Who Owned Pioneer Shoe Repair In Beaver Dam Ky
This is a listing of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Contrivance County, Wisconsin. It is intended to provide a comprehensive listing of entries in the National Annals of Historic Places that are located in Contrivance County, Wisconsin. The locations of National Annals backdrop for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included beneath may be seen in a map.[i]
In that location are 37 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county. Another two backdrop were once listed but have been removed.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted Apr 15, 2022. [2]
Electric current listings [edit]
[iii] | Name on the Register[4] | Epitome | Appointment listed[5] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
i | Beaumont Hotel |
| January 13, 1988 (#87002238) | 45 Main St. 43°29′48″Due north 88°32′xl″Due west / 43.496667°N 88.544444°Westward / 43.496667; -88.544444 (Beaumont Hotel) | Mayville | 3-story Queen Anne-style commercial block with bays covered with pressed metal and with an elaborate cornice. Designed by Henry Messmer and Son of Milwaukee and congenital in 1896 for Jacob Mueller, publisher of the Dodge Canton Pioneer, a German-language newspaper.[6] [vii] |
2 | W. H. Boller Meat Marketplace and Residence |
| August nineteen, 1994 (#94000997) | 705 South. Water St. 43°35′29″Due north 88°26′25″W / 43.591389°Due north 88.440278°W / 43.591389; -88.440278 (W. H. Boller Meat Market place and Residence) | Lomira | 2-story cream brick edifice, originally containing a meat market place, cold store, and living quarters, built in 1913 for William Boller.[8] [nine] |
three | Primal State Hospital Historic District |
| September 13, 1991 (#91001395) | Lincoln St. between Beaver Dam and Mason Sts. 43°37′24″Northward 88°44′12″West / 43.623333°N 88.736667°W / 43.623333; -88.736667 (Central State Hospital Historic District) | Waupun | Hospital complex congenital by the state beginning in 1913 to care for the insane - particularly the criminal and dangerous. The complex included a dairy, a craven house, pig pen, smoke house, and a carpenter shop, then the inmates could contribute and experience therapeutic work.[10] |
4 | Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company Passenger Depot |
| July 7, 1981 (#81000039) | 127 S. Leap St. 43°27′22″N 88°fifty′10″W / 43.456111°N 88.836111°Westward / 43.456111; -88.836111 (Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company Passenger Depot) | Beaver Dam | Red brick cottage-similar depot of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad designed past Frost & Granger and built in 1900.[11] [12] Previously listed as "Dodge County Historical Museum". |
5 | Martin K. Dahl House |
| September 11, 1975 (#75000062) | 314 Beaver Dam St. 43°37′46″N 88°44′43″W / 43.629444°Northward 88.745278°W / 43.629444; -88.745278 (Martin K. Dahl House) | Waupun | Late 2nd Empire-mode house with typical mansard roof, designed by Newell Whiting and built in 1879. Dahl was a Norwegian immigrant blacksmith and investor in farmlands in Minnesota and Dakota, a civic leader, and the builder of the "showtime mansion" in Waupun, this house.[13] [fourteen] |
6 | Fountain Inn |
| September 30, 2009 (#09000797) | 203 Front St. 43°27′22″N 88°50′22″W / 43.456194°North 88.839492°W / 43.456194; -88.839492 (Fountain Inn) | Beaver Dam | Tavern of the Binzel Brewing Co., built 1911.[15] [16] The owner fought neighbors and the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources after flooding on the Beaver Dam River caused a redesign of downtown Beaver Dam[17] but he eventually lost and the edifice was razed.[xviii] The site was empty in July 2022. |
7 | Pull a fast one on Lake Railroad Depot |
