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Weigl Pub Inc

Racism

Racism

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Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, Joseph Bailly, Mammals of the Indiana Dunes, History of the Indiana Dunes, Chellberg Farm, Birds of the Indiana Dunes, Insects of the Indiana Dunes, Swedish Farmsteads of Porter County, Indiana, Habitats of the Indiana Dunes, Joseph Bailly Homestead, Indiana Dunes State Park, Florida Tropical House, Chronology of the Indiana Dunes, Cowles Bog, Petit Fort, List of Invasive Plant Species in the Indiana Dunes, Heron Rookery, Pinhook Bog, List of Non-Marine Mollusks of the Indiana Dunes, Armco-Ferro House, Century of Progress Architectural District, House of Tomorrow, Marquette Park, Bailly Cemetery, Wieboldt-Rostone House, List of Fish of the Indiana Dunes, List of Reptiles of the Indiana Dunes, Tremont, Indiana, Hoosier Prairie State Nature Preserve, List of Amphibians of the Indiana Dunes, List of Crustaceans of the Indiana Dunes, Invertebrates of the Indiana Dunes, Cypress Log Cabin, List of Arachnids of the Indiana Dunes, Diana of the Dunes. Excerpt: Armco-Ferro House A Brief Architectural Description of the Armco-Ferro House From research completed by the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS): The Ferro Enamel Corporation, one of the two major sponsors for the . . . house, was formed in 1930 by a merger between the Ferro Enameling Company and the Ferro Enamel and Supply Co. The idea of using porcelain enamel for residential construction was introduced by Bob Weaver, president of the newly formed company. Shortly after the merger, Charles Bacon Rowley, architect, designed a four-person house with Ferro-Enamel shingles that the company erected in Cleveland, Ohio, in July 1932.31 Despite the innovative use of ferroenamel as a cladding material, the house was built using conventional wood construction. The first porcelain-enameled frameless s...

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