Grant County
Quincy is a city in Grant County, Washington.
Quincy is a city in Grant County, Washington.
grants for champaign county Ohio fairgrounds nonprofit to build restrooms
The address of the Grant County Historical Society is: Po Box 1141, Ephrata, WA 98823-1141
20 same-sex couples married in Grant County in 2013. 2 same-sex couples married there in 2012.
We just passed a sign on Interstate 90 in Washington state that claims Doulas county produces the most potatoes.
Krupp is a town in Grant County, Washington. It begins with the letter K.
Ephrata, Pennsylvania. About 40 Miles SE of Harrisburg in Lancaster County. Ephrata, Washington State. Grant County in the Columbia River Basin Area
can i get a government grant to build a church
According to census.gov, the total area of Grant County, West Virginia, is 480.19 square miles.
* Adams County, Washington: John Adams, the second president of the United States. * Asotin County, Washington: The Nez Percé name for Eel Creek. * Benton County, Washington: Thomas Hart Benton, a Missouri U. S. senator. * Chelan County, Washington: A Native American word meaning deep water, probably a reference to Lake Chelan. * Clallam County, Washington: A Klallam word meaning the strong people. * Clark County, Washington: William Clark, the co-captain of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. * Columbia County, Washington: The Columbia River. * Cowlitz County, Washington: A Cowlitz word meaning seeker (in the spiritual sense). * Douglas County, Washington: Stephen Arnold Douglas, the statesman and rival of Abraham Lincoln. * Ferry County, Washington: Elisha P. Ferry, the first governor of Washington. * Franklin County, Washington: Benjamin Franklin, the famous Founding Father, statesman, printer, and scientist. * Garfield County, Washington: James Abram Garfield, the twentieth president of the United States. * Grant County, Washington: Ulysses Simpson Grant, the eighteenth president of the United States. * Grays Harbor County, Washington: Grays Harbor on the county's Pacific Ocean coastline. * Island County, Washington: After the fact that it consists of just two islands, Whidbey Island and Camano Island. * Jefferson County, Washington: Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States. * King County, Washington: William Rufus de Vane King, the thirteenth vice president of the United States. (The county was "renamed" in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1986.) * Kitsap County, Washington: Kitsap, a chief of the Suquamish tribe. * Kittitas County, Washington: A Native American word of uncertain meaning. * Klickitat County, Washington: The Klickitat tribe of the Yakama Nation. * Lewis County, Washington: Meriwether Lewis, the co-captain of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. * Lincoln County, Washington: Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States. * Mason County, Washington: C. H. Mason, the first secretary of the Washington Territory. * Okanogan County, Washington: A Salish Native American word meaning rendezvous. * Pacific County, Washington: The Pacific Ocean. * Pend Oreille County, Washington: The Pend d'Oreille Native American tribe. * Pierce County, Washington: Franklin Pierce, the 14th president of the United States. * San Juan County, Washington: San Juan Island. * Skagit County, Washington: The Skagit Native American tribe. * Skamania County, Washington: A Chinookan word meaning swift water. * Snohomish County, Washington: The Snohomish Native American tribe. * Spokane County, Washington: The Spokane Native American tribe. * Stevens County, Washington: Isaac Ingalls Stevens, the first governor of the Washington Territory. * Thurston County, Washington: Samuel Royal Thurston, Oregon Territory's first delegate to the United States Congress. * Wahkiakum County, Washington: Chief Wahkiakum of the Chinook Native American tribe. * Walla Walla County, Washington: The Walla Walla Native American tribe. * Whatcom County, Washington: Chief Whatcom of the Nooksack Native American tribe. * Whitman County, Washington: Marcus Whitman, a Presbyterian missionary who was killed by members of the Cayuse Native American tribe. * Yakima County, Washington: The Yakama Native American tribe.