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Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Sunday Morning Rugby Football Club on March 16, 2019 at the Springfield Pitch. Springfield wins 29-24!
Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Kansas City Blues Rugby team and the Queen City Chaos vs the Omaha Goats women's rugby teams.
Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Kansas City Blues Rugby team and the Queen City Chaos vs the Omaha Goats women's rugby teams.
Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Sunday Morning Rugby Football Club on March 16, 2019 at the Springfield Pitch. Springfield wins 29-24!
Built in 1974-1976, this Brutalist building houses the Lincoln Library, the public library of the city of Springfield, and replaced a previous early 20th Century building on the same site. The building features a granite-clad exterior with large columns and panel-clad spandrels, ribbon windows, a first floor clad in brick with recessed entranceways and wrapped by a portico, with the floors of the building getting larger towards the top. The building today remains in use as a public library for the city of Springfield.
Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Kansas City Blues Rugby team and the Queen City Chaos vs the Omaha Goats women's rugby teams.
Built in 1905-1906, this eight-story Classical Revival-style building was designed by Samuel J. Hanes for businessman and banker Benjamin Ferguson, and was later known as the McFadden Building. The building features a buff brick exterior with recessed window bays, blind arched brick panels at the seventh floor, a decorative parapet cap, a modernized first floor storefront with large aluminum and glass curtain walls, green glazed brick piers flanking the corner entrance, and a suspended aluminum canopy, and one-over-one paired windows on the upper floors. The building is a contributing structure in the Central Springfield Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, and expanded to its present size in 2016. The building is presently vacant.
Springfield used to be a gateway city and it still is! These tracks could represent the connection between the past and future. Do you see what is in the middle of it? The present! My son! How does what we invest now, in him, impact our future?
Built in 1882 and renovated in the 1930s to its present Art Deco-style appearance, this building was formerly the home of a Kresge Department Store location. The building features a buff brick exterior, decorative spandrel panels, limestone trim, geometric motifs, including ziggurat-shaped brick panels over the third-floor windows, one-over-one double-hung windows, decorative piers, and a heavily modified first floor facade. The building is a contributing structure in the Central Springfield Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, and expanded to its present size in 2016.
Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Kansas City Blues Rugby team and the Queen City Chaos vs the Omaha Goats women's rugby teams.
Built in 1869, this Italianate-style house was gifted by Judge William Wilson to his son-in-law, Dr. Bernard Stuve, and his daughter, Mary Wilson Stuve, upon their marriage. The house features a painted exterior with quoins, a low-pitch hipped roof with gable ends and bracketed eaves, oxeye attic windows, arched one-over-one double-hung windows, and porches with rectilinear columns and hipped roofs. The house is part of the Lincoln Home National Historic Site, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.
Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Kansas City Blues Rugby team and the Queen City Chaos vs the Omaha Goats women's rugby teams.
Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Kansas City Blues Rugby team and the Queen City Chaos vs the Omaha Goats women's rugby teams.
Springfield Rugby Football Club vs Kansas City Blues Rugby team and the Queen City Chaos vs the Omaha Goats women's rugby teams.
Built in 1866, this Second Empire-style building is known as the Booth and McCosker Building, after the original owner, the Booth and McCosker carriage and spring wagon manufacturing company. The building features a mansard roof, a painted brick exterior, arched window bays on the second and third floors with one-over-one and two-over-two double-hung windows, a modified second story facade along 6th Street, including an oriel window on the second floor of the 6th Street facade, bracketed eaves, and modified first floor storefronts. The building is a contributing structure in the Central Springfield Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, and expanded to its present size in 2016.
Built in 1927, this Classical Revival-style building was designed by Helmle and Helmle, and received large Modern New Formalist additions in 1974-1976 to the north and south, flanking the building along 6th Street. The original building features a limestone-clad exterior with a recessed portico featuring fluted corinthian columns, a decorated pediment with acroterions and dentils, and a large glass curtain wall at the rear of the portico, added during the 1970s renovation. To the north and south are modern additions with stone-clad columns and parapets, with a portico wrapping the northern addition, which features a glass curtain wall at the rear of the portico, and a colonnade at the street frontage of the southern addition, which encloses the front of a parking lot in front of the glass curtain wall of the front facade. The original building is a contributing structure in the Central Springfield Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, and expanded to its present size in 2016. The building presently houses the offices of the Illinois State Treasurer.