National Indian Gaming Commission Gaming Tribe Report (Sorted by State)
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Riverfront Master Plan
Village of Plainfield Riverfront Master Plan Prepared by Hitchcock Design Group in association with Business Districts, Inc., Hey & Associates and Civiltech Engineering June 18, 2007 Acknowledgements VILLAGE OF PLAINFIELD BOARD OF TRUSTEES James A. Waldorf, President Michael Collins (Former Trustee) Jeffrey Dement (Chairperson-Steering Committee) Paul Fay Bill Lamb Walter O. Manning Jim Racich Larry Vaupel (elected May 2007) PLAINFIELD PARK DISTRICT BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS Larry Newton, President (term 2007-2009) John Primiano, Vice President Michael Brann (elected May 2007) Wayne Ford (Former Commissioner) John Wilson Michelle Kelly VILLAGE OF PLAINFIELD STAFF Chris Minick, Village Administrator James F. Testin, AICP, Community Development Director (Steering Committee) Michael S. Garrigan, AICP, Village Planner Michael J. Schwarz, AICP, Planner (Steering Committee) Ken Blaauw, Village Engineer Eric Gallt, Traffic Engineer Allen Persons, Director of Public Works PLAINFIELD TOWNSHIP PARK DISTRICT STAFF Greg Bott, Executive Director (Steering Committee) Cameron Bettin, Superintendent of Planning (Steering Committee) OTHER STAKEHOLDERS AND PARTICIPANTS MainStreet Plainfield, Inc. Plainfield Economic Partnership Plainfield Area Chamber of Commerce Plainfield Historical Society Baxter & Woodman, Village Consulting Engineer Conservation Foundation Conservation Plainfield 1 Executive Summary 2 Introduction: Approach 4 Opportunity Analysis 5 Riverfront Vision 6 Strategic Approach: Summary 8 Strategic Approach: Central Riverfront District 20 Strategic -
Surnames in Bureau of Catholic Indian
RAYNOR MEMORIAL LIBRARIES Montana (MT): Boxes 13-19 (4,928 entries from 11 of 11 schools) New Mexico (NM): Boxes 19-22 (1,603 entries from 6 of 8 schools) North Dakota (ND): Boxes 22-23 (521 entries from 4 of 4 schools) Oklahoma (OK): Boxes 23-26 (3,061 entries from 19 of 20 schools) Oregon (OR): Box 26 (90 entries from 2 of - schools) South Dakota (SD): Boxes 26-29 (2,917 entries from Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions Records 4 of 4 schools) Series 2-1 School Records Washington (WA): Boxes 30-31 (1,251 entries from 5 of - schools) SURNAME MASTER INDEX Wisconsin (WI): Boxes 31-37 (2,365 entries from 8 Over 25,000 surname entries from the BCIM series 2-1 school of 8 schools) attendance records in 15 states, 1890s-1970s Wyoming (WY): Boxes 37-38 (361 entries from 1 of Last updated April 1, 2015 1 school) INTRODUCTION|A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U| Tribes/ Ethnic Groups V|W|X|Y|Z Library of Congress subject headings supplemented by terms from Ethnologue (an online global language database) plus “Unidentified” and “Non-Native.” INTRODUCTION This alphabetized list of surnames includes all Achomawi (5 entries); used for = Pitt River; related spelling vartiations, the tribes/ethnicities noted, the states broad term also used = California where the schools were located, and box numbers of the Acoma (16 entries); related broad term also used = original records. Each entry provides a distinct surname Pueblo variation with one associated tribe/ethnicity, state, and box Apache (464 entries) number, which is repeated as needed for surname Arapaho (281 entries); used for = Arapahoe combinations with multiple spelling variations, ethnic Arikara (18 entries) associations and/or box numbers. -
A Tradition of Excellence
