City Market: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with "right|thumb|475px|City Market The '''City Market''' was a commercial block developed in 1885 by saloonkeeper George Raps on the northeast c...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
:''This article is about the Southside City Market. For other uses, see [[City Market (disambiguation)]].'' | |||
[[File:City Market sm.jpg|right|thumb|475px|City Market]] | [[File:City Market sm.jpg|right|thumb|475px|City Market]] | ||
The '''City Market''' was a commercial block developed in [[1885]] by saloonkeeper [[George Raps]] on the northeast corner of [[19th Street South|19th Street]] and [[4th Avenue South|Avenue D]] on [[Birmingham]]'s [[Southside]]. | The '''City Market''' was a commercial block developed in [[1885]] by saloonkeeper [[George Raps]] on the northeast corner of [[19th Street South|19th Street]] and [[4th Avenue South|Avenue D]] on [[Birmingham]]'s [[Southside]]. |
Revision as of 11:49, 21 July 2015
- This article is about the Southside City Market. For other uses, see City Market (disambiguation).
The City Market was a commercial block developed in 1885 by saloonkeeper George Raps on the northeast corner of 19th Street and Avenue D on Birmingham's Southside.
The building housed Birmingham Fire Station No. 2. The company named their steam-driven pump wagon after Raps' daughter Nellie. In return, he outfitted the firemen with new blue cashmere uniforms.