Mpilsh Berlin, 11 Września

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Mpilsh Berlin, 11 Września OLDEST POLISH NEWSPAPER IN THE NAJSTARSZE CZASOPISMO POLSKIE X, UNITED STATES. STANACH ZJEDNOCZONYCH. _•M- HE WEEK1ŁY •-—, GAZETA POLSKA GAZETA POLSKA w Chicago. (Cazeta Polska w Chicago.) Wychodzi co czwartek każdego tygodnia. APPEARING EVERY THURSDAY. Established. 1873. Subscription only Two Dollars per year. Prenumerata wynosi rocznie: W Stanach Zjednoczonych i Canadzie......................................................... Jf •• W Europie, Azyi, Meksyku, Ameryce Południowej, Afryce i Australii.........M Represents the interests of nearly 1,000,000 Poles residing throughout the UNITED STATES & CANADA. Cena inseratów dla Polaków wynosi: Od wiersza drobnego druku na raz jeden.............................................. C. 50 Rates of advertising: Od cala.............................................................................................. $1 •© One line once............................................................................. -...50 c. Następnie połowę. One inch once ..................................................................... .. $2.oo Bocznie od cala na pierwszej stronicy ........................... «9O •• na drugiej i trzeciej stroMay .............|fO oe SUBSEQUENTLY HALF THE PRICE. {na cswartej stronicy.............. ... ............ | First page...............................................$40.oo Dla obcych cena podwojona. One Inch one year < Second and third pages...................... 20.no POSZUKIWANIA krewnych lub znajomych nie wynoszące cala druku na nu ( Fourth page........................................... 30.on jeden 50 centów, następnie połowę. The “Gazeta Polska,” read in all the States and Territories of the Union, in POSZUKIWANIA na raz jeden jak i ogłoszenia o zmianie mieszkania Ine Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Chile, Peru, in France, Great Britain, Germany, Austria, założeniu jakiego przedsiębiorstwa dla abonentów naprzód płatnych, bezpłatni ; Serbia, Dunabian Principalities-* Turkey, irt Asia, Africa & Australia and m all Pienifdze winne być przesyłane przez P. O. Money Order. Express, lub Che provinces of ancient Poland; is a leully first-class advertising medium- liście registrowanym. Rękopisy nie zwracają się. All communications ought to be addressed: Wszelkie listy, korespondeneye i pieni|d^e winne być adresowane*. V. Dyuiewicz. 532 Noble Street, Chicago, III. IV. Dyniewicz, 532 Noble Street, Chicago, III. The printing Office of “Gazeta Polska” executes the cheapest, promptest W drukarni “Gazety Polskiej" wykon*ij$ się wszelkie roboty, wchodzące w And most correct printing ?.» the Polish language. aakres drukarski, po najtańszej cenie. Jeb printing in all modern languages neatly executed. Chicago, Illinois, Czwartek 18go Września, 1890 roku ENTERED A 2 THE POST-OFFIf^^ 'AGO, ILLINOIS, A8 BECOND-CLA88 MATTEL. EKANCYA. areszcie dostało rowie zdymisyonowani dla udziału zgodzoną sumę dopłacają, to już o Franciszek Kruszyński ) Podchorą- kszej części z miękkiej ziemi j FIRST w ruchu rewolucyjnym otrzymali KSIĄŻKĄ Bordeaux, 11 września. Rada ataku bagnetami. złem miejscu mowa być nie może. Wincenty Wasilewski ( żowie miałkiego piasku i tylko tu i o. Telegramy Zagraniczne. U’rz.i /kierzy jeszcze się znów swe miejsca. Nie można wąt­ Obok tego w tych koloniach Pol­ Jak. Snyder, Do chorągwi krajowej. wdzie z odłamów’ skał, a nie zaś z jenerał na departamentu de Gironde pić, że zwycięztwo nad rewolucyj­ NATIONAL BANK Szlązk. żąda, aby rząd zniósł zakaz przy­ kilku przcbi- skich mamy 2 kościoły wyłącznie Wiktor Chudzięski, Sekr. materyału mocnego i bezpieczniej­ ozbiegli się. Oba­ ną partyą w