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Dataset: Wikipedia: Geolocated Wikipedia articles, downloaded 2015-08


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Move (change location) ↑Tillmans Corner ↗Prichard ↗Daphne ↘Fairhope ↗Saraland ↙Moss Point ↙Pascagoula ↙Gautier ↘Foley ↙Ocean Springs ↙Biloxi ↘Bellview ↘Gonzalez ↘Myrtle Grove ↘Ensley ↘West Pensacola ↘Warrington ↘Brent ↙West Gulfport ↙Gulfport ↘Ferry Pass ↘Pensacola ↘East Pensacola Heights ↙Long Beach ↖Hattiesburg ↙Picayune ↘Wright ↘Fort Walton Beach ↖Laurel ↗Crestview

links to loca­tions & detailsArticle TitleURLCategories the item belongs toImages in Wikipedia articleP
 
 
 
 Mon Louis Island, originally known as Isle aux Maraguans, is an island on the coast of the U.S. state of Alabama, south of Mobile. Located in southeastern Mobile County, it has an average elevation of 7 feet (2.1 m). Roughly 2 miles (3.2 km) wide and 6 miles (9.7 km) long, it is bounded by Fowl River on the north and west, Mobile Bay on the east, and the Mississippi Sound on the south. Mon Louis is traversed by Alabama State Route 193, which travels in a north to south direction along the easter...
 
Hank Aaron Stadium is a baseball park in Mobile, Alabama. It hosts the Mobile BayBears, a minor-league professional team in the Southern League. The stadium opened in 1997 and has a capacity of 6,000. The ballpark was named after Major League Baseballs home run king (from 1974 to 2007) and Mobile native Hank Aaron. It also features a commemorative plaque outside the stadium to honor each Mobilian enshrined at the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. Hank Aaron Stadium is unique in that the lux...
 W. P. Davidson High School is a four-year senior high school located in Mobile, Alabama. Its first class graduated in 1963. The school operates in the Mobile County Public School System. There are roughly 1,700 students and 110-125 staff members at the school. The birth of W.P. Davidson High School was in 1960 when a tenth-grade class was contained in the building of the Azalea Road Junior High School.Each year an additional grade was included, until the 1962-1963 school year when Davidson gradu...
 The Dog River is a river in Mobile County, Alabama. The Dog River watershed drains more than 90 square miles (230 km2). The river is about 8 miles (13 km) long and is influenced by tides. It originates at 30°38�30�N 88°05�48�W 30.64158°N 88.09666°W 30.64158; -88.09666 within the city of Mobile. It discharges into Mobile Bay, a tidal estuary on the northern Gulf of Mexico, at 30°33�54�N 88°05�18�W 30.56491°N 88.08833°W 30.56491; -88.08833 near Hollingers ...
 
 
 
 
 
 Bel Air Mall is a super-regional shopping mall, located in Mobile, Alabama, United States. The mall has a gross leasable area of 1,345,000 square feet (125,000 m²). It is the oldest continuously operating enclosed super-regional mall in Alabama^ and serves as one of the primary retail venues for the west Mobile shopping district located at the vicinity of Airport Boulevard (Mobile County Highway 56) and Interstate 65. Currently, Belk, Dillards, JCPenney, and Target serve as the malls anchor sto...
1930 establishments in the United States, Airfields of the United States Army Air Corps, Airfields of the United States Army Air Forces I Troop Carrier Command, Airfields of the United States Army Air Forces Technical Service Command, Airfields of the United States Army Air Forces in Alabama, Airports in Alabama, Closed facilities of the United States Air Force, Initial United States Air Force installations, Transportation in Mobile, Alabama, Airfields of the United States Army Air Forces Air Tr...
 
The Martin Lindsey House, also known as the Roy and Barbara Hoppmyer House, is a historic house in Mobile, Alabama, United States. The one-story wood-frame structure was built in 1915 for Martin Lindsey on Mobile Bay, along what was, at that time, the Bay Shell Road. Built in a style known locally as a Bay house, it combines bungalow features with those indicative of much older French Colonial buildings found along the United States central Gulf Coast, such as French doors, instead of windows, o...

