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Holy Name High School was a four-year comprehensive coeducational Roman Catholic preparatory/secondary school located in Reading, Pennsylvania. It was approved and accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the Diocese of Allentown. The school's athletic rivals included ...
Building. Constructed by the Red Men in 1900, the four-story brick facade building displays American Craftsman style architectural designs with Renaissance Revival elements, and includes decorative tiles by Henry Chapman Mercer. Later, the structure served as a rental hall called Century Hall, capitalizing on the building being built at the ...
Trinity Lutheran Church (Reading, Pennsylvania) / 40.33694°N 75.92639°W / 40.33694; -75.92639. Trinity Lutheran Church is an historic, American Lutheran church that is located at 6th and Washington Streets in Reading, Berks County, Pennsylvania . It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.
Tartalomjegyzék. West Reading (Pennsylvania) Amerikai Egyesült Államok. 1907. március 18. 4553 fő (2020. ápr. 1.) [1] A Wikimédia Commons tartalmaz West Reading témájú médiaállományokat. West Reading település az Amerikai Egyesült Államok Pennsylvania állama Berks megyéje, Reading városában. A 2020-as népszámláláskor ...
TWA Flight 513, registration NC86513, Star of Lisbon, was a Lockheed L-049 Constellation operated by Transcontinental and Western Air on a training flight on July 11, 1946, near Reading, Pennsylvania.
December 8, 1976. Designated PHMC. September 10, 2003 [3] The Reading Terminal ( / ˈrɛdɪŋ / RED-ing) is a complex of buildings that includes the former Reading Company main station located in the Market East section of Center City in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It comprises the Reading Terminal Headhouse, Trainshed, and Market .
The company was founded by James Henry Carpenter and a small group of New York City investors in Reading, Pennsylvania on June 7, 1889, as the Carpenter Steel Company. [2] In November 1896, the United States Secretary of the Navy referred to the company's armor-piercing projectiles as "the first made that would pierce improved armor plate."