Buenos Ayres trzeba Polskie, 2 szkoły, 6 sztorów, 4 552 East 14 str., Erie, Pa. szego dla prac tunelowych. OF CHICAGO. Berlin, 10 września. W Ry-- wozu amerykańskiej peklowiny. wiajc vii rozruchów. przypisać stałości wojskowo tior- Post Ofisy, Klasztor Wielebnych bniku na Górnym Szlązku wybuchł Naczelny inżynier Hobson obie­ PIERWSZY Paryż, 13 września. Niedobór — Dzisiaj przybjło jeszcze wię­ ganizowanej policyi liczącej 3000 Ojców Reformatów z 16 członkami, tyfus. pszenicy we Francyi wynosi w cał, że usunie te przeszkody. Czte­ cej wojska, ponieważ tłumy wciąż członków. Gdyby polieya była za- Bractwo Różańca Bw., Gospodarzy Chicago, 15 września, 1890 r. ry lata potrzebował dla wypraco­ tym roku 5,329,763 buszle (1,881,- jeszcze grożą burmistrzowi. Are­ wachala się na chwilę, to całe woj­ św. Izydora, oto co mamy, to Ro­ NARODOWY BANK na pustyni świata tego KOSY A 093 hektolitrów) w porównaniu z Na posiedzeniu delegatów Towa­ wania planów’ olbrzymiego tego sztowano 25 ludzi, którzy w wczo­ sko byłoby przeszło do rewolucyo- dakom jeśli chcą wiedzieć podajemy. dzieła, poczem takowe zostało roz­ jęczącej, Petersburg, 10 września. Car przeszłorocznym plonem. naryuszów. rzystw zajmujących się urządzaniem w cinciGo. rajszych rozruchach brali udział. Wprawdzie niektórzy Rodacy, co rocznych obchodów narodowych, poczęte przez kompanią „Grand N arożnik Monroe i Dearborn ulic. i inni członkowie carscy przybyli SZ HAJCARl A. Dopiero po licznych groźbach, że wyobrażenia o farmach nie mają, u> tnocnef oprnwie z czeru-oiiemi do Łucka nad Styrem, aby brać u- AMERYKA ŚRODKOWA. które się odbyło w dniu 14go Trunk” kolei. KAPITAL $3,000,000. l>rze<i<nni w cenie $ 1.00 kan- wojsko bidzie strzelało, rozbiegli Mexico, 12 września. Z Salva­ sądzą że jak się osiedli na farmie września w hali ob. Ant. Groen- Z powodu natury gruntu nie by­ dział w ćwiczeniach wojskowych w Berno, 11 września. W się ludzie. Plakaty burmistrza, w to ta zaraz go obsypie złotem. WEKSLE. tonie Tessin wskutek r>żnicy żą­ dor donoszą, że jen. Ezela jedno­ walda na Holt ave. w pobliżu ło można pomyśleć o murze tune­ Berlin — Niemcy, Wiedeń — Austrya, Peters­ zo t'‘ła wydrukowaną i jest owej okolicy się odbywających dań co do zmiany konstytucyi po­ których żąda, aby ludzie pozostali głośnie wyjąwszy jednego głosu Wprawdzie farma wyda złote ziar­ Blackhawk ulicy, obrano na nastę­ lowym z kamieni. Dla tego wybu­ burg — Rosya i wszystkie inne europejskie kraje ■— Czterech oficerów armii, po­ w ich domach, zostały zdarte. Wie­ no, ale je trzeba z głębi wydobyć, ’ako też na wszystkie kursujące pieniądze. do nabycia w między nimi jenerała majora, wy­ wstały rozruchy. Trzech członków został obrany prezydentem rzecz.y- pny rok urzędowy następujących dowano go za pomocą „hydrauli­ LISTA ZASTAWNE rządu zostało uwięzionych, jeden czorem wojsko kilka razy musiało pospolitej. Rozchodzi się pogłoska a to osiągniemy przez odpowiedni c^Rnków urzędnikami: słano do Syberyi, ponieważ ukra- użyć bagnetów, aby utrzymać ko- nakład i wylanie nieco potu, Kto cznej tarczy tunelowej” z obręczy dh użytku podróżnych w wszystkie części KSIĘGARNI POLSKIEJ dli pieniądze i inną własność rządu. człowiek został zabity wystrzałem o wojnie pomiędzy Honduras i Adam Majewski, Prezydent z lanego żelaza, której już dawniej świata, ściąganie spadkobierstw (schodów)' i z rewolweru a dwóch ubiegło. Rząd munikac.yę po ulicach. Nicaragua. z małym zasobem puszcza się na wszelkich należności z Polski, Niemiec, A astry i, — W Równie na Wołyniu przed­ farmy, czy tu, czy gdzieindziej ma Marcin Mróz, Wiceprezydent przy podobnych pracach używano. Rosyi i wszystkich europejskich krajów za bar­ Southampton, 11 września. Lecz nie używano tego sposobu w sięwzięto obszerne