The Downtown Jacksonville Multiple Property Submission is a Multiple Property Submission (MPS) of historic buildings to the National Register of Historic Places in Jacksonville, Florida. It consists of eleven properties in Downtown Jacksonville that were added to the National Register between 1992 and 2007.
Resource Name | Also known as | Address | City/County | Added |
Buckman and Ulmer Building | 29-33 West Monroe Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | December 30, 1992 | |
Church of the Immaculate Conception | 121 East Duval Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | December 30, 1992 | |
Groover-Stewart Drug Company Building | McKesson-Robbins Drug Company Building | 25 North Market Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | December 30, 1992 |
Mount Zion AME Church | 201 East Beaver Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | December 30, 1992 | |
Plaza Hotel | 353 East Forsyth Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | December 30, 1992 | |
South Atlantic Investment Corporation Building | 35-39 West Monroe Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | December 30, 1992 | |
Atlantic National Bank Annex | 118 West Adams Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | November 7, 1997 | |
Elks Club Building | 201-213 North Laura Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | March 9, 2000 | |
Lynch Building | American Heritage Life Building | 11 Forsyth Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | December 23, 2003 |
W. A. Knight Building | Peninsular Building or Greenleaf & Crosby Annex | 113 West Adams Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | March 15, 2005 |
Hutchinson-Suddath Building | 315-319 East Bay Street | Jacksonville, Duval County | October 3, 2007 |
Famous quotes containing the words multiple, property and/or submission:
“... the generation of the 20s was truly secular in that it still knew its theology and its varieties of religious experience. We are post-secular, inventing new faiths, without any sense of organizing truths. The truths we accept are so multiple that honesty becomes little more than a strategy by which you manage your tendencies toward duplicity.”
—Ann Douglas (b. 1942)
“All over this land women have no political existence. Laws pass over our heads that we can not unmake. Our property is taken from us without our consent. The babes we bear in anguish and carry in our arms are not ours.”
—Lucy Stone (18181893)
“The doctrine of blind obedience and unqualified submission to any human power, whether civil or ecclesiastical, is the doctrine of despotism, and ought to have no place mong Republicans and Christians.”
—Angelina Grimké (18051879)