A Tradition of Excellence April 7 2017 Via Electronic Mail Shirquita Sharrock Data Acquisition Specialist SmartProcure Direct: 954-834-6739 | Support: 888-998-6348 Email: [email protected] | www.smartprocure.us 700 W. Hillsboro Blvd. Suite 4-100, Deerfield Beach, FL 33441 RE: FOIA 17-15 – Response to FOIA Request Thank you for writing to Hinsdale Township High School District 86 with your request for information pursuant to the Illinois Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 ILCS 140/1 et seq., received on March 29 2017. You requested the following: SmartProcure is submitting a commercial FOIA request to the Hinsdale Township High School District 86 for any and all purchasing records from 2016-10-13 to current. The request is limited to readily available records without physically copying, scanning or printing paper documents. Any editable electronic document is acceptable. The specific information requested from your record keeping system is: 1. Purchase order number. If purchase orders are not used a comparable substitute is acceptable, i.e., invoice, encumbrance, or check number 2. Purchase date 3. Line item details (Detailed description of the purchase) 4. Line item quantity 5. Line item price 6. Vendor ID number, name, address, contact person and their email address 7. What is the beginning of your fiscal year? Enclosed is documentation responsive to your request. Please note that District purchasing information is available through the District’s Transparency Portal on our website at d86.hinsdale86.org. Select Transparency Portal then select Financial Information then select Check Register to see District purchases by month. [http://d86.hinsdale86.org/Page/923] District purchases are also presented to the Board of Education for approval at their monthly Regular Action Meeting. -
To Shoot the Last Stand at Chimney Rock, the Sass 2007 Western Regional!
MercantileEXCITINGSee section our NovemberNovemberNovember 2001 2001 2001 CowboyCowboyCowboy ChronicleChronicleChronicle(starting on PagepagePagePage 90) 111 The Cowboy Chronicle~ The Monthly Journal of the Single Action Shooting Society ® Vol. 21 No. 4 © Single Action Shooting Society, Inc. April 2008 IT WOULD BEHOOVE YOU – TO SHOOT THE LAST STAND AT CHIMNEY ROCK, THE SASS 2007 WESTERN REGIONAL! By Frederick Jackson Turner, SASS #28271 ucern Valley, CA – “It See HIGHLIGHTS on page 75 would behoove you to fol- low the stage directions most spectacular sunsets I’ve ever L …” intoned Range Officer beheld. Later that same evening, Roan Henry, setting the stage for a with the guns safely locked away, weekend of “behoove” jokes, and the first of several parties broke out with a blast of Marshall Brous- in Twitchy Finger’s Saloon, the sard’s 16th century siege gun, working bar on Stage Three. Lit by SASS’ 2007 Western Regional was kerosene lanterns, with the roof off and running! open to let in the billion-star sky, Set in the picturesque Lucerne the event, bartended smartly (if not Valley, Double R Bar Regulators put wisely!) by Twitchy and Co, and together one of the most authentic entertained by the strolling strings and scenic matches held in this of one Frederick Jackson Turner, country. The serene landscape is the party lasted well into the night. the site of one of the last shootouts Kentucky Gal, resplendent in peri- in the Old West—Chimney Rock— od-appropriate finery, sidles up to and from that event, the Western me while I’m playing. “Look up at Regional takes its name. -
Nebraska Statewide Preservation Plan 2017-2021
State Historic BUILDING ON THE Preservation Plan for the State of Nebraska, FUTURE OF OUR PAST 2017-2021 This plan sets forth our goals and objectives for Preservation for the state of Nebraska for the next five years. 1 Table of Contents Executive Summary 2 Chapter 1: Public Participation Process 3 Chapter 2: Summary of Current Knowledge of Nebraska Historical Periods 11 Chapter 3: A Vision of Preservation in Nebraska 19 Chapter 4: A Five-Year Vision for Historic Preservation in Nebraska 29 Bibliography 33 Appendix 1 Questions from the Nebraska State Historic Preservation Plan Survey 35 Appendix 2 List of National Register Properties listed between 2012-2016 38 Appendix 3 List of National Historic Landmarks in Nebraska 40 Appendix 4 Glossary 41 Appendix 5 Map of Nebraska Certified Local Governments 44 2 Executive Summary Every five years, the Nebraska State Historic Preservation Office (NeSHPO), a division of History Nebraska (formerly the Nebraska State Historical Society), prepares a statewide preservation plan that provides a set of goals regarding preservation for the entire state. This plan sets forth goals and objectives for Preservation for the state of Nebraska for the next five years. In developing this plan, we engaged with