środki bezpie­ związkowy wysłął dwa batal-ony La Li bert ad, 12 września. z początku biedę i takim bieda lat Wiktor Karłowski, Sekretarz dzo umiarkowany komisyy. piechoty na miejsce rozruchów. Strajkierzy zachowują się dzisiaj Reszta wojska salvadorskiego li­ Antoni Groenwald, Skarbnik. tak wnelkich rozmiarach, jak wła­ Zarząd. t. mm, czeństwa dla ochrony cara. Drogi spokojnie. parę oknem zaglądać będzie, a są obsadzone wojskiem. Podróżni Berno, 12 września. Rewolu­ czącego 12,0Ó0 ludzi powróciło przecież każdy rozsądny " wie, że Wybrano komitet, który się ma śnie przy St. Clair tunelu. Postę­ SAMUEL M. NICKERSON LYMAN ). GAGE msz PA NI A pod naczelnictwem jenerała Górna powano w następujący sposób: PREZYDENT. WICEPREZYDENT 532 IVOBL.E ST., muszą się poddać rewizyi. Żadne­ cjoniści w kantonie Tessin zamia­ każdy początek jest trudny, czy w zająć wybraniem stósownej hali na Madryt, 10 września. W Ma­ z granicy do stolicy. H. R. SYMONDS H. M. KINGMAN mu Galicyanowi nie, wolno prze­ nowali rząd prowizoryczny i zwo­ handlu, czy w rzemiośle, czy też obchód rocznicy powatan-a Listopa­ Tarczę tunelową, która ma śre­ CHICAGO, ILL. ladze i sąsiednich miejscowościach KASYER. PODKASYER. kroczyć granicy. Mieszkańcy Ró­ łali wiec ludu, który zniósł tera­ Na dzisiejszej sesyi kongres zwo­ w gospodarstwie, a kto tego nie dowego, który się odbędzie dnia dnicę o sześć cali większą od obrę­ R. J. STREET, As. KASYERA. źniejszy rząd i rozwiązał „wielką dało się dzisiaj uczuć silne trzęsie­ łany przez rząd prowizoryczny za­ zna nic nie zna. Są w kolonii na­ 29 Listopada. Ten sam komitet czy z lanego żelaza posuu’ano w wna nawet muszą być zaopatrzeni nie ziemi. w perraisye policyjnć i nie wolno radę” i rozporządził, że w niedzie­ mianował jenerała Ezeta prowizo­ szej osadnicy co byli na farmach wybierze mówców na tę okazyę. ziemi za pomocą hydraulicznej ma­ Kto jeszcze nie ma, niech so­ lę mają się odbyć ogólne wybory. Z miasta Valencia donoszą dzi­ rycznym prezydentem i rozporzą­ w wielu różnych innjth państwach, szyny. Każde uderzenie posuwało Polska Apteka im podczas ćwiczeń wojskowych Wszelkie Towarzystwa, których opuszczać domów. Powstańcy są górą w Lugano, Men- siaj o 24 nowych zachorowaniach dził, aby w ■ grudniu odbyły się w najwięcej wychwalonych
Recommended publications
  • Final Report to Action Baybrook Fall 2020 Research
    Final Report to Action Baybrook Fall 2020 Research Student Researchers: Treanna Alston, Laura Bayona-Roman, Samantha Fries, Perry Gilchrist, Erin Hall-Singleton, Maya June, Fariha Khalid, Anna Lettieri, Heather Moore, Nicholas Nguyen, Keller Trotman, and Courtney Walker Faculty Member: John Schumacher, PhD, SOCY 680 Applied Sociology Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Public Health University of Maryland Baltimore County Community Partner: Action Baybrook Applied Sociology Part 1 Overview Presentation Slides from December 2020 ABB Presentation Part 2 Final Report Action Baybrook Phone Survey Residents’ Perceptions of their Neighborhood in Brooklyn, Maryland Part 3 Research Report Overview of Brooklyn/Curtis Bay Reports Fall 2020 Part 1 Overview of Presentation Slides to ABB Meeting Projects, Progress, and Perceptions Presenters: Samantha Fries, Perry Gilchrist, Maya June, Fariha Khalid, John Schumacher, PhD SOCIOLOGY 680: Applied Sociology Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Public Health University of Maryland Baltimore County December 8, 2020 SOCY 680 Student Contributors Treanna Laura Bayona- Samantha Perry Gilchrist Alston Roman Fries Erin Hall- Maya June Fariha Khalid Anna Lettieri Singleton Heather Nicholas Keller Courtney Moore Nguyen Trotman Walker Introduction Research Objectives: • Synthesize existing reports and recommendations • Identify assets and issues in Brooklyn • Capture stakeholders’ perceptions and concerns Key Deliverables: • Synthesis of 35 Brooklyn Reports • GIS Maps of 311/911 Call Data • Evaluation