| May 22, 1978 (#78000093) | Cordelia St. and S. Higher Artery 43°33′40″Due north 88°54′31″W / 43.561111°N 88.908611°W / 43.561111; -88.908611 (Play a trick on Lake Railroad Depot) | Fox Lake | Small Victorian wooden depot built by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad in 1884, with porte-cochère added in 1919. Served passengers including resort patrons until the 1950s and freight until 1970. Now a museum.[19] [twenty] |
eight | Willard Greenfield Farmstead |
| November v, 1992 (#92001557) | N-7436 WI Trunk Hwy. 26, Burnett Township 43°27′52″Due north 88°42′09″Westward / 43.464444°Due north 88.7025°W / 43.464444; -88.7025 (Willard Greenfield Farmstead) | Horicon | Greek Revival-styled farmhouse built in 1862 past Greenfield, an immigrant from New York and one of the first settlers in Dodge County. Too 1891 fieldstone smokehouse, 1895 dairy barn, 1900 machine shed, 1920 poultry barn, 1920 corn crib, ii concrete silos built in 1929 and 1930, and a 1935 two-hole privy.[21] [22] |
9 | Ferdinand C. Hartwig House |
| June 17, 1982 (#82000662) | 908 Country Lane 43°12′18″N 88°44′44″Westward / 43.205°North 88.745556°Due west / 43.205; -88.745556 (Ferdinand C. Hartwig House) | Watertown | 2-story foam brick Italianate farmhouse with cupola built by Prussian immigrant Hartwig in 1864 at the center of his grain and cattle subcontract. Hartwig was an early producer of Holstein-Friesians, which started many herds in the area.[23] [24] |
ten | Hollenstein Railroad vehicle and Carriage Manufactory |
| July 27, 1979 (#79000070) | Bridge and German Sts. 43°29′46″N 88°32′32″W / 43.496111°Northward 88.542222°W / 43.496111; -88.542222 (Hollenstein Wagon and Railroad vehicle Factory) | Mayville | Cream-brick business firm built effectually 1875 attached to a factory behind, operated past Swiss immigrant John Hollenstein, who built wagons, sleighs, buggies, coaches and omnibuses. Now a museum.[25] |
11 | Horicon Site |
| January 31, 1979 (#79003492) | E of Waupun | Waupun | Prehistoric camp near the Horicon Marsh and Rock River, probably a brusk-term camp occupied by Woodland people effectually 1100 CE.[26] |
12 | Horicon Country Depository financial institution |
| February v, 2022 (#100002090) | 326 E Lake St. 43°27′06″N 88°37′53″Westward / 43.451545°Due north 88.631259°W / 43.451545; -88.631259 (Horicon State Bank) | Horicon | 2-story red brick banking company, designed in Neoclassical manner by Herman Buemming of Milwaukee and built in 1915, with terrazzo floors, electric lighting, bubblers, a double vault, and a pair of "tamper-proof" alarm bells.[27] |
13 | Hotel Rogers |
| March 2, 1989 (#89000120) | 103 E. Maple Ave. 43°27′26″N 88°l′12″W / 43.457222°N 88.836667°West / 43.457222; -88.836667 (Hotel Rogers) | Beaver Dam | six-story hotel designed by Richard R. Boyd in a somewhat Georgian Revival style and built in 1927 - the last and grandest hotel in Beaver Dam - a projection headed by Fred Westward. Rogers of Monarch Ranges.[28] |
14 | John Hustis House |
| March 10, 1983 (#83003371) | N. Ridge St. 43°20′49″N 88°36′05″W / 43.346944°North 88.601389°Westward / 43.346944; -88.601389 (John Hustis Firm) | Hustisford | Simple Greek Revival home congenital in 1857 by Merrit Wiltse for Hustis, the founder of Hustisford, who lived in that location until 1907.[29] [xxx] |
15 | Hutchinson Memorial Library |
| November fifteen, 1990 (#90001705) | 228 N. High St. 43°32′23″N 89°00′23″W / 43.539722°N 89.006389°Westward / 43.539722; -89.006389 (Hutchinson Memorial Library) | Randolph | Pocket-size-town library designed by Clas & Clas in Classical Moderne style and built in 1936, kick-started by a donation from Mary L. Morris.[31] [32] |
16 | Indian Indicate Site |
| September thirteen, 1990 (#90001459) | Accost Restricted | Fox Lake | |
17 | Kekoskee Archeological District |
| August xvi, 1994 (#94000985) | Address Restricted | Kekoskee | Several tardily Woodland sites on the eastern border of Horicon Marsh, including an effigy mound in a seasonal base camp and ii stockaded villages.[33] |