Records 21+:
links to loca­tions & detailsArticle TitleURLCategories the item belongs toImages in Wikipedia articleP
 
 
 
 
 
 
Mitchell Center is a 10,041-seat multi-purpose arena on the campus of the University of South Alabama in Mobile, Alabama. It was completed in 1998 and is the home court for University of South Alabama Jaguars basketball teams. The Center is named for the Mitchell family, local real estate developers who have given over US$35 million to various University causes (both the Mitchell Cancer Institute and the Mitchell College of Business are named for them), including $1 million for construction of t...
The James Arthur Morrison House, also known as the Morrison-Walker House, is a historic Spanish Colonial Revival style house and garage- guest house in Mobile, Alabama, United States. The two-story stucco and concrete main house was completed in 1926. It features Mission-style side parapets on the main block, red tile roofing, a central entrance courtyard with a decorative gate, a rear arcaded porch, and arched doorways on the exterior and in the interior. The matching garage- guest house has a ...
Roman Catholic churches completed in 1850, National Register of Historic Places in Mobile, Alabama, Properties of religious function on the National Register of Historic Places in Alabama, Churches in Mobile, Alabama, Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mobile, Roman Catholic churches in Alabama, University and college chapels in the United States, Spring Hill College, Greek Revival architecture in Alabama, University and college buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Alabama, Alabam...
 
The Spring Hill College Quadrangle is a grouping of historic structures on the campus of Spring Hill College in Mobile, Alabama, United States. The original main building was constructed in 1831 in the Greek Revival style, but burned in 1869. It was replaced within the year by a new main building on the same site in a Neo-Renaissance style. St. Josephs Chapel was built c.1910 in the Gothic Revival style on the northern side of the quadrangle, with the main building on the southern side. The peri...
 

Records 41+:
links to loca­tions & detailsArticle TitleURLCategories the item belongs toImages in Wikipedia articleP
 
 
 
 
The Maysville Historic District is a historic district in Mobile, Alabama. The district covers 451 acres (183 ha) and contains 1121 properties located southwest of downtown and directly south of the Leinkauf Historic District. Platted in 1871 in the midst of a recession in Mobile, the neighborhood did not begin to develop until the late 1890s. Maysville has long been a working class neighborhood; many late 1890s and early 1900s houses were bungalows and cottages, some with modest Victorian influ...
The Pfau-Crichton Cottage, best known as Chinaberry, is a historic cottage in Mobile, Alabama, United States. The 1 1�-story, wood-frame, Gulf Coast cottage was completed in 1862. The house was built by the Pfau family, but its best known resident was Miss Anne Randolph Crichton, known for the elaborate gardens that she developed on the property. She enlisted in the Navy at the outbreak of World War I and continued her service until retirement, in the 1950s. She traveled extensively in Europe ...
 
 
The Midtown Historic District is a historic district in the city of Mobile, Alabama, United States. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 29, 2001. It is roughly bounded by Taylor Avenue, Government Street, Houston Street, Kenneth Street, Springhill Avenue, and Florida Street. The district covers 467 acres (1.89 km2) and contains 1270 contributing buildings. The majority of the contributing buildings range in age from the 1880s to the 1950s and cover a wide variet...
National Register of Historic Places in Mobile, Alabama, High schools in Mobile, Alabama, International Baccalaureate schools in Alabama, Educational institutions established in 1926, Public high schools in Alabama, 1926 establishments in Alabama, Hidden categories:, Pages using duplicate arguments in template calls, All articles with dead external links, Articles with dead external links from November 2010, Articles with dead external links from May 2013, Coordinates on Wikidata, All articles w...
 The Crichton Leprechaun (known alternatively as the Mobile Leprechaun or Alabama Leprechaun) is an urban legend and internet meme involving a purported leprechaun seen in a tree in Crichton, a neighborhood of Mobile, Alabama. The Crichton Leprechaun rose to international fame in March 2006 following a news report filed at local NBC affiliate WPMI-TV. The video was posted to YouTube on St. Patricks Day 2006 and fueled media attention to the story and the city. The clip became one of the first You...

Records 61+:
links to loca­tions & detailsArticle TitleURLCategories the item belongs toImages in Wikipedia articleP
National Register of Historic Places in Mobile, Alabama, Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Alabama, Houses in Mobile, Alabama, Houses completed in 1843, Defunct museums in Alabama, Gulf Coast cottage architecture in Alabama, 1843 establishments in Alabama, Alabama Registered Historic Place stubs, Southern United States museum stubs, Alabama building and structure stubs, Hidden categories:, All articles with dead external links, Articles with dead external links from November ...The Carlen House, also known as the Carlen House Museum, is a historic house museum in Mobile, Alabama, United States. The house was built in the Gulf Coast cottage style in 1843. It was the residence of Michael and Mary Carlen, Irish immigrants, and their twelve children. Operated as a farm during the 19th century, the Mobile County School Board acquired 38 acres (15 ha) of the property from the Carlen family in 1923 as the site for a new public city school. As a result, the house is now on the...
The Ashland Place Historic District is a historic district in the city of Mobile, Alabama, United States. The neighborhood gained its name from a Greek Revival antebellum house called Ashland that once stood on Lanier Avenue. Ashland was famous as the home of Augusta Evans Wilson. The house burned in 1926. The Ashland Place Historic District was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on June 23, 1987. It is roughly bounded by Spring Hill Avenue, Ryan Avenue, Old Shell Road, and Lever...
 