    [Show full text]
  • History of Ethnic Enclaves in Canada
    Editor Roberto Perm York University Edition Coordinator Michel Guénette Library and Archives Canada Copyright by The Canadian Historical Association Ottawa, 2007 Published by the Canadian Historical Association with the support the Department of Canadian Heritage, Government of Canada ISBN 0-88798-266-2 Canada's Ethnic Groups ISSN 1483-9504 Canada's Ethnic Groups (print) ISSN 1715-8605 Canada's Ethnic Groups (Online) Jutekichi Miyagawa and his four children, Kazuko, Mitsuko, Michio and Yoshiko, in front of his grocery store, the Davie Confectionary, Vancouver, BC. March 1933 Library and Archives Canada I PA-103 544 Printed by Bonanza Printing & Copying Centre Inc. A HISTORY OF ETHNIC ENCLAVES IN CANADA John Zucchi All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including inlormation storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the Canadian Historical Association. Ottawa, 2007 Canadian Historical Association Canada s Ethnic Group Series Booklet No. 31 A HISTORY OF ETHNIC ENCLAVES IN CANADA INTRODUCTION When we walk through Canadian cities nowadays, it is clear that ethnicity and multicul- turalism are alive and well in many neighbourhoods from coast to coast. One need only amble through the gates on Fisgard Street in Victoria or in Gastown in Vancouver to encounter vibrant Chinatowns, or through small roadways just off Dundas Street in Toronto to happen upon enclaves of Portuguese from the Azores; if you wander through the Côte- des-Neiges district in Montreal you will discover a polyethnic world - Kazakhis, Russian Jews, Vietnamese, Sri Lankans or Haitians among many other groups - while parts ot Dartmouth are home to an old African-Canadian community.
    [Show full text]
  • HISTORY of STREET GANGS in the UNITED STATES By: James C
    Bureau of Justice Assistance U.S. Department of Justice NATIO N AL GA ng CE N TER BULLETI N No. 4 May 2010 HISTORY OF STREET GANGS IN THE UNITED STATES By: James C. Howell and John P. Moore Introduction The first active gangs in Western civilization were reported characteristics of gangs in their respective regions. by Pike (1873, pp. 276–277), a widely respected chronicler Therefore, an understanding of regional influences of British crime. He documented the existence of gangs of should help illuminate key features of gangs that operate highway robbers in England during the 17th century, and in these particular areas of the United States. he speculates that similar gangs might well have existed in our mother country much earlier, perhaps as early as Gang emergence in the Northeast and Midwest was the 14th or even the 12th century. But it does not appear fueled by immigration and poverty, first by two waves that these gangs had the features of modern-day, serious of poor, largely white families from Europe. Seeking a street gangs.1 More structured gangs did not appear better life, the early immigrant groups mainly settled in until the early 1600s, when London was “terrorized by a urban areas and formed communities to join each other series of organized gangs calling themselves the Mims, in the economic struggle. Unfortunately, they had few Hectors, Bugles, Dead Boys … who found amusement in marketable skills. Difficulties in finding work and a place breaking windows, [and] demolishing taverns, [and they] to live and adjusting to urban life were equally common also fought pitched battles among themselves dressed among the European immigrants.