18 | Kliese Housebarn |
| April ii, 2008 (#08000257) | N366 Co. Rd. EM 43°12′24″N 88°40′03″W / 43.206667°Northward 88.6675°W / 43.206667; -88.6675 (Kliese Housebarn) | Emmet | Business firm and barn in ane gable-roofed building, built around 1850 by Prussian immigrant Friedrich Kliese and his family. Walls are fachwerk and the business firm contains a blackness kitchen.[34] [35] |
19 | Chief Street Celebrated District |
| Apr xiv, 1995 (#95000443) | Roughly, 103 Due north. Main St.-126 Southward. Main St. and Bridge St. from Principal to School St. 43°29′43″N 88°32′40″W / 43.495278°Due north 88.544444°Westward / 43.495278; -88.544444 (Main Street Historic District) | Mayville | Mayville'south old downtown, including the 1866 Italianate Reible building,[36] the pre-1873 Commercial Vernacular Simonin-Wolff-Faust Edifice,[37] the 1891 Classical Revival Ruedebusch Department Shop,[38] the 1897 Queen Anne Hamm building,[39] and the 1915 Modernist Beginning National Banking concern.[xl] [41] |
xx | Neosho Village Hall |
| September 21, 2022 (#100002976) | 115 S Schuyler St. 43°18′forty″N 88°31′06″Due west / 43.3110°North 88.5184°W / 43.3110; -88.5184 (Neosho Village Hall) | Neosho | Seat of hamlet regime, with walls of crude-faced concrete block, cornice returns, and a square corner tower, built 1914 to 1922. Housed hamlet offices, burn department, jail, and other community functions. Converted to a museum starting in 1989.[42] [43] |
21 | N Washington Street Historic District |
| October 23, 2009 (#09000850) | N. Church St. by and large divisional past O'Connell and N. Green St., N. Washington St. divisional by O'Connell and Elm Sts. 43°xi′51″Due north 88°43′44″West / 43.197369°Due north 88.728864°Westward / 43.197369; -88.728864 (North Washington Street Historic District) | Watertown | Residential district with homes in diverse sizes and styles, unified by a lot of local cream brick.[44] [45] Examples include the 1849/1870 Italianate Kusel house,[46] the 1855 simple front gable house at 423 N Church building,[47] the 1877 Second Empire Cody business firm,[48] the 1894 Queen Anne Woodard house,[49] the 1910 American Foursquare Schimmel house,[l] the 1915 Craftsman Calhoun business firm,[51] the 1929 Dutch Colonial Revival Baumann house,[52] and the 1930 Tudor Revival Salick house.[53] |
22 | Paramount Knitting Company Mill |
| February 4, 2022 (#10001229) | 222 Madison St. 43°27′xviii″N 88°50′28″W / 43.455°North 88.841111°W / 43.455; -88.841111 (Paramount Knitting Visitor Manufacturing plant) | Beaver Dam | four-story knitting factory begun in 1883. Powered by the Beaver Dam River, it knit cotton until 1906 and hosiery from 1911 to 1934, when it closed during a strike.[54] |
23 | Schoenicke Barn |
| September xix, 1979 (#79000071) | NE of Watertown on Venus Rd. 43°15′14″N 88°35′02″W / 43.253889°North 88.583889°W / 43.253889; -88.583889 (Schoenicke Barn) | Watertown | Scheune threshing barn built in 1855 past Prussian immigrant Gottlieb Schoenicke in Prussian Colonial fashion. Later converted to dairy.[55] |
24 | Ferdinand Schulze House |
| Jan eleven, 1996 (#95001503) | Due north. 4262 Daley Rd. 43°twenty′51″N 88°35′44″West / 43.3475°Northward 88.595556°West / 43.3475; -88.595556 (Ferdinand Schulze House) | Hustisford | Italianate cream brick house built 1872-74 by Schulze himself, a stonemason from Prussia. The basement contains barrel-vaulted cellar rooms. Also an 1870 bank barn with a frame of pegged beam and truss, and an 1870 granary.[56] [57] |
25 | St. Andrew's Church building |
| January 27, 2010 (#09001295) | W3081 County Highway Y 43°34′25″North 88°33′03″Westward / 43.573553°N 88.550767°W / 43.573553; -88.550767 (St. Andrew's Church) | LeRoy | Rural Catholic church designed by Anton Dohmen in Gothic Revival fashion and built by the largely German community in 1901, with stained drinking glass windows by Emil Frei Art Glass of St. Louis.[58] |
