Peoria, Illinois, United States

History | Notable events | Geography | Economy : Industry : Retail | Businesses | Economy : Top employers | Arts and culture | Library | Performing arts | Civic Center | Renaissance Park | The Museum Block | Registered historic places | Points of interest | Sport | Parks and recreation | Township of the City of Peoria | Education | Media | NOAA Weather Radio | Health and medicine | Transport | Rail transportation | Public transportation | Transport : Air

🇺🇸 Peoria is the county seat of Peoria County, Illinois, and the largest city on the Illinois River. It is the principal city of the Peoria Metropolitan Area in Central Illinois, consisting of the counties of Marshall, Peoria, Stark, Tazewell, and Woodford. Established in 1691 by the French explorer Henri de Tonti, Peoria was later labeled by the Peoria Historical Society to be the oldest European settlement in Illinois. Originally known as Fort Clark, it received its current name when the County of Peoria organized in 1825. The city was named after the Peoria tribe, a member of the Illinois Confederation. On October 16, 1854, Abraham Lincoln made his Peoria speech against the Kansas-Nebraska Act. A major port on the Illinois River, Peoria is a trading and shipping centre for a large agricultural area that produces corn, soybeans, and livestock. Although the economy is well diversified, the city's traditional manufacturing industries remain important and produce earthmoving equipment, metal products, lawn-care equipment, labels, steel towers, farm equipment, building materials, steel, wire, and chemicals. The city is associated with the phrase "Will it play in Peoria?", which originated from the vaudeville era and was popularized by Groucho Marx. Museums in the city include the Pettengill-Morron House, the John C. Flanagan House, and the Peoria Riverfront Museum.

History Peoria is the oldest European settlement in Illinois, as explorers first ventured up the Illinois River from the Mississippi. The lands that eventually would become Peoria were first settled by Europeans in 1680, when French explorers René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle and Henri de Tonti constructed Fort Crevecoeur. This fort would later burn to the ground, and in 1813, Fort Clark, Illinois was built. When the County of Peoria was organized in 1825, Fort Clark was officially named Peoria.

Peoria was named after the Peoria tribe, a member of the Illinois Confederation. The original meaning of the word is uncertain. A 21st-century proposal suggests a derivation from a Proto-Algonquian word meaning "to dream with the help of a manitou".

Peoria was incorporated as a village on March 11, 1835. The city did not have a mayor, though they had a village president, Rudolphus Rouse, who served from 1835 to 1836. The first Chief of Police, John B Lishk, was appointed in 1837. The city was incorporated on April 21, 1845. This was the end of a village president and the start of the mayoral system, with the first mayor being William Hale.

Peoria, Arizona, a suburb of Phoenix, was named after Peoria, Illinois because the two men who founded it in 1890 − Joseph B. Greenhut and Deloss S. Brown − wished to name it after their hometown.

For much of the 20th century, a red-light district of brothels and bars known as the Merry-Go-Round was part of Peoria.

Richard Pryor got his start as a performer on North Washington Street in the early 1960s.

In 2021, Rita Ali became Peoria's first female and African American mayor.

Notable events • September 19 to October 21, 1813 – Peoria War • 1844 – Abraham Lincoln came to Peoria to get involved in the Aquilla Wren divorce case and took it to the Supreme Court of Illinois • April 15, 1926 – Charles Lindbergh's first air mail route, Contract Air Mail route #2, began running mail from Chicago to Peoria to Springfield to St. Louis and back. There is nothing to substantiate the local legend that Lindbergh offered Peoria the chance to sponsor his trans-Atlantic flight and call his plane the "Spirit of Peoria", but he does state that he first pondered the journey after taking off from the Peoria air mail field. • 1942 – Penicillium chrysogenum, the fungus originally used to industrially produce penicillin, was first isolated from a mouldy cantaloupe found in a grocery store in Peoria. • Local legend is that Theodore Roosevelt called Grandview Drive, a street on the bluffs overlooking the Illinois River "the world's most beautiful drive" during his visit in 1910. However, no contemporaneous accounts of this story appeared, even in local papers and histories, for over two decades after it supposedly occurred. A related legend claims that the Peoria radio station and CBS television affiliate, WMBD, chose it's call sign based on this story. In fact, the WMBD letters were assigned randomly and the meaning behind it was invented after the fact in 1927.

