Skip to content
🎉 your bitcoin🥳

❤️ Kmoch 💀

"Kmoch is a surname meaning godfather in Moravian dialect of Czech language. Notable people with the surname include: * František Kmoch (1848–1912), Czech composer and conductor * Hans Kmoch (1894–1973), Jewish Austrian-American chess master and -journalist Czech-language surnames "

❤️ Coronado High School 💀

"Coronado High School is the name of several high schools in the United States of America, including: * Coronado High School (Arizona), located in Scottsdale, Arizona * Coronado High School (California), located in Coronado, California * Coronado High School (Colorado), located in Colorado Springs, Colorado * Coronado High School (Nevada), located in Henderson, Nevada * Coronado High School (El Paso, Texas), located in El Paso, Texas * Coronado High School (Lubbock, Texas), located in Lubbock, Texas "

❤️ Victory Memorial Gardens 💀

"Victory Memorial Gardens are located on the banks of the Wollundry Lagoon in the central business district of Wagga Wagga New South Wales, Australia. The of land were formerly the site of the Old Police Barracks and Police Paddock, where all of the police horses were kept.Morris 1999, p.87. It became land for public recreation in February 1931. In 1925 the Wagga Wagga Municipality Council planned a tribute to those who fought and died in the First World War. The Council and Returned Sailors, Soldiers Imperial League of Australia (RSSILA) originally planned a memorial hall to be added onto the council chambers but public preference was for gardens.Morris 1999, p.76. There was a public competition for the design which was won by Thomas Kerr who was the chief landscape gardener of the Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney. Work on the gardens started in 1928. In the midst of the war, there had been a proposal for a Memorial Arch to honour volunteer soldiers from 1916. The proposal gained momentum when the servicemen returned after the War. A plan was finally planned to construct a monumental archway entrance to a memorial gardens in 1925. The Victory Memorial Gardens Arch was finally completed at a cost of £1700 and was officially unveiled amid great fanfare on Anzac Day 1927 by Major-General C. F. Cox. A cenotaph had been built earlier in 1922. In 2006, the Chisholm Fountain, previously located in the Civic Centre precinct, was restored and installed in the gardens in time for Anzac Day commemorations. Notes References * Morris, Sherry; Fife, Harold. A history of the Wagga Wagga sub-branch of the Returned and Services League of Australia : 1918-1998. Wagga Wagga, NSW.: Wagga Wagga sub branch of the RSL, 1999. External links *Victory Memorial Gardens - City of Wagga Wagga *History of the Victory Memorial Gardens - City of Wagga Wagga Australian military memorials Gardens in New South Wales Urban public parks History of Wagga Wagga "

Released under the MIT License.

has loaded