101 Lafayette Street: 1887–1902: 237 / 69: Allen County Courthouse: 715 South Calhoun Street: 1902–1930: 237 / 73: 3 Lincoln Bank Tower: 116 East Berry Street: 1930–1970: 312 / 95: 22 Fort Wayne National Bank Building: 110 West Berry Street: 1970–1982: ...
The Masonic Temple is a historic Masonic Lodge located at Fort Wayne, Indiana.It was designed by architect Charles R. Weatherhogg (1872–1937) and built in 1926. It is a 12 story, rectangular Classical Revival style steel frame building faced with Indiana limestone.
The Rt. Rev. Jackson Kemper, Bishop of the Northwest, visited Fort Wayne for the first time in 1837 in an effort to organize a church. Two years later, he set the Rev. Benjamin Hutchins, formerly of Philadelphia, to organize a church, and Christ Episcopal Church was formally established on May 26, 1839.
The 26 story Fort Wayne National Bank Building was built during 1969 but a series of work strikes caused delays. The general contractor was changed and the building opened in 1970. The building was owned by an Oklahoma company, Transamaerica Investment Group. It was designed to be a bank and office building.
The McColloch-Weatherhogg Double House, also known as the J. Ross McCulloch House, is a historic residential building constructed in 1883 in the Victorian Gothic Revival style at 334-336 E. Berry St., Fort Wayne, Indiana.