    [Show full text]
  • How Baltimore Became the New York of the South: European Immigration Between 1867-1914 and the Development of Ethnic Neighborhoods Around the Port of Baltimore
    HOW BALTIMORE BECAME THE NEW YORK OF THE SOUTH: EUROPEAN IMMIGRATION BETWEEN 1867-1914 AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF ETHNIC NEIGHBORHOODS AROUND THE PORT OF BALTIMORE A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of The School of Continuing Studies and of The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Liberal Studies By Ron Cassie Georgetown University Washington, D.C. April 15, 2016 HOW BALTIMORE BECAME THE NEW YORK OF THE SOUTH: EUROPEAN IMMIGRATION BETWEEN 1867-1914 AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF ETHNIC NEIGHBORHOODS AROUND THE PORT OF BALTIMORE Ron Cassie, MA Mentor: Charles Edward Yonkers, JD ABSTRACT Located 40 miles south of the Mason-Dixon Line, Baltimore was the fourth – largest city in the U.S. and the largest in the South before the Civil War, serving as the economic hub of the Mid-Atlantic region. Although Baltimore was always home to a significant free black population, the city was centered in a largely slave-holding state. Although Maryland choose neither Union or Confederate sides during the Civil War before President Abraham Lincoln sent federal troops into Baltimore, the city’s port business in the middle of the 19th century focused on the rural exports of tobacco, cotton, grain, and flour; ship building; and the importation of sugar. Politically, economically, and culturally, Maryland was, at the time, a Southern state full of plantations from the Eastern Shore across the state’s central area around Baltimore. The city, however, was more a blend of white Southern and white Northern influences, a marginalized African-American citizenry, a significant group of German immigrants, and more recent Irish arrivals at the start of the Civil War.
    [Show full text]
  • Return of Private Foundation
    l efile GRAPHIC p rint - DO NOT PROCESS As Filed Data - DLN: 93491355002001 Return of Private Foundation OMB No 1545-0052 Form 990 -PF or Section 4947 ( a)(1) Nonexempt Charitable Trust Treated as a Private Foundation 201 0 DepartmentRevenue Note . The foundation may be able to use a copy of this return to satisfy state reporting requirements Internall Revenue Service For calendar year 2010, or tax year beginning 03-01-2010 , and ending 02-28-2011 G Check all that apply r'Initial return r'Initial return of a former public charity r'Final return r-Amended return r'Address change r'Name change Name of foundation A Employer identification number THE HARRY AND JEANETTE WEINBERG FOUNDATION INC 52-6037034 Number and street (or P 0 box number if mail is not delivered to street address ) Room/ suite U ieiepnone number ( see page 1u of the instructions) 7 PARK CENTER COURT (410) 654-8500 City or town , state, and ZIP code C If exemption application is pending, check here F OWINGS MILLS, MD 21117 D 1. Foreign organizations , check here F H Check type of organization I' Section 501(c)(3) exempt private foundation 2. Foreign organizations meeting the 85% test, r- check here and attach computation Section 4947( a)(1) nonexempt charitable trust Other taxable private foundation 3 Accounting method F Cash I' Accrual E If private foundation status was terminated I Fair market value of all assets at end un d er section 507 ( b )( 1 )( A), c h ec k h ere F o f y e a r (from Part I I, col.
