User:Ipoellet/sandbox

Sandbox 1 - Pending listings rows... Sandbox 2 - Prepped infoboxes

Sandbox 3 - NRHP photo contest 2013... Sandbox 4 - Local government

Sandbox 5 - Draft NRHP header... Sandbox 6 - Draft NRHP row... Sandbox 7 - Draft NRHP table test case

garden apartment

Smithsonian trinomials

 * Article titles
 * Smithsonian trinomials (or equivalent archaeological site numbers, e.g. in Arizona) generally should not appear in article titles, except in the following circumstances:
 * Where necessary to disambiguate between sites with identical common names, with the form Old Site (51FC123) and Old Site (51FC124). However, use of other, more common disambiguators is preferred over trinomials/numbers, such as at Indian Sands (Brookings, Oregon) and Indian Sands (Carpenterville, Oregon).
 * Where no common name exists apart from the trinomials themselves, such as


 * Neither Wikipedia nor WikiProject Archaeology style guidelines specify a preferred spelling of archeology vs. archaeology and their derivative forms (notwithstanding the wikiproject's name). Similarly WP:NRHP leaves the choice of spelling up to individual authors/editors, provided the same spelling is used consistently throughout any one article. However, the NPS prefers the spelling archeology, which is therefore the spelling used in nearly all NRHP/NRIS names where the word appears.


 * NRHP list name columns and NRHP infobox headlines
 * NRHP list tables and infoboxes are not subject to WP:COMMONNAME. Therefore, list names/infobox headlines should adhere to the NRHP/NRIS names and formats regardless of any more common name for the site, except that certain stylistic stan

=Individual palimpsest=

The Beatrice Morrow and E. D. Cannady House is a historic house located in Portland, Oregon, United States. Beatrice Morrow Cannady (c. 1889 – 1974) from 1912 to 1937. The Advocate, one of Portland’s earliest Black newspapers and the longest-running Black newspaper in Oregon prior to World War II.

The house was entered on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 2024.

Reducto de San Gerónimo del Boquerón
18.46284°N, -66.0842°W

(Redoubt Saint Jerome at El Boquerón), also frequently referred to as Fortín de San Gerónimo (Fort Saint Jerome)

Polvorín de San Gerónimo
18.46465°N, -66.09054°W

(Saint Jerome Powderhouse)

Batería del Escambrón
18.46705°N, -66.08649°W

(Battery Escambron)

San Antonio Bridgehead
18.46°N, -66.0864°W

(Cabeza de Puente de San Antonio)