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பிராங்க்ளின் கவுண்டி வரலாற்று சமூகம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Louise Ervin enjoys a century of loving and laughing

Louise Ervin enjoys a century of loving and laughing
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Hilliard historian Tim Woodruff named grand marshal of Fourth of July parade

Woodruff will ride in a 1967 Chevrolet Camaro convertible at the front of the parade. Woodruff was 6 weeks old when his parents, Ned and Ruth, brought him home to live at the farmhouse of his paternal grandparents at the southwest corner of Alton Darby Creek and Roberts roads in Brown Township. Woodruff’s father was an infant when the farmhouse was purchased in 1919. In 1962, Woodruff sold the farmhouse, which still stands, to another family and built a new house on Roberts Road, just west of Alton Darby Creek Road, where he and his wife still live. One of his grandchildren also lives adjacent to him.

Hilliard History Lives: Make tracks to Weaver Park to check out historic train station

Hilliard History Lives: Make tracks to Weaver Park to check out historic train station The tracks were finished in 1853, when the inaugural run was made from Columbus to Indiana. As Hilliard continued to grow, the railroad owners took notice and decided that the Hilliard area might be a good stopping point for the train and, therefore, decided to create a train station. The first station in 1895 was temporary and consisted of combining three boxcars along the side of the tracks. This lasted for four years until the permanent wood structure was constructed. The stopping point was called Hilliard’s Station. This structure was somewhat different from most train stations of that era in that it had only freight doors and no passenger doors. Although there was some passenger business, most of the business was commercial and agricultural.

Jack Bremer s photos looks into Ottawa teen life, moments he captured

OTTAWA Growing up in Ottawa, former Topeka minister Jack Bremer found of one his many passions early in life. As a young boy, Bremer spent much of his time looking through the camera lens, snapping photos of important events and those who meant the most to him. Bremer died April 30, 2020, in Burlington, Vt. While many can take photos, what made Bremer s stand out was his ability as a teenager to capture some of the most poignant moments occurring around him. He captured his world in black and white and offered a viewpoint into his life as an adolescent. Now, more than 50 of those photos taken during Bremer s teenage years are on display at the Old Depot Museum, 135 W. Tecumseh, in Ottawa. The exhibit is on display through March 2022.

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