26 | St. Joseph'southward Roman Catholic Church |
| July two, 1980 (#80004480) | County Highway Q and Rich Rd. 43°14′28″Northward 88°47′16″W / 43.241111°Due north 88.787778°Westward / 43.241111; -88.787778 (St. Joseph'southward Roman Catholic Church) | Shields | Simple rural Cosmic church designed in Country Church Gothic style by James Clancy of Hubbleton and built in 1864, a spiritual and social center of the German and Irish community.[59] |
27 | St. Mark's Episcopal Church |
| November 28, 1980 (#80000132) | 130 E. Maple St. 43°27′29″N 88°l′05″W / 43.458056°N 88.834722°Westward / 43.458056; -88.834722 (St. Marking's Episcopal Church) | Beaver Dam | Carpenter Gothic-styled church built in 1858 past Episcopal congregation, with board-and-batten exterior. Moved to current site in 1865.[60] |
28 | Swan House and Vita Spring Pavilion |
| April 9, 1980 (#80000133) | 230 Park Ave. 43°27′26″North 88°49′54″Westward / 43.457222°North 88.831667°W / 43.457222; -88.831667 (Swan House and Vita Spring Pavilion) | Beaver Dam | Queen Anne house congenital 1889 for homeopath Dr. George Swan. The ornate pavilion is a remnant of the Vita Jump mineral spring spa, which Swan founded in 1880.[61] [62] |
29 | Van Brunt Memorial Schoolhouse |
| February 24, 2022 (#100004987) | 611 Mill St. 43°27′01″N 88°37′41″W / 43.4502°North 88.6281°W / 43.4502; -88.6281 (Van Brunt Memorial School) | Horicon | School building designed by Parkinson & Dockendorff in Collegiate Gothic way and congenital in 1922.[63] |
30 | Daniel C. Van Brunt Firm |
| September xiv, 1981 (#81000040) | 139 W. Lake St. 43°27′05″N 88°38′11″W / 43.451389°N 88.636389°West / 43.451389; -88.636389 (Daniel C. Van Brunt House) | Horicon | Italianate house with a well tower which was once topped by a windmill. Built in 1858 for dentist William Decker, then occupied from 1868 past Van Burden, a wagon builder who with his brother designed and congenital the first mechanical circulate seeder marketed in the U.Due south. Later the Horicon Community Center.[64] [65] [66] |
31 | Waupun Commercial Historic Commune |
| September 30, 2022 (#100004468) | Roughly bounded by E. Franklin St., Carrington St., E. Jefferson St., and Woods St. 43°38′00″N 88°43′47″W / 43.6332°N 88.7298°Due west / 43.6332; -88.7298 (Waupun Commercial Historic District) | Waupun | Role of Waupun's old downtown,[67] including the 1868 Italianate-styled Opera House,[68] the 1868 Italianate Odd Fellows Hall,[69] and the 1892 Queen Anne-styled Carrington Harness/Starr Saloon.[lxx] |
32 | Waupun Public Library |
| September 4, 1979 (#79000072) | 22 Due south. Madison St. 43°37′57″North 88°43′48″W / 43.6325°North 88.73°West / 43.6325; -88.73 (Waupun Public Library) | Waupun | Carnegie library designed with Gothic and Tudor Revival influences by H.A. Foeller of Green Bay and built in 1904. Now the Waupun Heritage Museum.[71] [72] |
33 | Weyenberg Shoe Factory |
| November 22, 2000 (#00001452) | 913 Northward. Spring St. 43°27′53″Due north 88°49′55″Westward / 43.464722°N 88.831944°W / 43.464722; -88.831944 (Weyenberg Shoe Factory) | Beaver Dam | Intact four-story brick mill built in 1919 with many windows for natural lite. Made shoes until 1994.[73] [74] |
34 | White Limestone Schoolhouse |
| October 22, 1976 (#76000057) | N. Master St. between Dayton and Buchanan Sts. 43°29′54″N 88°32′46″W / 43.498333°N 88.546111°Due west / 43.498333; -88.546111 (White Limestone School) | Mayville | two-story Greek Revival style schoolhouse, built in 1857 from limestone quarried at Waupun and expanded with portico and cupola in 1876. Served equally a public school for 125 years. Now a museum.[75] [76] |
35 | Williams Free Library |
| August 7, 1974 (#74000079) | 105 Park Ave. 43°27′21″North 88°50′12″W / 43.455833°N 88.836667°W / 43.455833; -88.836667 (Williams Gratuitous Library) | Beaver Dam | Richardsonian Romanesque library with elaborate towers designed by Walter Holbrook and built in 1890. At present a museum.[77] [78] |
