Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
City and town halls on the National Register of Historic Places in Texas (2 P) Pages in category "City halls in Texas" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
The Texas Star Chapter of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas (DRT) discovered this fact from reading a November 1939 article of the Scripps Howard Houston Press and publicized it in 2010. [5] The statue project was dropped by the DRT chapter and the Oran M. Roberts Chapter 440, UDC, stepped in and raised the funds to have the Allen Brothers ...
Six Flags opened in 1961 in Arlington. These photos from the Star-Telegram show long-gone rides, historic moments and fun memories from the 1960s into into 2010s.
The City purchased land for the fourth City Hall between 1911 and 1912 from Eliza Trice, Otto H. Lang and the Sweeney Family. Designed by C. D. Hill & Company in the Beaux-Arts style, plans were drawn up in 1913 and the Spring Fred A. Jones Building Company began construction.
Austin formerly operated its City Hall at 124 West 8th Street. [3] In the 1980s, the City of Austin proposed a 60-acre urban renewal project for Austin's Warehouse District, [4] which would have included a new city hall complex designed by urban planner Denise Scott Brown, along with a new location for the Laguna Gloria art museum, designed by architect Robert Venturi. [5]
Recent job listings tout a mission "to foster freedom of speech and empower individuals to express themselves freely," and to "create a platform for all perspectives"—corporate objectives that ...
The only tax based city income is from a 1% sales tax on taxable goods and services within the city limits. [citation needed] The United States Postal Service Cut and Shoot Post Office is located at 13985 Texas State Highway 105 East. [18] Cut and Shoot includes Groceville, an unincorporated populated place. [19] [20]
The Port of Texas City, operated by the Port of Texas City / Texas City Terminal Railway, is the eighth-largest port in the United States and the third-largest in Texas, with waterborne tonnage exceeding 78 million net tons. The Texas City Terminal Railway Company provides an important land link to the port, handling over 25,000 carloads per year.