the people of Nebraska to learn about their objectives and opportunities for preservation in their communities. This plan seeks to create a new vision for the future and set goals that will address the needs of stakeholders and ensure the support, use and protection of Nebraska’s historic resources. VISION The Nebraska State Historic Preservation Office seeks to understand the historic and cultural resources that encompass aspects of our state’s history to evaluate the programs, preservation partnerships and state and federal legislation that can be used to preserve these resources and their relative successes and failures. -
Rural Historic Structural Survey
Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc. November 2000 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY At the request of the Will County Land Use Department (Will County), acting as liaisons for the Will County Historic Preservation Commission (Historic Preservation Commission), Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc., is submitting the following report of the survey of existing farmsteads in unincorporated Wheatland, Plainfield, and Lockport Townships in northwest Will County, Illinois. The survey area includes 108 square miles of land, 227 farmsteads and historically related sites, and 862 individual structures. The survey was performed July, August, and September 1999, with follow-up survey work conducted in March and September 2000. A Rural Structures Survey of unincorporated Will County was performed in 1988, which identified approximately 21,000 structures, with approximately 984 structures on 328 sites in the three-township region studied in the current survey. The 1988 survey documented sites with photographs and survey data on standard Illinois Historic Preservation Agency format cards. For most sites, the data for the 1988 survey was gathered from the public right-of-way. In addition to this survey a report was prepared examining the overall rural themes present in the county and identification of noteworthy structures. Numerous changes have occurred in the years since the original survey. Therefore, Will County and the Historic Preservation Commission recognized the need to reassess the agricultural heritage in the region. Northwest Will County in particular is one of the fastest developing areas of the state, and for this reason was selected for the first area in the county to be reassessed. The boundaries of Naperville, Plainfield, and Bolingbrook were once several miles apart. -
Wagon Tracks. Volume 6, Issue 2 (February, 1992) Santa Fe Trail Association
Wagon Tracks Volume 6 Issue 2 Wagon Tracks Volume 6, Issue 2 (February Article 1 1992) 1992 Wagon Tracks. Volume 6, Issue 2 (February, 1992) Santa Fe Trail Association Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/wagon_tracks Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Santa Fe Trail Association. "Wagon Tracks. Volume 6, Issue 2 (February, 1992)." Wagon Tracks 6, 2 (1992). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/wagon_tracks/vol6/iss2/1 This Full Issue is brought to you for free and open access by UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Wagon Tracks by an authorized editor of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. : Wagon Tracks. Volume 6, Issue 2 (February, 1992) • VOLUME 6 FEBRUARY 1992 NUMBER 2 RENDEZVOUS '92 AT TRAIL VISITOR RECORDS LARNED, MAY 28-30 BROKEN IN 1991 THE Santa Fe Trail Center and Fort THE SantaFe Trail enjoyed unprece Lamed National Historic Site will co dented national publicity in 1991. With host Rendezvous 1992 at Larned, May many fine articles appearing In major 28-30. The theme for this year's bien magazines and neWspapers. The four nial event Is "The Plains Indians and National Park Service sites along the the Santa Fe Trail: A Clash of Cul Trail reaped the benefits of the ex tures." This topic was chosen, In part. panded public awareness about the to fulfill a grand plan designed to focus historic route. a series ofconferences on various cul Fort Larned NHS In Kansas had tures associated with the Santa Fe 46.813 visitors, an Increase of 21% Trail. -