36 | Wisconsin State Prison Celebrated Commune |
| Jan 22, 1992 (#91001994) | 200 S. Madison St. 43°37′47″Due north 88°43′56″W / 43.629722°N 88.732222°W / 43.629722; -88.732222 (Wisconsin Country Prison house Historic District) | Waupun | Wisconsin'southward first state prison complex, begun shortly after statehood, designed Auburn-style with individual cells for prisoners, and congenital mostly with prisoner labor. Includes the 1855 one-story South Prison cell Firm,[79] the iii-story 1855-58 Main Edifice, various other cell houses, the wall and guard towers, the 1894 Kitchen Add-on, the 1909 Binder Twine Factory, the 1931 Auto Tags Constitute, and other structures.[80] |
37 | Zirbel-Hildebrandt Farmstead |
| December 11, 2007 (#07001271) | W1328-1330 WI 33 43°26′02″North 88°27′42″W / 43.433944°N 88.461656°Westward / 43.433944; -88.461656 (Zirbel-Hildebrandt Farmstead) | Herman | Farm begun by immigrants from Pomerania, including the 1868/1878 Italianate-influenced John and Wilhelmine Zirbel house and its 1870 summer kitchen, the 1870 smokehouse, the 1868/1890 threshing/dairy befouled, the 1900 privy, the 1902 American Foursquare Hildebrandt firm and its 1902 summertime kitchen, and diverse subcontract buildings, however quite intact and nevertheless in the family unit.[81] [82] |
Former listings [edit]
[3] | Name on the Register | Image | Appointment listed | Date removed | Location | Urban center or town | Clarification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ane | Dodge County Courthouse | March nine, 1982 (#82000661) | March 6, 2001 | 220 E. Land St. | Juneau | 1878 courthouse designed in High Victorian fashion by H.C. Koch & Co. of Milwaukee, and demolished in 1995. R.R. Boyd designed a Modernist addition which was added in 1937.[83] | |
2 | Sock Route Bridge |
| September 6, 1978 (#78003442) | March four, 1982 | Sock Route over the Beaver Dam River 43°21′07″N 88°fifty′00″Westward / 43.35200°N 88.83320°West / 43.35200; -88.83320 (Sock Route Bridge) | Lowell | Cast atomic number 26 overhead truss bridge built by Due east. Kunert Mfg in 1893, with iron ornamentation on pinnacle. Demolished and replaced in 1980.[84] |
See likewise [edit]
- Listing of National Celebrated Landmarks in Wisconsin
- National Annals of Historic Places listings in Wisconsin
- Listings in neighboring counties: Columbia, Dane, Addicted du Lac, Light-green Lake, Jefferson, Washington, Waukesha
References [edit]
- ^ The latitude and longitude data provided is primarily from the National Register Information Arrangement, and has been plant to exist fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. For i%, the location info may be way off. We seek to correct the coordinate information wherever it is institute to exist erroneous. Please get out a note in the Discussion page for this article if you believe whatever specific location is incorrect.
- ^ National Park Service, U.s. Section of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved April 15, 2022.
- ^ a b Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering past significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ "National Annals Information System". National Register of Celebrated Places. National Park Service. April 24, 2008.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each engagement is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information Organisation database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ "Beaumont Hotel". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-08-xix .
- ^ Cartwright, Carol Lohry (1987-01-21). "Beaumont Hotel". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Course. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-19 .
- ^ "Westward. H. Boller Meat Market and Residence". Wisconsin Historical Lodge. Retrieved 2016-08-19 .
