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By and 1895
By 1895, these investments totalled $ 50 million.
By taking off like the scissors, but extending his back and flattening out over the bar, Sweeney achieved a more economic clearance and raised the world record to in 1895.
By the time of Sabine Baring-Gould's A Book of Nursery Songs ( 1895 ), folklore was an academic study, full of comments and foot-notes.
By 1895, Leadville mines posted their largest combined output since 1889, and Leadville was then Colorado's most productive mine camp, producing almost 9. 5 million ounces of silver.
By way of example, and following Germany's decision after the Franco-Prussian War ( 1870 – 1871 ) to extract reparations to facilitate a move to the gold standard, Japan gained the needed reserves after the Sino-Japanese War of 1894 – 1895.
By the spring of 1895, his busy and tiring schedule led to poor health.
By 1895, the Great Britain had withdrawn its army and navy from the area of the Sulu Sea.
By the turn of the 20th century, many of the nation's wealthiest families were summering in Newport, including the Vanderbilts, Astors and Widener family who constructed the largest " cottages ", such as The Breakers ( 1895 ) and Miramar.
*" By His Hand the Chief Tecumseh Fell " ( PDF ), The New York Times, August 13, 1895.
By 1895, at the height of the timber boom, Carter County had as many as ten precincts.
By 1895, Jensen was called the “ Pineapple Capital of the World ,” shipping over one million boxes of pineapples each year during the June and July season To help deal with the increased Pineapple production, a Pineapple Factory was built.
By 1895, business enterprises included a tile factory, two grain elevators, millinery and dressmaker shop, general store, livery stable, two hotels, lumber and coal businesses, barber shop, blacksmith, and others.
By 1895 there was a brickyard on the southwest edge of the town and next to it was a coal shaft, but it is not clear if the shaft was ever finished.
By 1895 these included a hotel, a bank, the Masonic Hall, and several stores.
By 1895 it had a few businesses and 50 residents.
By 1895, the building looked like the museum as it appears today.
By 1895, Rochester's population was 900.
By 1895, Red River was a booming mining camp, with gold, silver, copper, and molybdenum in some abundance, and a population estimated at three thousand.
By 1900, Chester Atwood had increased his land holdings and his family included wife Patsy Ann ( familiarly called Mattie ), daughters Ottie ( b. 1883 ) and Arrie ( b. 1886 ), son Bennie ( b. 1887 ), daughter Allie ( b. 1889 ), son Coleman ( b. 1891 ), and daughters Lizzie ( b. 1893 ) and Ambrozia ( b. 1895 ).
By 1895, he employed six men, and sold the mine to the Fort Smith and Western Coal and Railway in the following year.
By 1895, the Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad ( later known as the Kansas City Southern Railway ) laid tracks through the area, the Kedron post office moved closer to the railroad and a marble quarry, and was renamed as Marble.
By 1895, Belle Fourche was shipping 2500 carloads of cattle per month in the peak season, making it the world's largest livestock shipping point.
By 1895 the D & RGW buildings and shops at Helper were lighted by electricity, and two reservoirs for water had been constructed.
By 1895, Washington had enough dairy farms to make the operation of a creamery possible.
By now all chance of a reunion between the Liberals and Liberal Unionists had disappeared, and it was no great surprise when leading Liberal Unionists joined Salisbury's new administration in 1895 following the heavy electoral defeat inflicted on the Liberal party.

By and streetcar
) By the time the streetcar pulled away, he had fallen in love with Paula.
By 1890, there were more than 20 private companies operating streetcar lines in Fort Worth.
By the end of 1899 the streetcar reached out along Mayfield Road to the old village of Fairmount.
By 1938, Pacific City Lines ( PCL ) was formed to purchase streetcar systems in the western United States.
By 1947 the company owned or controlled more than 100 electric streetcar systems in 45 cities including, but not limited to, Baltimore, St. Louis, Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Oakland, Philadelphia and Tulsa.
By 1900, it had acquired virtually all of the rapid transit and streetcar operations in its target area:
By June 6, 1896, an interurban streetcar linethe Mount Vernon, Alexandria and Washington Railway — also crossed the bridge.
By the early 1890s, streetcar lines reached the park, carrying nearly 3 million visitors a year, and after the closing of the city zoo, its animals were moved to the park during this time.
By 1900, the rough frontier settlement of wooden buildings and sandy streets had been transformed into a bustling town with brick buildings and streets, a streetcar line, and many social and cultural opportunities.
By the early 1900s, downtown Columbus residents and professors from Ohio State University had built summer homes in Clintonville and the surrounding farmland was developed into housing developments shortly after the extension of the streetcar lines northward from Columbus.
By 1900, full streetcar service was in the area, led by the Charles River Street Railway, which built its first railway through Inman Square in 1881.
By 1912, 45 minute streetcar service from Van Nuys to downtown and the " no speed limit " paved road ( if you could get your " Model A " to do 30 mph ) were key selling points.
By 1890, electric streetcar lines were replacing horse-drawn ones in cities of all sizes, allowing the lines to be extended and fostering a tremendous amount of suburban development.
By the 1930s, the once-profitable streetcar companies were diversifying by adding motorized buses and trackless trolleys to their fleets.
By the 1940s, streetcar ridership had dropped dramatically, and few subdivisions were being built with streetcars or mass transit in general in mind.
By the 1950s, nearly all streetcar lines had stopped running, and were instead served by buses.
By the next year it had consolidated ownership of a number of horse-drawn streetcar lines, composing a fleet of 7816 horses and 1480 rail vehicles.
By this time the Brooklyn City operated 27 streetcar lines.
By 1933, the TTC introduced the local bus and streetcar stop design, a white pole with a red band on the top and bottom.
By 1925, all streetcar tracks had been removed from the central part of downtown, and tracks along Atlantic Avenue north of Summer Street ( Dewey Square ) took streetcars around downtown.

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