    [Show full text]
  • Extensions of Remarks
    April 28, 1976 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS 11689 Congress with respect to the structure of the ance requirements in those States in which establishment of State energy research, de­ common carrier telecommunications industry the vehicle will be operated. velopment, and demonstration institutes. rendering services in interstate and foreign Directs the Secretary of the Treasury to Authorizes financial assistance for specified commerce. Grants additional authority to forward certain identifying information on energy research projects of such institutes. the Federal Communications Commission to such vehicles to the Secretary of Transporta­ Directs the Administrator to establish a authorize mergers of carriers when deemed tion who shall forward such information to plan, subject to Congressional review, for to be in the public interest. Reaffirms the the appropriate State agency responsible for the establishment of a Cooperative Energy authority of the States to regulate terminal motor vehicle registration. Conservation Extension Service. H.R. 13087. April 7, 1976. Public Works and station equipment used for telephone H.R. 13089. April 7, 1976. Interstate and exchange service. Requires the Federal Com­ and Transportation. Amends the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to require the Foreign Commerce. Amends the Uniform munications Commission to make specified Time Act of 1966 with respect to the period findings in connection with Commission ac­ United States to pay the entire cost of lateral of daylight savings time. tions authorizing specialized carriers. sewer connections between federally-assisted H.R. 13086. April 7, 1976. Ways and Means. collection systems and single-family resi­ Exempts from such act any State or a part Amends the Tariff Schedules of the United dences of low-income elderly persons age 65 of any State which has enacted a State law States to require proof of automobile prop­ or older.
    [Show full text]
  • Re-Mapping Chinese America from the Margins, 1875-1943 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment Of
    Race, Space, and Gender: Re-mapping Chinese America from the Margins, 1875-1943 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Adrienne Ann Winans, M.A. Graduate Program in History The Ohio State University 2015 Dissertation Committee: Judy Tzu-Chun Wu, Advisor Kevin Boyle Lilia Fernández Katherine Marino Copyright by Adrienne Ann Winans 2015 Abstract This dissertation interrogates the experiences of Chinese immigrant and Chinese American women and families during the era of Chinese exclusion. The enforcement of anti-Chinese immigration laws, starting in the late 19th century, initiated the creation of the U.S. as a “gatekeeping nation-state.” Scholars have examined the boundaries formed by exclusion of Asians and Asian Americans from the social and physical spaces of U.S. society. In this work, an intersectional analysis of Chinese immigrant and Chinese American women and families complicates existing narratives of U.S. immigration, race, and gender. By focusing on women’s experiences as boundary-crossers who challenged community prescriptions and anti-Chinese policies, this work shifts the historiography away from male, working-class immigrants. In its broadest arguments, this dissertation 1) constructs a social history of Chinese America using the experiences of transnational students, interracial families, and Chinese American women who were expatriated via marriage and then re-claimed their U.S. citizenship; 2) argues that these women’s gendered negotiation of state power changed the ways in which white immigration officials perceived them, a ground-level foreshadowing of post-World War II raced and gendered immigration dynamics; 3) challenges the normative idea of Chinese America as coastal, urban Chinatown space and co-ethnic community; and 4) re-maps Chinese ii America through regional mobility and networks, focusing on understudied areas of the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic.