Geography According to the 2010 census, Peoria has a total area of 50.23 square miles (130.10 km²), of which 48.01 square miles (124.35 km²) (or 95.58%) is land and 2.22 square miles (5.75 km²) (or 4.42%) is water.

Economy: Industry Peoria's first major industries include: flour mill, pork planting, carriage factories, pottery makers, wholesale warehousing, casting foundries, glucose factories, ice harvesting, and furniture makers.

Peoria became the first world leader for distilleries. Peoria held 22 distilleries and multiple breweries. Together, they produced the highest amount of internal revenue tax on alcohol of any single revenue district in the entire U.S. Peoria also was one of the major bootlegging areas during Prohibition. This great success placed Peoria into a building boom of beautiful private homes, schools, parks, churches, as well as municipal buildings.

In addition to the distilleries came farm machinery manufacturing starting with the steel plow which gained immediate success. The dominant manufacturing companies in Peoria were Kingman Plow Co., Acme Harvester Co., Selby, Starr & Co., and Avery Manufacturing Co. In 1889, Keystone Steel & Wire developed the first wire fence and has since been the nation's leading manufacturer.

Around the 1880s, businesses such as Rouse Hazard Co. in Peoria, were dealers and importers of bicycles and accessories worldwide. Charles Duryea, one of the cycle manufacturers, developed the first commercially available gasoline-powered automobile in the U.S. in 1893.

At this time, agricultural implement production declined, which led the earth moving and tractor equipment companies to skyrocket and make Peoria in this field the world leader. In 1925, Caterpillar Tractor Co. was formed from California-based companies, Benjamin Holt Co. and the C.L. Best Tractor Co. Robert G. LeTourneau's earth moving company began its production of new scrapers and dozers in 1935 which evolved into Komatsu-Dresser, Haulpak Division. Today, the joint venture between Komatsu and Dresser Industries has long since passed. The entity that remains is the off-highway truck manufacturing division for Komatsu America Corporation.

More recently Peoria has become a regional medical hub for central Illinois with recent hospital expansions.

Economy: Retail The city's largest mall is Northwoods Mall. Other retail centres include The Shoppes at Grand Prairie, Sheridan Village, Metro Centre, Willow Knolls Court, and Westlake Shopping Center.

Businesses • Archer Daniels Midland: Corn processing plant and ethanol producer • Bergner's (until August 2018 when it went bankrupt and closed nationwide): Department store; started in 1889 in downtown Peoria and eventually bought out Carson Pirie Scott & Co. (now part of Bon-Ton) • Caterpillar (until 2017 when its Headquarters (approx 300 positions) moved to Deerfield, Illinois): Heavy equipment and engine manufacturer. Caterpillar still maintains a large working force in the area in Management, Marketing, IT, Engineering and Labor Union manufacturing, as well as other positions. • CEFCU: Credit union; started by Caterpillar employees; now serves residents of 14 counties in Central Illinois and 3 in California • Komatsu America Corporation: World's second-largest mining equipment manufacturer has a large manufacturing facility in Peoria • Maui Jim (World Headquarters): Sunglasses manufacturer • National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research: Largest USDA research facility; one of the facilities where mass production of penicillin was improved • OSF Healthcare, which operates OSF Saint Francis Medical Center • RLI Corp. (World Headquarters): Specialty insurance company • Pioneer Railcorp (Corporate Headquarters): Railroad holding company for a number of American short-line railroads • UnityPoint Health: Owns three hospitals in the area, two in Peoria.

Economy: Top employers According to a recent Financial Report, the top employers in the city include: 1 Caterpillar; 2 OSF Saint Francis Medical Center; 3 UnityPoint Health; 4 Peoria Public Schools District 150; 5 Bradley University; 6 Advanced Technology Services; 7 Keystone Steel & Wire; 8 City of Peoria; 9 Peoria County; 10 Citizens Equity First Credit Union.

Arts and culture Museums in Peoria include the Pettengill-Morron House, the John C Flanagan House of the Peoria Historical Society, and the Wheels o' Time Museum. The Museum Block, opened on October 12, 2012, houses the Peoria Riverfront Museum, a planetarium, and the Caterpillar World Visitors Center.

The Peoria Art Guild hosts the Annual Art Fair, which is continually rated as one of the 100 top art fairs in the nation.

