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Page "Roaring Springs, Texas" ¶ 5
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brick and depot
The cavalrymen burned the large, brick railroad depot, along with all the train cars on the track and the railroad bridges on each side of the town.
In 1893 the brick depot was erected by William Peter, with the provision in the deed that all passenger trains were to stop in Columbiaville.
In 1904, the Michigan Central Railroad built a small brick and stone depot along the tracks near East River Road on the east side of the island.
Entrepreneur John L. Buis built a two-story brick building across from the train depot where he opened the Cherokee Hotel.
The first school building was erected around 1888 one mile ( 1. 6 km ) north of the depot ; by 1912 a brick high school had been built in town.
The old brick building on Holly across from the senior center was a National Guard motor depot.
While there is no official station house, Metro-North does maintain a small 2-story brick depot dating to circa 1900, housing the northbound waiting room, ticket machines, and the United States Post Office for ZIP Code 10503.
The circa 1918 brick building served as the passenger rail depot of the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad and later the freight depot of Central Illinois Railroad.
The last station, built by the Boston and Maine Railroad, was the 1937 brick Cambridge depot.
and in addition to a coal depot and goods yard, the low ground near the river housed at various times a tar works and two brick and tile works.
His cavalrymen burned the large brick depot, along with all the railcars on the track and the railroad bridges on each side of town.
This was granted and a new, brick passenger and a wood freight depot was built.
In 1915, a brick depot was added.
There is a large model train layout and a gift shop at New Haven, in a brick building that is a replica of the former L & N depot there.

brick and was
It was to provide a safe and spacious crossing for these caravans, and also to make a pleasance for the city, that Shah Abbas 2, in about 1657 built, of sun-baked brick, tile, and stone, the present bridge.
He was a square brick of a man with a moon-round face and sunken Polish features.
What had been the ambassador's suite was now jagged walls of blackened brick.
" This was borrowed into Arabic as al-tub ( الط ّ وب al " the " + tub " brick ") " brick ," which was assimilated into Old Spanish as adobe, still with the meaning " mud brick.
Ceramic, or fired brick was used as early as 4500 BC in early Indus Valley cities.
During the Renaissance and the Baroque, visible brick walls were unpopular and the brickwork was often covered with plaster.
It was only during the mid-18th century that visible brick walls regained some degree of popularity, as illustrated by the Dutch Quarter of Potsdam, for example.
This potential has not been fully developed because of the ease and speed in building with other materials ; in the late-20th century brick was confined to low-or medium-rise structures or as a thin decorative cladding over concrete-and-steel buildings or for internal non-load-bearing walls.
In Victorian London the bright red brick was chosen to make buildings visible in the heavy fog that caused transport problems.
The idea of signing the worker's name and birth date on the brick and the place where it was made was not new to the Ming era and had little or nothing to do with vanity.
Some have stated that the secret of concrete was lost for 13 centuries until 1756, when the British engineer John Smeaton pioneered the use of hydraulic lime in concrete, using pebbles and powdered brick as aggregate.
Angkor's neighbor state of Champa was also the home to numerous brick temples that are similar in style to those of Angkor.
In the end, the Cham replica was more impressive than the real brick tower of the Khmer, and the Cham won the contest.
Since its obtainment was considerably more expensive than that of brick, sandstone only gradually came into use, and at first was used for particular elements such as door frames.
The brick and granite work was enlarged, the watch towers were redesigned, and cannons were placed along its length.
It was replaced in 1988 by the 1541-II, which used an external power supply to provide cooler operation and allow the drive to have a smaller desktop footprint ( the power supply " brick " being placed elsewhere, typically on the floor ).
Nennius, a ninth-century historian, mentions a " Hot Lake " in the land of the Hwicce, which was along the Severn, and adds " It is surrounded by a wall, made of brick and stone, and men may go there to bathe at any time, and every man can have the kind of bath he likes.
The building was designed to distance the Irwin Union Bank from traditional banking architecture, which mostly echoed imposing, neoclassical style buildings of brick or stone.

brick and soon
In Indiana, log homes were soon replaced with one-or two-story houses of timber frame or brick construction in addition to four large rooming houses ( dormitories ) for its growing membership.
Until about 1800, the most common pattern of steam engine was the beam engine, built as an integral part of a stone or brick engine-house, but soon various patterns of self-contained portative engines ( readily removable, but not on wheels ) were developed, such as the table engine.
They soon outgrew this facility, tore it down, and built a new brick building on the same site.
The center of Stockton was destroyed by fire in 1906, but was soon rebuilt, with many of the new buildings constructed of brick.
The congregation soon outgrew its building and constructed a new brick church ; when it became too small, a larger brick church was constructed and completed in 1892.
An even more grand structure made of brick and stone followed, but it was soon closed as well.
Construction soon commenced on several substantial brick homes and businesses blocks that would house and serve the steel mill employees.
As soon as it passed to the Grand Duchy of Moscow, a brick citadel, or kremlin, was constructed in 1530.
Another possible story of the " Stove god " is believed to have appeared soon after the invention of the brick stove.
" However, soon after crossing the artillery-breached brick wall, the attackers were ambushed by the Polish defenders, with small arms, mortar and machine gun fire from concealed and well-positioned firing points that caught them in a crossfire.
:" The Lieutenant-Governor having set apart for each of the gentlemen who came out from Scotland in the Surprise a brick hut, in a row on the east side of the cove, they took possession of their new habitations, and soon declared that they found sufficient reason for thinking " the bleak and desolate shores of New Holland " not quite so terrible as in England they had been led to expect.
The opening of the Tunstall railway station contributed to the growth of the brick and clay industries, with orchards soon following.
Mass development in Moss Side occurred in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when large numbers of red brick terraced houses were built, and soon attracted numerous Irish immigrants and other working people.
" The district was soon " covered with innumerable cottages of the comfortable working classes ; street after street ; row after row, of these neat brick buildings.
A quarry was soon established at the north end of the site and a brick making plant was built at the south end of the property near the Don River.
The stations at first only consisted of tents of sail and crude furnaces, but were soon replaced by more permanent structures of wood and brick, such as Smeerenburg for the Dutch, Lægerneset for the English, and Copenhagen Bay for the Danes.
However, soon after crossing the artillery-breached brick wall, the attackers suddenly came into a well-prepared ambush.
The hopes of both did not deceive them, for Wojciech, rising in rank, became a priest, and soon from being a Kraków scholastic, as Dlugosz says, or from being a Kraków dean and Poznan pastor, he became the mitred prelate of Poznan in 1399 ; tearing down the wooden church in Bensowa, he had a brick one built in 1407, and later settled the friars of St. Paul the Hermit there, and gave it the villages of Bensowa, Bensowka, Bydlowa, and Bystronowice.
They agreed to allow the whites to leave the brick house, but as soon they left, the rebels killed many and took several prisoners, among them the wife of the Bearestyn Plantation owner whom Cuffy kept as his wife.
Until about 1800, the most common pattern of steam engine was the beam engine, built as an integral part of a stone or brick engine-house, but soon various patterns of self-contained portative engines ( readily removable, but not on wheels ) were developed, such as the table engine.
As soon as Spyridon finished speaking, the sherd is said to have miraculously burst into flame, water dripped on the ground, and only dust remained in his hand ( other accounts of this event say that it was a brick he held in his hand ).
The wooden church burned down in 1878 but was soon replaced by a red brick Lutheran church in 1885.
The brick of heroin was soon seized by IAD and Lem became a means with which Lieutenant Jon Kavanaugh could take down the entire Strike Team.

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