    [Show full text]
  • United States Department of the Interior
    United States Department of the Interior NATIONAL PARK SERVICE 2280 National Register of Historic Places 1201 "I" (Eye) Street, NW Washin gton D.C. 20005 The Director of the National Park Service is pleased to announce actions on the following properties for the National Register of Historic Places. For further information contact Edson Beall at (202) 354-2255 or E-mail: [email protected] Visit our web site at http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 12/26/07 THROUGH 12/28/07 KEY: State, County, Property Name, Address/Boundary, City, Vicinity, Reference Number, NHL, Action, Date, Multiple Name COLORADO, OTERO COUNTY Adobe Stables, Arkansas Valley Fairgrounds, 800 N 9th St., Rocky Ford, 07001305, LISTED, 12/26/07 (New Deal Resources on Colorado's Eastern Plains MPS) COLORADO, PHILLIPS COUNTY Phillips County Courthouse, 221 Interocean Ave., Holyoke, 07001306, LISTED, 12/28/07 (New Deal Resources on Colorado's Eastern Plains MPS) GEORGIA, BACON COUNTY Bacon County School, 504 N Pierce St., Alma, 07001307, LISTED, 12/26/07 INDIANA, MONROE COUNTY University Courts Historic District, Roughly bounded by 7th St., Indiana Ave., 10th St. & Woodlawn Ave., Bloomington, 07001308, LISTED, 12/26/07 KANSAS, MARION COUNTY Meehan, P.H., House, Address Restricted, Tampa, 07001227, LISTED, 11/28/07 MARYLAND, ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY First Avenue School, 13 SW 1st Ave., Glen Burnie, 07001309, LISTED, 12/26/07 MARYLAND, ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY Richland, 195 Harwood Rd., Harwood vicinity, 07001310, LISTED, 12/26/07 MARYLAND, BALTIMORE INDEPENDENT CITY Polish Home Hall, 4416 Fairhaven Ave., Baltimore (Independent City), 07001311, LISTED, 12/26/07 MASSACHUSETTS, FRANKLIN COUNTY South School, 6 Schoolhouse Rd., Schutesbury, 07001312, LISTED, 12/26/07 MINNESOTA, HENNEPIN COUNTY Eitel Hospital, 1367 Willow St., Minneapolis, 07001313, LISTED, 12/26/07 NPS Form 10-900 OMB No.
    [Show full text]
  • Maryland Historical Trust
    Report to the Governor and the General Assembly 2009 Annual Report of the Maryland Historical Trust Maryland Department of Planning Maryland Historical Trust Maryland Department of Planning 100 Community Place Crownsville, MD 21032-2023 410-514-7600 www.planning.maryland.gov www.MHT.maryland.gov Martin O’Malley, Governor Anthony G. Brown, Lieutenant Governor Richard E. Hall, Secretary Matthew J. Power, Deputy Secretary Executive Summary The Department of Planning (MDP) is pleased to transmit the 2009 Annual Report of the Maryland Historical Trust (MHT), including information on the MHT Loan Program, the MHT Historic Preservation Grant Program, and the MHT Museum Assistance Program. This report is submitted in accordance with the requirements of State Finance Article §5A-318(c)(16), State Finance Article §5A-327(m), State Finance Article §5A-328(l), and State Finance Article §5A-353(c). Maryland Historical Trust programs promote the preservation and interpretation of historic resources and cultural traditions throughout the State. Throughout the year, MHT staff continued emphasizing growth management, neighborhood revitalization, and economic development through heritage tourism as agency priorities. Noteworthy activities for 2009 include: MHT Receives Preserve America Grant to Make Historic Property Data Available on the Internet Under a $78,000 federal Preserve America grant, MHT GIS staff will to provide internet access to the entire updated library of documentation contained in the Maryland Inventory, including National Register forms, determinations of eligibility, and inventory form text, photos, and maps. Making these records available through the internet will serve to directly educate the general public about the historic resources in their own communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Phillips County Courthouse National Register
    United States Department of the Interior NATIONAL PARK SERVICE 2280 National Register of Historic Places 1201 "I" (Eye) Street, NW Washin gton D.C. 20005 The Director of the National Park Service is pleased to announce actions on the following properties for the National Register of Historic Places. For further information contact Edson Beall at (202) 354-2255 or E-mail: [email protected] Visit our web site at http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 12/26/07 THROUGH 12/28/07 KEY: State, County, Property Name, Address/Boundary, City, Vicinity, Reference Number, NHL, Action, Date, Multiple Name COLORADO, OTERO COUNTY Adobe Stables, Arkansas Valley Fairgrounds, 800 N 9th St., Rocky Ford, 07001305, LISTED, 12/26/07 (New Deal Resources on Colorado's Eastern Plains MPS) COLORADO, PHILLIPS COUNTY Phillips County Courthouse, 221 Interocean Ave., Holyoke, 07001306, LISTED, 12/28/07 (New Deal Resources on Colorado's Eastern Plains MPS) GEORGIA, BACON COUNTY Bacon County School, 504 N Pierce St., Alma, 07001307, LISTED, 12/26/07 INDIANA, MONROE COUNTY University Courts Historic District, Roughly bounded by 7th St., Indiana Ave., 10th St. & Woodlawn Ave., Bloomington, 07001308, LISTED, 12/26/07 KANSAS, MARION COUNTY Meehan, P.H., House, Address Restricted, Tampa, 07001227, LISTED, 11/28/07 MARYLAND, ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY First Avenue School, 13 SW 1st Ave., Glen Burnie, 07001309, LISTED, 12/26/07 MARYLAND, ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY Richland, 195 Harwood Rd., Harwood vicinity, 07001310, LISTED, 12/26/07 MARYLAND, BALTIMORE INDEPENDENT CITY Polish Home Hall, 4416 Fairhaven Ave., Baltimore (Independent City), 07001311, LISTED, 12/26/07 MASSACHUSETTS, FRANKLIN COUNTY South School, 6 Schoolhouse Rd., Schutesbury, 07001312, LISTED, 12/26/07 MINNESOTA, HENNEPIN COUNTY Eitel Hospital, 1367 Willow St., Minneapolis, 07001313, LISTED, 12/26/07 NPS Form 10-900 OMB No.