- ^ Miller, Elizabeth L. (1994-02-12). "Boller/ West.H., Meat Marketplace and Residence". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Grade. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-xix .
- ^ Canaday, Tricia (1991-02-14). "Key State Infirmary Historic District". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-19 .
- ^ "Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Depot". Wisconsin Historical Guild. Retrieved 2016-08-22 .
- ^ Filipowicz, Diane H. (Feb 1981). "Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co. Passenger Depot". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-22 .
- ^ "Martin K Dahl House". Wisconsin Historical Club. Retrieved 2016-08-22 .
- ^ Erdmann, Biruta (1975-06-30). "Dahl, Martin M., House". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Grade. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-22 .
- ^ "Fountain Inn". Wisconsin Historical Social club. Retrieved 2016-08-22 .
- ^ Mikos, Susan Thou. (2008-12-08). "Fountain Inn". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Grade. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-22 .
- ^ Baulch, Dan (2010-03-12). "Fountain Inn Stands in the way of downtown plan". WiscNews. Retrieved 2016-08-22 .
- ^ Kazmarek, Hannah (2014-01-14). "Legend & Lore: The Fountain - An Obituary". LocaLeben - The Magazine of Dodge County Life. Retrieved 2016-08-22 .
- ^ "Fox Lake Railroad Depot". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-08-31 .
- ^ Anderson, Donald A.; McNulty, Mary Eastward. (1977-12-20). "Play a joke on Lake Railroad Depot". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-31 .
- ^ "Willard Greenfield Farmstead". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-08-31 .
- ^ Heggland, Timothy F. (1991-04-19). "Greenfield, Willard, Farmstead". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-31 .
- ^ "Ferdinand C. Hartwig Business firm". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-08-31 .
- ^ Brown, George C.; Brant, Kirby E.; Brant, Judith F. (1981-xi-09). "Ferdinand C. Hartwig Firm". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Course. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-31 .
- ^ "Hollenstein Railroad vehicle and Wagon Factory". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-04 .
- ^ Keslin, Richard O. (December 1958). "A Preliminary Report of the Hahn (Dg 1 and Dg2) and Horicon (Dg v) Sites, Contrivance County, Wisconsin". The Wisconsin Archeologist. 39 (4): 191–273.
- ^ "Horicon State Bank". Wisconsin Historical Club. Retrieved 2018-02-27 .
- ^ "Hotel Rogers". Wisconsin Historical Guild. Retrieved 2016-09-04 .
- ^ "John Hustis Business firm". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-04 .
- ^ Garfield, Leonard T. (1982-11-nineteen). "Hustis, John, Firm". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-04 .
- ^ "Hutchinson Memorial Library". Wisconsin Historical Guild. Retrieved 2016-09-04 .
- ^ Kooiman, Barbara (1988-12-x). "Hutchinson Memorial Library". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Class. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-04 .
- ^ Salkin, Philip H. (March 1987). "A reevaluation of the Late Woodland Phase in southeastern Wisconsin". Wisconsin Academy Review. 33 (two): 75–79. Retrieved 2016-09-10 .
- ^ "Kliese Housebarn". Wisconsin Historical Social club. Retrieved 2016-09-ten .
- ^ Kliese, James (June 2007). "Kliese Housebarn". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-10 .
- ^ "Reible, Baronial, Building". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-ten .
- ^ "Simonin-Wolff-Faust Edifice". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-10 .
- ^ "Reudebusch Section Store". Wisconsin Historical Lodge. Retrieved 2016-09-ten .
- ^ "Henry Hamm Building". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-10 .
- ^ "Beginning National Bank". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-10 .
- ^ Cartwright, Carol Lohry (1994-01-10). "Primary Street Historic Commune". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Class. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-10 .
- ^ "Neosho Village Hall". Wisconsin Historical Lodge. Retrieved 2018-12-30 .
- ^ "Contempo Additions". Columns. 39 (4): 11. November 2022 – Jan 2022. Retrieved 2018-12-30 .
- ^ "Northward Washington Street Historic Commune". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-fifteen .
- ^ Douglas, Mollie; Long, Christine; Alexis, Cydney (November 2008). "North Washington Street Historic District". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Course. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-15 .
- ^ "Daniel Kusel Firm". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-xv .
