Ontario State Bank Block

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ontario_State_Bank_Block an entity of type: Thing

The Ontario State Bank Block was a historic commercial building located at 300 South Euclid Avenue in Ontario, California. The building, completed in 1887, was composed of three sections, and had a design which incorporated elements of the Eastlake and Queen Anne styles. The design included a corner turret, several gables along the roof line, and a variety of different window styles; it originally had three prominent oriel windows in the gable peaks above the bank's original section, and also had a set in the second section of the block. Decorative features included corbelled brickwork and carved wooden pilasters and brackets. The Ontario State Bank, which opened with the building, was the first bank in Ontario and an important early business center for the city. The building also housed s rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ontario State Bank Block
rdf:langString Ontario State Bank Block
rdf:langString Ontario State Bank Block
xsd:float 34.06166839599609
xsd:float -117.6505584716797
xsd:integer 46782444
xsd:integer 1069256648
xsd:date 1982-01-08
rdf:langString Photograph of the Ontario State Bank Block, a two-story, brick commercial building with an ornate roofline
rdf:langString Eastlake, Queen Anne
rdf:langString less than one acre
rdf:langString The Ontario State Bank Block in 1977
xsd:integer 300
xsd:integer 82002242
xsd:string 34.06166666666667 -117.65055555555556
rdf:langString The Ontario State Bank Block was a historic commercial building located at 300 South Euclid Avenue in Ontario, California. The building, completed in 1887, was composed of three sections, and had a design which incorporated elements of the Eastlake and Queen Anne styles. The design included a corner turret, several gables along the roof line, and a variety of different window styles; it originally had three prominent oriel windows in the gable peaks above the bank's original section, and also had a set in the second section of the block. Decorative features included corbelled brickwork and carved wooden pilasters and brackets. The Ontario State Bank, which opened with the building, was the first bank in Ontario and an important early business center for the city. The building also housed several other shops, including Grand Palace Pavilion of Antiques, Howell's Furniture and Hardware, and E.H. Richardson's Pacific Electric Heating Company, which invented the Hotpoint electric iron and brought national attention to Ontario. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 8, 1982. It unfortunately burned down in 1986. Euclid Avenue is on the National Register of Historic Places.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4221
xsd:string 82002242
xsd:gYear 1887
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