Browse Items (6159 total)

  • Collection: Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil Archives

AFS Student . . . Terje Froystein, right, and host John Martin pause to pet the Martin's setter, Nick.

This model of the first building regularly to be built as a high school for Council Bluffs was constructed by the art classes of Abraham Lincoln high school. The building, located on top of the hill where the Abraham Lincoln athletic field now is…

Chevra B'Nai Yisroel Synagogue . . . was destroyed by fire March 5, 1930. Cornerstone for this building at 618 Mynster St. was laid June 19, 1904.

B'nai Israel Synagogue...was first occupied in January of 1931. It was built on the same site of the Chevra B'nai Yisroel Synagogue.

The first load of meat transported by motor carrier left the Beefland International plant, 2700 Twenty-third Ave. Thursday afternoon. The 37,000-pound load of carcass beef, shipped by the Premier Trucking Service Co. of Carter Lake, is enroute to the…

First National Bank, northwest corner of Main and Broadway.

First National Bank, Council Bluffs, Iowa
unknown date

First National Bank on Broadway, looking west from Main to Pearl Street
date unknown

First National Bank, Council Bluffs, Iowa
date unknown

City National Bank, Council Bluffs, Iowa
January 1958

Hal Booth (left), President of First National Bank of Council Bluffs, is shown above accepting the 1974 Golden Coin Award in New Orleans, Louisiana, for the bank's public affairs project, "Rent-A-Garden." Presenter is Bank Marketing Association…

Cindi Keathley, with a customer in the Investment Center at First National Bank in Council Bluffs
November 1988

Bank President Tony Payne inside First National Bank, Council Bluffs, Iowa
January 1990

An artist conception shows the remodeling planned for First National Bank's westside office. The bank sign, now on the northeast corner of the structure, will be moved to the northwest side. Off to the right will be an additional drive-in lane as…

Signing Receipt . . . for shipment of pipe is Martin W. Flynn, right. Others are M.E. (Barney) Rew, left, and Lee Samuelson of 208 Bennet Ave., foreman at the Griffin Pipe plant.

In August of 1856 a steamboat which came up the Missouri river carried Rev. John Hancock, who became the first pastor of the First Presbyterian church; Thomas Officer, one of the church's first elders; James B. Rue and Cinncinnatus W. Boyers.
Rev.…
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