    [Show full text]
  • URCAD 2013 Student Abstracts
    URCAD 2013 Student Abstracts In Alphabetical Order by Presenting Author How to read the abstracts Title of Presentation Name of Student Author, Co-Investigator, Co-Investigator Name of mentor, rank of mentor, department of mentor Student presenter names are in bold. Non-presenting co-investigators are not in bold All investigators are assumed to be from UMBC unless otherwise noted. Mentor information is shown below author information, in roman type. If the mentor is not from UMBC, an institution name is given. The body of the abstract provides information about the student’s research. Funding information is provided in italics below the body of the abstract. We encourage you to visit the students’ presentations throughout the day. Presentation times and locations begin on page six of this booklet. 1 Using Student Designed Extra Credit to Increase Student Academic Achievement Jason S. Adams Jonathan Singer, Associate Professor, Department of Education Students who find themselves uninterested in, and disengaged from, the material being taught in the classroom may be more prone to suffer academically than students who are more invested in the curriculum being taught. This study investigated what effect empowering students to design their own extra credit projects would have on student engagement, motivation, and subsequently academic achievement. Data was collected from the entire inclusive population of eighth grade students in a Baltimore City middle school, 65 students in total, during the third quarter of the 2012-13 school year. The methodology of this study included periodic encouragement of the entire eighth grade student body to design their own extra credit projects in order to enhance their academic achievement.
    [Show full text]
  • Preserving Places, Making Spaces in Baltimore: Seeing the Connections
    JUHXXX10.1177/0096144213516072KingJournal of Urban History 516072research-article2014 King Special Section: The Place of the City Journal of Urban History 2014, Vol 40(3) 425 –449 Preserving Places, Making Spaces in © 2014 SAGE Publications Reprints and permissions: Baltimore: Seeing the Connections sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/0096144213516072 of Research, Teaching, and Service juh.sagepub.com as Justice P. Nicole King1 Abstract Effective place-based learning challenges the traditional understanding of academic service. The present article demonstrates that students and scholars can engage and collaborate with communities to identify, analyze, and respond to pressing social problems. Service, in this context, is integrated with teaching and research. This article traces the development of an applied research course at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. Students and professors conducted research on the neighborhoods that compose Baybrook, an industrial community in the southern corner of Baltimore City. The course demonstrates that public history methods can create dynamic social spaces in which scholars and residents work together to frame questions, conduct research, and preserve urban places. Keywords urban history, deindustrialization, Baltimore City, civic engagement, environmental justice On Saturday May 19, 2011, Catherine Benicewicz arrived at the Polish Home Hall, a place she knows well. Her family came from Poland to Curtis Bay, a factory town across the river from Baltimore City, in 1910. She was born in 1918 as Curtis Bay was on the cusp of being annexed from Anne Arundel County into the city of Baltimore. Her family moved to Filbert Street, where the Polish Home Hall is located, in 1922 when she was just four years old.
    [Show full text]