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Results for Marshall Hall

Marshall Field's

Marshall Field pioneered the department store model during a time of rising consumer optimism. He began his retail career in 1865 when he opened a dry-goods business with well-known Chicago giants Levi Leiter and Potter Palmer. Palmer sold his part ...

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John Marshall House

The John Marshall House, home of the distinguished Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court for 45 years, is a surviving early residential building in a section of Richmond that now has office and hospital buildings. Like many Richmonders ...

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Marshall County/Ohio County

Marshall County

(North Face)

Formed in 1835 from Ohio. Named for Chief Justice John Marshall. In Marshall County is Grave Creek Mound, first among remains left by the unknown race which lived in the Ohio Valley centuries before the white man came.

Ohio ...

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Marshall House

This was the original site of the home of John Marshall, one of the founders and president of the Bank of Illinois, the first bank chartered by the Illinois Territorial Legislature. The charter was issued in 1816. The bank opened ...

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Chief Justice John Marshall

Civil War to Civil Rights

A bronze likeness of Chief Justice John Marshall, visible on your way to the next Heritage Trail sign, keeps watch over John Marshall Park to your right. Marshall is remembered for molding the U.S. Supreme ...

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National Historic Landmark - Humphry Marshall House

National Historic Landmark - Humphry Marshall House

Constructed in 1773-74 and enlarged in 1801, this two-and-a-half story house was the home of Humphrey Marshall (1722-1801), American botanist and author of ARBUSTUM AMERICANUM, the first account of forest trees and shrubs native ...

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Marshall Plantation

A State Historical Marker for the Marshall Plantation Site is located a short distance south of the sugar plantation of Jehu Foster Marshall. From South Carolina, Marshall established his Florida plantation in 1855.

At the outbreak of the war, Marshall returned ...

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John Marshall

Site of the residence of

John Marshall

Chief Justice of the United States

Plaque erected under the auspices of the

Columbia Historical Society

and

the Bar Association

of the District of Columbia.

[Inscription on wall below the marker plaque:]

John ...

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Marshall County Court House

1891

Entered on the

National Register

of Historic Places

Nov. 5, 1974

Marker is on Broadway near 13th Street, on the right when traveling east.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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John Marshall House

Built 1790

The third United States Supreme Court Justice lived here until his death in 1835. His family remained until 1909, and the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities (APVA) opened it to the public in 1913.

Marker is at the ...

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