National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A)
NPS Form 10-900OMB No. 1024-0018 (Expires 5/31/2012) (Rev. 10-90) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete each item by marking "x" in the appropriate box or by entering the information requested. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable". For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional entries and narrative items on continuation sheets (NPS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer to complete all items. 1. Name of Property Historic name Miles Ranch Other names/site number RH00-423 2. Location Street & number 63795 638 Avenue Not for publication [ ] City or town Dawson Vicinity [x ] State Nebraska Code NE County Richardson Code 147 Zip code 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1986, as amended, I hereby certify that this [X] nomination [] request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property [X] meets [] does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant [] nationally [X] statewide [] locally. -
Historic Preservation Commission Thursday, August 13, 2020 7:00 PM Village Boardroom 24401 W
Historic Preservation Commission Thursday, August 13, 2020 7:00 PM Village Boardroom 24401 W. Lockport Street Plainfield, IL 60544 Agenda CALL TO ORDER, ROLL CALL, PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE APPROVAL OF THE AGENDA APPROVAL OF THE MINUTES Approval of the Minutes of the Historic Preservation Commission held on May 14, 2020. 05-14-2020 HPC Minutes.pdf CHAIR'S COMMENTS COMMISSIONER'S COMMENTS PUBLIC COMMENTS (5 minutes per topic) - • Please email public comments to [email protected], please note PUBLIC COMMENTS - HPC in the email subject line. Comments must be received by Thursday, August 13, 2020 at 3:00 p.m. • Village Meetings are livestreamed on the Village’s Website - https://plainfield-il.org/pages/agendasmeetings, click “in progress” when available. • Live meetings are broadcast on Comcast Channel 6 and AT&T U-verse Channel 99. OLD BUSINESS NEW BUSINESS CASE NUMBER: 1845-062819.HPC REQUEST: Landmark designation (Public Hearing) LOCATION: 15017 S. Bartlett Avenue APPLICANT: Caryn Burke Please email public comments to [email protected], please note PUBLIC HEARING COMMENTS - HPC in the email subject line. Comments must be 1 Historic Preservation Commission Page - 2 received by Thursday, August 13, 2020 at 3:00 p.m. 15017 S. Bartlett Ave. Staff Report & Nomination.pdf DISCUSSION ADJOURN REMINDERS - August 17th - Village Board at 7:00 p.m. August 18th - Plan Commission at 7:00 p.m. September 10th - Historic Preservation Commission at 7:00 p.m. 2 Meeting of the Historic Preservation Commission Record of Minutes Date: May 14, 2020 Location: Village Hall (Zoom Meeting) CALL TO ORDER, ROLL CALL, PLEDGE Chairman Bortel called the meeting to order at 7:00 p.m. -
Landmark Nomination for 14930 S. Illinois Street.Pdf
Village of Plainfield Historic Preservation Commission Nomination for Individual Landmark Listing in Register of Historic Places For the property located at: 14930 S. Illinois Street Plainfield, IL 60585 April 4, 2019 1 Table of Contents Cover 1 Appendix E 35 Summary Statement of Significance Part I Survey Description 3 Appendix F 36 Exhibit Table of Contents Part II Overview 4 Exhibit A 37 Ingersoll’s Original Plat of Planefield Part III Architecture 5 Exhibit B 38 Ingersoll’s Addition to Plainfield Part IV Photo Descriptions 21 Exhibit C 39 Plat of Arnold’s Addition to Plainfield Appendix A 22 Early Plainfield Exhibit D 40 Chittenden & Smiley’s subdivision Appendix B 27 of a part of the SE ¼ of Sec. 9 The Levi Arnold Connection Exhibit E 41 Appendix C 29 Edgar L. Doud’s Re-Subdivision of The Jacobs-Bates-Crist-Doud Connection Block 3 in Arnold’s Addition to Plainfield Appendix D 32 Exhibit F 42 The Levi Baldwin Overman, Jr. & Chain of Title for 14930 S. Illinois Elisha Brown Connection Bibliography 46 2 Part I Survey Description Nomination for listing in the Plainfield, Illinois Register of Historic Places Individual Landmark Overman – Brown – Buss Residence - 1884 14930 S. Illinois Street, Plainfield, Illinois Note: at the time of construction the name of the street was Arnold which was later changed to Illinois - f/k/a 806 N. Illinois Street, Plainfield, Illinois PIN: 06-03-09-404-010-0000 That part of Lots 2 & 3 in Doud’s subdivision of Block 3 of Arnold’s Addition, begin at a point in the westerly line of Arnold (Illinois) which is 30’ southeasterly from the NE corner of said Lot 2, thence in a southeasterly direction along the westerly line of Arnold (Illinois) St., which is 30’ southeasterly from the NE corner of said Lot 2, thence in a southeasterly direction along the westerly line of Arnold (Illinois) St. -