Three cultural institutions are located in Glen Oak Park. The Peoria Zoo, formerly Glen Oak Zoo, was expanded and refurbished in recent years. Finished in 2009, the new zoo improvements more than triple the size of the zoo and feature a major African safari exhibit. Luthy Garden, established in 1951, encompasses five acres and offers over a dozen theme gardens and a Conservatory. The Peoria PlayHouse Children's Museum opened in June 2015 in the Glen Oak Pavilion.

The Steamboat Classic, held every summer, is the world's largest four-mile (6 km) running race and draws international runners.

The Peoria Santa Claus Parade, which started in 1888, is the oldest running holiday parade in the United States.

Library Library services in Peoria originated in 1855 with two rival libraries, the Peoria Mercantile Library and the Peoria Library, which consolidated in 1856 as the Peoria City Library, and contained over 1,500 volumes. The Peoria Public Library has five locations, including the Lincoln Branch, a Carnegie library opened in 1911.

Performing arts The Peoria Symphony Orchestra is the 14th oldest in the nation. Peoria is also home to the Peoria Municipal Band, the Peoria Area Civic Chorale, the Youth Music Illinois (formerly known as Central Illinois Youth Symphony), Central Illinois Ballet, and the Peoria Ballet. Several community and professional theaters have their home in and around Peoria, including the Peoria Players, which is the fourth-oldest community theater in the nation and the oldest in Illinois. Corn Stock Theatre is another community theater company in Peoria, and is the only outdoor theater company in Central Illinois.

Peoria has hosted the Heart of Illinois Fair every year since 1949. The fair features livestock competitions, rides, concessions, motor contests and concerts.

Civic Center The Peoria Civic Center includes an arena, convention centre, and theater, and was completed in the early 1980s, was designed by the famed late architect Philip Johnson. It completed a $55 million renovation and expansion by 2007.

The Hotel Pere Marquette finished renovations in 2013 with a skyway linking to the Peoria Civic Center. A new 10-story Courtyard has been built adjacent to this hotel, completing a hotel campus for larger conventions.

The Civic Center hosts the Bradley University Men's Basketball team, the IHSA Boys State Basketball Championships and State Chess Championship. Which claims to be the largest chess team tournament in the United States: Beginning in 2018, the teams were narrowed to 128 by the use of sectional elimination competitions, and as of 2018 the tournament has about 1500 players, including up to 8 players and 4 alternates per team.

Renaissance Park Renaissance Park was originally designated as a research park, originally established in May 2003 as the Peoria Medical and Technology District. It consisted of nine residential neighborhoods, Bradley University, the medical district, and the National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research. The Peoria NEXT Innovation Center opened in August 2007 and provides both dry and wet labs, as well as conference and office space for emerging start-up companies. Over $2 billion in research is conducted in Peoria annually. While the Renaissance Park research park project never came to full fruition, many of the original ideas from the original Renaissance Park concept still continue on a smaller level via The Renaissance Park Community Association.

The Museum Block The Museum Block is a $100+ million project that contains the Peoria Riverfront Museum and The Caterpillar Experience, a museum and visitor's centre showcasing Caterpillar past, present, and future. It is located in downtown Peoria along the Illinois River at the site formerly known as the Sears Block. The Block opened in October 2012.

Registered historic places • Central National Bank Building • Cumberland Presbyterian Church • Grand Army of the Republic Memorial Hall • Grandview Drive • International Harvester Building • John C. Proctor Recreation Center • Judge Flanagan Residence • Judge Jacob Gale House • Madison Theatre • North Side Historic District • Peace and Harvest • Peoria City Hall • Peoria Cordage Company • Peoria Mineral Springs • Peoria Waterworks • Pere Marquette Hotel • Pettingill-Morron House • Rock Island Depot and Freight House • Springdale Cemetery • West Bluff Historic District • A. Lucas & Sons.

Points of interest • The city of Peoria is home to a United States courthouse and the Peoria Civic Center (which includes Carver Arena). • Civil War Monument at County Courthouse Plaza • Grandview Drive along the Illinois River bluff in Peoria and Peoria Heights • Glen Oak Park, including Glen Oak Zoo and George L. Luthy Memorial Botanical Garden • Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Immaculate Conception (Peoria, Illinois) (also known as St. Mary's Cathedral) • Scottish Rite Cathedral • Wildlife Prairie State Park, about 10 mi (16 km) west of the city • Peoria Riverfront Museum and Caterpillar Visitor Center along the downtown waterfront. The third largest scale model of the solar system is centered on the museum. • Dozer Park - home of the Peoria Chiefs professional baseball team located in the downtown sector

Sport Peoria Chiefs, Baseball; Peoria Rivermen, Ice Hockey; Peoria Mustangs, Ice Hockey; Peoria City, Association football; Peoria Push Roller Derby; Peoria Rugby Football Club; Bradley Braves Basketball.