- ^ "423 N Church St". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-fifteen .
- ^ "Dr. James Cody Business firm". Wisconsin Historical Gild. Retrieved 2016-09-15 .
- ^ "Marshall J. Woodard Firm". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-09-fifteen .
- ^ "Clarence Schimmel House". Wisconsin Historical Guild. Retrieved 2016-09-15 .
- ^ "Alvin Calhoun". Wisconsin Historical Order. Retrieved 2016-09-15 .
- ^ "Alfred Baumann; John Kreuziger". Wisconsin Historical Gild. Retrieved 2016-09-xv .
- ^ "John Salick House". Wisconsin Historical Order. Retrieved 2016-09-15 .
- ^ "Paramount Knitting Visitor Factory". Wisconsin Historical Order. Retrieved 2016-09-15 .
- ^ Wyatt, Barbara (1979-01-03). "Schoenicke Barn". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-15 .
- ^ "Ferdinand Schulze House". Wisconsin Historical Guild. Retrieved 2016-09-23 .
- ^ Rausch, Joan (1994-05-16). "Schulze, Ferdinand, Business firm". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Class. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-23 .
- ^ "St. Andrew's Church". Wisconsin Historical Guild. Retrieved 2016-09-23 .
- ^ Brownish, George C. (August 1979). "St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Class. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-23 .
- ^ Meyer, David (Jan 1980). "St. Marking'due south Episcopal Church". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-23 .
- ^ "(George E. and Mary) Swan Firm and Vita Leap Pavilion". Wisconsin Historical Club. Retrieved 2016-09-23 .
- ^ Mueller, Patricia (1979-06-14). "Swan Firm and Vita Bound Pavilion". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-09-23 .
- ^ "Van Brunt Memorial Loftier Schoolhouse". Wisconsin Historical Guild. Retrieved 2020-03-02 .
- ^ "Daniel C. Van Burden House". Wisconsin Historical Guild. Retrieved 2016-10-01 .
- ^ Haygood, William Carl; Filipowicz, Diane H.; Mueller, Mrs. Charles H. (May 1981). "Van Brunt, Daniel C., House". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-10-01 .
- ^ Moore, Sam (2013-09-25). "Van Burden Grain Drills". Farm Collector . Retrieved 2016-10-01 .
- ^ "Waupun Commercial Celebrated Commune". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-10-12 .
- ^ "Jones Cake/Opera House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-10-xiii .
- ^ "International Order of Odd Fellows Hall #33". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-10-13 .
- ^ "Carrington Harness/Starr Saloon". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-10-13 .
- ^ "Waupun Public Library". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-10-01 .
- ^ Wyatt, Barbara (1979-02-27). "Waupun Public (Carnegie) Library". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-x-01 .
- ^ "Weyenberg Shoe Factory". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-10-01 .
- ^ Miller, Elizabeth L. (1999-10-01). "Weyenberg Shoe Manufacturing plant". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Class. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-10-01 .
- ^ "White Limestone School". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-x-08 .
- ^ Anderson, Donald N. (1976-06-xviii). "White Limestone School". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Grade. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-10-08 .
- ^ "Williams Gratis Library". Wisconsin Historical Club. Retrieved 2016-10-08 .
- ^ Anderson, Donald North. (1974-03-14). "Williams Free Library". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Class. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-10-08 .
- ^ "Wisconsin State Prison". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-ten-17 .
- ^ Canaday, Tricia (1991-06-24). "Wisconsin State Prison house Historic District". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Course. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-10-17 .
- ^ "Zirbel-Hildebrandt Farmstead". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-10-17 .
- ^ Cartwright, Carol Lohry (2006-12-06). "Zirbel-Hildebrandt Farmstead". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Course. National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-10-17 .
- ^ "Dodge County Courthouse". Wisconsin Historical Lodge. Retrieved 2016-10-21 .
- ^ "Sock Road Bridge". Wisconsin Historical Lodge. Retrieved 2016-ten-21 .
Who Owned Pioneer Shoe Repair In Beaver Dam Ky,
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Dodge_County,_Wisconsin
Posted by: lindnermung1940.blogspot.com
0 Response to "Who Owned Pioneer Shoe Repair In Beaver Dam Ky"
Post a Comment