Embracing Reminiscences and Incidents of Settlement and Growth
t ^! F 64-1 CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Pages from the early history of the West 3 1924 028 846 950 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028846950 PAGES FKOM THE EARLY HISTORY WEST AND NORTH-WEST: EMBRACtNO REMINISCENCES AND INCIDENTS OF SETTLEMENT AND GROWTH, AND SKETCHES OF THE MATERIAL AND RELIGIOUS PROGRESS STATES OF OHIO, INDIANA, ILLINOIS, AND MISSOURI, ESPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE HISTORY OF METHODISM. REV. S. R. BEGGS. CINCINNATI: PRINTED AT THB METHODIST BOOK CONCBKN. 1868. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by S. R. BEGGS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States foi the Southern District of Ohio. SO CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. PioB. Autobiographical—^Ancestry—Life in Southern Indiana—Con- version , ;. 9 CHAPTER II. Early Methodism in Indiana—Notable Preachers—Confer- ences—Districts and Circuits 17 CHAPTER ni. Compilations from Smith's "Indiana Miscellany" 31 CHAPTER IV. The Same continued—^The Pious Wife and Impenitent Hus- band—^Remarkable Conversion 44 CHAPTER V. Received into Missouri Conference—Remarkable Experiences in the Primitive Itinerancy 51 CHAPTER VI. Introduction to the Illinois Work—Minutes of the First Con- ference 59 CHAPTER VII. Pioneer Experiences—Home Again—^Pleasant Conference Occa- sions 6^ CHAPTER VIII. Quakers and Infidels at a Methodist Meeting—^A Primitive Baptism 75 4 CONTENTS. CHAPTER IX. Paoe. Marriage—Eough Ezperiences of a Young Bride—Painful and Perilous Journey ings 81 CHAPTER X Mission Work in Chicago, 1831-32—Terrors of an Indian Raid—A Home-Made Fort...; 94 CHAPTER XI. -
Chapter 1 Background And
Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc. CHAPTER 1 BACKGROUND AND METHODOLOGY Background At the request of the Will County Land Use Department, acting as liaison for the Will County Historic Preservation Commission, Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc. (WJE) has prepared this summary report of the intensive survey of farmsteads in Wesley Township in Will County, Illinois. A previous survey of farmsteads in Will County was performed in 1988. Beginning in 1999, WJE has prepared intensive surveys of individual townships in Will County. Previous townships surveyed included Plainfield, Wheatland, and Lockport (completed November 2000), Du Page (November 2001), Homer (November 2002), New Lenox (August 2003), Green Garden (July 2004), Manhattan (September 2006), Frankfort (December 2007), Joliet and Troy (April 2009), Channahon (April 2009), Wilmington (December 2009), Jackson (December 2009), Reed (January 2011), and Florence (August 2011). Concurrently with this survey and report for Wesley Township, a report for Custer Township was prepared. The objectives of the study are to provide comprehensive information on all historic rural structures located in the area; to assess the eligibility of rural districts or individual buildings for designation as local landmarks or nomination to the National Register of Historic Places; to inventory the existing structures in the area for future study; to provide background on significant architectural styles and rural structure types common to the area; and to provide background history of the development of the area. The present study has been developed to meet the requirements and standards of the Certified Local Government program. Survey Methodology Survey Team The survey team from WJE consisted of Kenneth Itle, Michael Ford, Gregory Dowell, and Deborah Slaton.