Parks and recreation Grandview Drive, which Theodore Roosevelt purportedly called the "world's most beautiful drive" during a 1910 visit, runs through both Peoria and Peoria Heights. In addition to Grandview Drive, the Peoria Park District contains 9,000 acres (36 km²) of parks and trails. The Illinois River Bluff Trail connects four Peoria Park District parks: Camp Wokanda, Robinson Park, Green Valley Camp, and Detweiller Park; the Rock Island Greenway (13 miles) connects the State of Illinois Rock Island trail traveling north to Toulon, IL and also connects south-east to East Peoria, IL and to the Morton Community Bikeway. Other parks include the Forest Park Nature Center, which features seven miles of hiking trails through prairie openings and forested woodlands, Glen Oak Park, and Bradley Park, which features disc golf as well as a dog park. Peoria has five public golf courses as well as several private and semi-private golf courses. The Peoria Park District, the first and still largest park district in Illinois, was the 2001 Winner of the National Gold Medal Award for Excellence in Parks and Recreation for Class II Parks.

Township of the City of Peoria The Township of the City of Peoria (also City of Peoria Township) is a separate government from the City of Peoria, and performs the functions of civil township government in most of the city. The township was created by the Peoria County Board to match the boundaries of the City of Peoria, which until then had overlapped portions of Peoria Township (now West Peoria Township) and Richwoods Township. The border of the township grew with the Peoria city limits until 1990, when it was frozen at its current boundaries, containing about 53 square miles (140 km²); the City of Peoria itself has continued expanding outside the City of Peoria Township borders into Kickapoo, Medina, and Radnor township. In the years before the freeze, the Township of the City of Peoria had grown to take up most of the former area of Richwoods and what is now West Peoria Township.

This township has the following neighborhoods: • Averyville • Central Peoria • Downtown • East Bluff • El Vista • Glen Oak-Flanagan Historic District • Grandview Drive • Heart of Peoria • Moss-Bradley • North Valley • Northwest Peoria • Randolph-Roanoke Historic District • West Bluff.

Education Bradley University, Methodist College, OSF St. Francis College of Nursing, the University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria, and the Downtown and North campuses of Illinois Central College are based in the city. The former Peoria campus of Roosevelt University is now closed. Additionally, Eureka College and the main campus of Illinois Central College are located nearby in Eureka and East Peoria, respectively.

Media Peoria is the 153rd largest radio market in the United States and Peoria-Bloomington is the 117th largest television market in the United States.

The area has 14 commercial radio stations with six owners among them; four non-commercial full-power radio stations, each separately owned; five commercial television stations with two operating owners among them; one non-commercial television station; and one daily newspaper (Peoria Journal Star).

NOAA Weather Radio NOAA Weather Radio station WXJ71 transmits from East Peoria and is licensed to NOAA's National Weather Service Central Illinois Weather Forecast Office at Lincoln, broadcasting on a frequency of 162.475 mHz (channel 4 on most newer weather radios, and most SAME weather radios). The station activates the SAME tone alarm feature and a 1050 Hz tone activating older radios (except for AMBER Alerts, using the SAME feature only) for hazardous weather and non-weather warnings and emergencies, along with selected weather watches, for the Illinois counties of Fulton, Knox, Marshall, Mason, McLean, Peoria, Stark, Tazewell, and Woodford. Weather permitting, a tone alarm test of both the SAME and 1050 Hz tone features are conducted every Wednesday between 11 AM and noon.

Health and medicine The health-care industry accounts for at least 25% of Peoria's economy. The city has three major hospitals: OSF Saint Francis Medical Center, UnityPoint Health – Methodist, and UnityPoint Health – Proctor, now known as Carle Heath as of 2023. In addition, the Children's Hospital of Illinois, the University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria, and the Midwest Affiliate of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital are located in the city. The hospitals are all located in a medical district around the junction of Interstate 74 and Knoxville Avenue, adjacent to downtown in the south-east of the city, except for UnityPoint Health – Proctor in the geographic centre of the city. The surrounding towns are also supported by UnityPoint Health – Proctor, Pekin Hospital, Advocate Eureka Hospital, and the Hopedale Medical Complex. The Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation was created from the "Peoria Plan for Human Rehabilitation", a model for medical and occupational rehabilitation launched in 1943 to integrate returning World War II veterans back into the workplace.