Churches completed in 1857, Towers completed in 1857, National Register of Historic Places in Mobile, Alabama, Churches in Mobile, Alabama, Episcopal churches in Alabama, Properties of religious function on the National Register of Historic Places in Alabama, Gothic Revival churches in Alabama, Towers in Alabama, Bell towers in the United States, Religious organizations established in 1845, 1845 establishments in the United States, 19th-century Episcopal churches, Hidden categories:, Coordinates...

Records 81+:
links to loca­tions & detailsArticle TitleURLCategories the item belongs toImages in Wikipedia articleP
The Convent and Academy of the Visitation, properly known today as the Visitation Monastery, is a historic complex of Roman Catholic religious buildings and a small cemetery in Mobile, Alabama, United States. The buildings and grounds were documented by the Historic American Buildings Survey in 1937. They were added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 24, 1992 as a part of Historic Roman Catholic Properties in Mobile Multiple Property Submission. It, along with the Convent of Me...
Shaarai Shomayim Cemetery, also known as the Reformed Temple Jewish Cemetery, is a historic Jewish cemetery located in Mobile, Alabama, United States. It was established by Congregation Shaarai Shomayim in 1876 after their previous cemetery, Jewish Rest in the adjacent Magnolia Cemetery, was filled to capacity. The cemetery is situated on 15 acres (6.1 ha) and is surrounded by a 19th-century cast-iron fence and live oak trees. The entrance is through an ornamental arched gate inscribed with the ...
Magnolia Cemetery is a historic city cemetery located in Mobile, Alabama. Filled with many elaborate Victorian-era monuments, it spans more than 100 acres (40 ha). It served as Mobiles primary, and almost exclusive, burial place during the 19th century. It is the final resting place for many of Mobiles 19th and early 20th century citizens. The cemetery is roughly bounded by Frye Street to the north, Gayle Street to the east, and Ann Street to the west. Virginia Street originally formed the south...
The DIberville Apartments is a complex of historic apartment buildings located in Mobile, Alabama. They were built in 1943 to the designs of architects Harry Pembleton and Aurelius Augustus Evans. They were constructed in a Minimal Traditionalist style of architecture and are notable for their significance to the community planning and development of Mobile during World War II, a time of tremendous growth in the city. The apartments were added to the National Register of Historic Places on Septe...
The Old Dauphin Way Historic District is a historic district in the city of Mobile, Alabama, United States. It was named for Dauphin Way, now known as Dauphin Street, which bisects the center of the district from east to west. The district is roughly bounded by Broad Street on the east, Springhill Avenue on the north, Government Street on the south, and Houston Avenue on the west. Covering 766 acres (3.10 km2) and containing 1466 contributing buildings, Old Dauphin Way is the largest historic di...
Oakleigh is a circa 1833 historic house museum in Mobile, Alabama, United States. It is the centerpiece of the Oakleigh Historic Complex, a grouping of buildings that contain a working-class raised cottage, Union Barracks, and a modern archives building. The name for the estate comes from a combination of the word oak and the Anglo-Saxon word lea, that means meadow. The complex is within the Oakleigh Garden Historic District, the surrounding district and neighborhood being named after the estate...
 
The Oakleigh Garden Historic District is a historic district in Mobile, Alabama, United States. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on 13 April 1972. It is centered on Washington Square and was originally bounded by Government, Marine, Texas, and Ann Streets. A boundary increase on 30 January 1991 increased the boundaries to Rapier Avenue, Selma, Broad, and Texas Streets. The district covers 1,453 acres (5.88 km2) and contains 288 contributing buildings. The buildings range...

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Link to query each field of Wikipedia: Geolocated Wikipedia articles, downloaded 2015-08 near Tillmans Corner, Alabama, United States Value in the first recordsee also

Article Title, in Wikipedia

  Tillmans Corner, Alabama  

URL, of the Wikipedia article

  Tillmans_Corner,_Alabama  

Categories the item belongs to

  Unincorporated communities in Alabama, Census-designated places in Mobile County, Alabama, Census-designated places in Alabama, Unincorporated communities in Mobile County, Alabama, Hidden categories:, Coordinates on Wikidata,  

Images in Wikipedia article

  500px-Mobile_County_Alabama_Incorporated_and_Unincorporated_areas_Tillmans_Corner_Highlighted.svg.png  

P: First paragraph of the article

  Tillmans Corner is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Mobile County, Alabama, United States. At the 2010 census the population was 17,398. It is a part of the Mobile metropolitan statistical area.  

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