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The Exchange

This property has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places

The Exchange - constructed in 1880, the building housed the Bank of Breckenridge, the Engle Bros. Exchange Bank and the Post Office at various times.

Marker is at the intersection ...

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The Old Exchange

Commissioned in 1767

by Act of

The General Assembly of

The British Colony of South Carolina

Completed in 1771

Deeded in 1917

by The United States Congress

to the South Carolina State Society

National Society

Daughters of the American Revolution

to be held in trust for

The Rebecca Motte Chapter DAR

Marker ...

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Stoffela Store/The Railroad Exchange

1899

The best preserved 19th century brick building in Yuma. One of the few structures to survive the flood of 1916. Across the street from the Southern Pacific Roundhouse, it offered groceries, sundries, and a saloon for railroad employees.

Dedicated December 1999, ...

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Exchange at the Presidio

The Mormon Battalion Enters Tucson, 16 December 1846

Near this site on December 16 – 17, 1846, the U.S. 101st Infantry ("Mormon") Battalion under the command of Colonel Philip St. George Cooke peacefully occupied the Presidio San Agustin del Tucson.

Organized in ...

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The First Telephone Exchange South of the Potomac River

The first telephone exchange south

of the Potomac River opened

at this site April 1, 1879

1219 E. Main Street

Old Dominion Chapter

Telephone Pioneers of America

C.&P. Telephone Co. of Va.

1979

Marker is at the intersection of South 13th Street and East Main Street (U.S. 60), ...

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The Buckhorn Exchange

Established 1893

In November 1893, Henry H. “Shorty Scout” Zietz opened a saloon in this building, which was built about 1886 by Neef Brothers Brewery. Known as the Rio Grande Exchange, the saloon catered to the railroaders working across Osage Street ...

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