Results for AT
National Historic Landmark- Chief Joseph Battleground of Bears Paw
Site of the battle in which Chief Joseph and more than 400...
National Historic Landmark- Camp Disappointment
A campsite for Meriwether Lewis on his return trip from th...
National Historic Landmark - Butte-Anaconda Historic District
The American Labor History Theme Study, completed in 2003,...
National Historic Landmark- Bannack Historic District
Bannack sprang up almost overnight when gold was discovere...
Florida Department of State, R.A. Gray Building
The Florida Memory Project presents a selection of histori...
Spanish Cattle Ranching
Present-day Gainesville was the center of a large Spanish ...
Matheson House
The Matheson homestead dates from 1857, when Alexander Mat...
Historic Haile Homestead At Kanapaha
One of the oldest houses in Alachua County, the Historic H...
First Gainesville Skirmish - Battle of Gainesville
The first Civil War gunfire in Gainesville's streets came ...
David Yulee and Cotton Wood Plantation
David Levy Yulee was born at St. Thomas, West Indies in 18...
Results for AT
National Historic Landmark- Chief Joseph Battleground of Bears Paw
Site of the battle in which Chief Joseph and more than 400 Nez Perce Indians surrendered to the United States Army (1877). The Bear Paw surrender signaled the close of the Nez Perces' existence as an "independent Indian people." Henceforth, ...
National Historic Landmark- Camp Disappointment
A campsite for Meriwether Lewis on his return trip from the Pacific in 1806. Northernmost point reached by the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Situated on the Blackfeet Reservation.
National Historic Landmark - Butte-Anaconda Historic District
The American Labor History Theme Study, completed in 2003, identified Butte as one of 16 sites that warranted further evaluation as an NHL for its association with labor history. The Butte-Anaconda district represents several themes discussed in the theme study, ...
National Historic Landmark- Bannack Historic District
Bannack sprang up almost overnight when gold was discovered in 1862. It became the first capital of Montana Territory in 1864. Remaining buildings are of frame and log construction, typical of a frontier boom town and reminiscent of its brief ...
Florida Department of State, R.A. Gray Building
The Florida Memory Project presents a selection of historical records that illustrate significant moments in Florida history, educational resources for students of all ages and archival collections for historical research. Among the collections are the Spanish Land Grants, the confirmed ...
Spanish Cattle Ranching
Present-day Gainesville was the center of a large Spanish cattle ranching industry, founded on the labor of native Timuqua Indians, during the 1600s. LaChua, largest of the ranches, was a Spanish corruption of an Indian word, and in turn was ...
Matheson House
The Matheson homestead dates from 1857, when Alexander Matheson brought his family from Camden, South Carolina to establish a home on the Sweetwater Branch at the eastern edge of the new town of Gainesville. The present one and a half ...
Historic Haile Homestead At Kanapaha
One of the oldest houses in Alachua County, the Historic Haile Homestead was the home of Thomas Evans Haile, his wife Esther Serena Chesnut Haile, and 14 of their children. The Hailes came here from Camden, South Carolina in 1854 ...
First Gainesville Skirmish - Battle of Gainesville
The first Civil War gunfire in Gainesville's streets came on February 15, 1864, when a raiding party of 50 men from the 40th Massachusetts Cavalry entered the City to attempt the capture of two trains. The raid was unproductive, for ...
David Yulee and Cotton Wood Plantation
David Levy Yulee was born at St. Thomas, West Indies in 1810. He attended school in Virginia from 1819 until 1827 when he went to Micanopy to work on one of the plantations of his father, Moses Elias Levy. He ...