Transport Interstate and U.S. routes The Peoria area is served by three Interstate highways: Interstate 74, which runs from north-west to south-east through the downtown area, Interstate 474, a southern bypass of I-74 through portions of Peoria and the suburbs of Bartonville and Creve Coeur, and Interstate 155, which runs south from I-74 in Morton to Interstate 55 in Lincoln which connects to Springfield and St. Louis. I-74 crosses over the Illinois River via the Murray Baker Bridge, while I-474 crosses via the Shade-Lohmann Bridge. The nearest metropolitan centres accessible on I-74 are the Quad Cities to the west, and Bloomington-Normal to the east.

From 2004 to 2006, Interstate 74 between Interstate 474 on the west and Illinois Route 8 on the east was reconstructed as part of the Upgrade 74 project.

In addition, U.S. Route 150 serves as the main arterial for the northern portion of the Peoria area, becoming War Memorial Drive before heading west towards Kickapoo. It enters from the McClugage Bridge; east of the bridge, then runs south-east to Morton. U.S. Route 24 runs concurrently with Interstate 474 in the south-west portion of the city.

State routes The following state routes run through Peoria: • Illinois Route 6 runs along the north-western portion of the city as an extension of I-474. It is a four-lane freeway that runs from the I-74/474 intersection north-east to Illinois Route 29 south of Chillicothe. It is marked as a north–south road. • Illinois Route 8 roughly parallels I-74 to the south. It enters Peoria from Elmwood and runs south-east through the city, passing just south-west of the downtown area. Illinois 8 crosses into East Peoria via the Cedar Street Bridge with 116. Illinois 8 is marked as an east–west road. • Illinois Route 29 runs through Peoria along the Illinois River from Chillicothe through downtown Peoria. It then joins Interstate 74 across the Murray Baker Bridge. Illinois 29 is marked as a north–south road, and is called Galena Road north of U.S. 150. • Illinois Route 40 (formerly 88) enters Peoria from the north as Knoxville Avenue. It runs south through the centre of the city and exits south-east over the Bob Michel Bridge. Illinois 40 is marked as a north–south road. • Illinois Route 91 briefly enters Peoria at the intersection with U.S. 150 in the far north-western portion of the city. Traffic on Illinois 91 mainly accesses The Shoppes at Grand Prairie, or continues to Dunlap. • Illinois Route 116 enters from the west at Bellevue. It runs directly east and crosses into East Peoria over the Cedar Street Bridge.

The planned Illinois Route 336 project will also connect Illinois 336 with I-474 between Illinois 8 and Illinois 116. Construction on the segment nearest Peoria has not started, nor has funding been allocated.

Rail transportation Metro Peoria is served by ten common carrier railroads. Four are Class I railroads: BNSF, Canadian National, Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific. The latter has a north–south oriented line which skirts the west edge of the city but a line branches off of it to enter Peoria. One Class II/Regional, Iowa Interstate, serves the city, coming out of Bureau Junction, Illinois. Five Class III/Shortline railroads: Central Illinois Railroad, which operates a portion of the city-owned Peoria, Peoria Heights and Western Railroad; three Genesee & Wyoming-owned operations: Toledo, Peoria & Western Railway, which runs next to US 24 east to Logansport, Indiana (formally owned by Rail America), Illinois & Midland Railroad (the former Chicago & Illinois Midland, comes up from Springfield and Havana) and Tazewell & Peoria Railroad (leases the Peoria & Pekin Union Railway from its owners Canadian National, Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific); Pioneer Railcorp's Keokuk Junction Railway (which now owns the Toledo, Peoria and Western's West End from Lomax and La Harpe in Western Illinois, plus the branch from Keokuk).

Peoria was a minor passenger rail hub until the 1950s. Several Midwestern railroads served Peoria Union Station until 1955. The Rock Island Railroad operated trains into its Rock Island Depot until 1978, when they discontinued the Peoria Rocket. East Peoria was served by Amtrak's Prairie Marksman (Chicago–East Peoria) until 1981. Peoria is currently the largest city in Illinois without passenger rail service; the closest passenger stations are Galesburg (served by Amtrak's Chicago–Los Angeles Southwest Chief) and Bloomington (served by Amtrak's Chicago-St. Louis Lincoln Service).

