Results for L
Great Buffalo Trace
On July 16th, 1773, James McAfee, George McAfee, Robert Mc...
Wilbur G. Grant Reservoir of Chester Metropolitan District
Dedicated by resolution of the Commission in recognition o...
Fifth Avenue School
Site of Alabama's First Public School Integration
Op...
Sarah Fairfield Hamilton, 1831-1909
Saco Main Street Museum Walk
Sarah Fairfield Hamilto...
Fort Saco in 1693 / Le Fort Saco en 1693
The Museum in the Streets
The Indians burned the tow...
Glass Mountains or Gloss Mountains
In February 1873 the name Glass Mountains appeared on a ma...
The Chisholm Trail
1865 – 1893
Here passed the Old Cattle Trail, blazed...
Ponca City Library
Ponca City had been in existence for 11 years. She had sch...
Sena Plaza
When Don Juan Sena bought this land in 1796, Santa Fe belo...
A Building Stood Here Before 1680
A building stood here before 1680. It was wrecked in the G...
Results for L
Great Buffalo Trace
On July 16th, 1773, James McAfee, George McAfee, Robert McAfee, James McCoun, Jr., Samuel Adams, and Hancock Taylor, following the Buffalo Trace from Big Bone Lick, crossed the Kentucky River at this point and made the first survey upon it. ...
Wilbur G. Grant Reservoir of Chester Metropolitan District
Dedicated by resolution of the Commission in recognition of the work and service of Senator Wilbur G. Grant in making possible this Reservoir and water system, for the people of Chester County.
E.J. Fowler, Chairman; Robert H. King, Secretary; W.E. ...
Fifth Avenue School
Site of Alabama's First Public School Integration
Opened in 1944, the Fifth Avenue School became the focal point for major educational change on September 9, 1963, when Sonnie Hereford IV became the first African-American student to integrate public schools in Alabama. ...
Sarah Fairfield Hamilton, 1831-1909
Saco Main Street Museum Walk
Sarah Fairfield Hamilton was a founder of the local chapter of the Women's Educational and Industrial Union, and led that organization to create Saco's first kindergarten, a nursery for mill workers' children, summer park programs and ...
Fort Saco in 1693 / Le Fort Saco en 1693
The Museum in the Streets
The Indians burned the township of Saco in 1688. Fort Saco was built on the future site of the Laconia Mills to protect the settlers in 1693. The fort served as stables during the construction of ...
Glass Mountains or Gloss Mountains
In February 1873 the name Glass Mountains appeared on a map issued by the Federal General Land Office. Two years later the same office issued another map calling them the Gloss Mountains. Thus precipitating a conflict that continues to this ...
The Chisholm Trail
1865 – 1893
Here passed the Old Cattle Trail, blazed by Jesse Chisholm, which finally stretched for eight hundred miles from San Antonio, Texas to Abilene, Kansas over which cowboys from the pasture-lands of the great southwest drove their herds to ...
Ponca City Library
Ponca City had been in existence for 11 years. She had schools, churches and even an opera house, but not a library. A group of women from the Twentieth Century Club decided to remedy this and convinced H.C.R. Brodboll to ...
Sena Plaza
When Don Juan Sena bought this land in 1796, Santa Fe belonged to Spain. When Major José D. Sena built this house for his bride Doña Isabel Cabeza de Baca in 1831, Santa Fe belonged to Mexico. In 1846 Santa ...
A Building Stood Here Before 1680
A building stood here before 1680. It was wrecked in the Great Indian Uprising. This house incorporates what remains.
Marker is on East Palace Avenue west of Cathedral Place, on the right when traveling west.
Courtesy hmdb.org