A study of East Peoria–Bloomington passenger rail service was published in 2011. Plans for the proposed service, which would have connected with Amtrak’s Lincoln Service at Bloomington, were abandoned due to financial considerations.

A study of Peoria–Chicago passenger rail service was published in July 2022. The study, conducted by IDOT at the request of a Passenger Rail Committee established in August 2021, estimated that startup costs for the proposed service would be $2.54 billion. The service would be operated by Amtrak and would have intermediate stops at LaSalle-Peru, Utica, Ottawa, Morris, and Joliet. The trip between Peoria and Chicago would take about 2+1⁄2 hours. Committee members, who met with federal transportation officials and Amtrak's CEO, were hopeful about securing funding.

Public transportation Public bus service is provided by the Greater Peoria Mass Transit District, which operates 17 bus routes under the name CityLink, that serve the city, Illinois Central College and much of East Peoria, Illinois, Peoria Heights, West Peoria, and points between Peoria and Pekin.

Transport: Air The General Wayne Downing Peoria International Airport is located west of Peoria. The airport is served by 3 passenger airlines (United, American, and Allegiant Air) and numerous cargo carriers. Nonstop destinations include Chicago, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Punta Gorda, and Charlotte. Seasonal destinations include Denver, Nashville, and Destin Fort Walton. Cargo carriers serving Peoria include UPS and Airborne Express (now DHL).

Mount Hawley Auxiliary Airport, on the north end of the city, is a general aviation airport.

Peoria, Illinois, United States 
<b>Peoria, Illinois, United States</b>
Image: Adobe Stock Kristen #209814001

Peoria was ranked #237 by the Nomad List which evaluates and ranks remote work hubs by cost, internet, fun and safety. Peoria has a population of over 115,007 people. Peoria also forms the centre of the wider Peoria metropolitan area which has a population of over 373,590 people. Peoria is the #384 hipster city in the world, with a hipster score of 1.852 according to the Hipster Index which evaluates and ranks the major cities of the world according to the number of vegan eateries, coffee shops, tattoo studios, vintage boutiques, and record stores. Peoria is ranked #736 for startups with a score of 0.195.

To set up a UBI Lab for Peoria see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Twin Towns, Sister Cities Peoria has links with:

🇱🇧 Aitou, Lebanon 🇨🇳 Benxi, China 🇮🇪 Clonmel, Ireland 🇩🇪 Friedrichshafen, Germany
Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license | Hipster Index | Nomad | StartupBlink

Antipodal to Peoria is: 90.407,-40.693

Locations Near: Peoria -89.5927,40.6928

🇺🇸 Normal -88.989,40.512 d: 54.8  

🇺🇸 Bloomington-Normal -88.985,40.508 d: 55.3  

🇺🇸 Bloomington -88.983,40.483 d: 56.5  

🇺🇸 Galesburg -90.35,40.95 d: 69.8  

🇺🇸 LaSalle -89.083,41.333 d: 83.1  

🇺🇸 Springfield -89.644,39.801 d: 99.3  

🇺🇸 Ottawa -88.817,41.35 d: 97.9  

🇺🇸 Decatur -88.95,39.833 d: 110  

🇺🇸 Sterling -89.683,41.783 d: 121.5  

🇺🇸 Morrison -89.967,41.8 d: 127  

Antipodal to: Peoria 90.407,-40.693

🇦🇺 Bunbury 115.637,-33.327 d: 17640  

🇦🇺 Mandurah 115.721,-32.529 d: 17591  

🇦🇺 Rockingham 115.717,-32.267 d: 17577  

🇦🇺 City of Cockburn 115.833,-32.167 d: 17562  

🇦🇺 Vincent 115.834,-31.936 d: 17549  

🇦🇺 Perth 115.857,-31.953 d: 17548.1  

🇦🇺 Wanneroo 115.803,-31.747 d: 17540.8  

🇦🇺 Guildford 115.973,-31.9 d: 17535.7  

🇦🇺 Midland 116.01,-31.888 d: 17532  

🇦🇺 Albany 117.867,-35.017 d: 17534.2  

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