National Register of Historic Places listings in Hennepin County, Minnesota
This list is of the properties and historic districts which are designated on the National Register of Historic Places or that were formerly so designated, in Hennepin County, Minnesota; there are 194 entries as of November 2024. A significant number of these properties are a result of the establishment of Fort Snelling, the development of water power at Saint Anthony Falls, and the thriving city of Minneapolis that developed around the falls. Many historic sites outside the Minneapolis city limits are associated with pioneers who established missions, farms, and schools in areas that are now suburbs in that metropolitan area.
Historical background
[edit]Father Louis Hennepin was the first European explorer to visit and name Saint Anthony Falls, the tallest waterfall on the Mississippi River, in 1680. While the falls were familiar to the Ojibwe and Sioux Indians who lived in the area, Father Hennepin spread word of the falls when he returned to France in 1683. The land east of the Mississippi came under England's control in 1763, and then became American territory after the American Revolutionary War in 1783. After the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the western side of the falls became American territory as well.[1]
Zebulon Pike explored the Mississippi River in 1805 and made a treaty with the Sioux to acquire land on either side of the Mississippi River from its confluence with the Minnesota River to Saint Anthony Falls. The United States did not do much to occupy the land until 1819, when Lieutenant Colonel Henry Leavenworth was ordered to establish a military post in the area. The following year, Colonel Josiah Snelling established a permanent fort at a blufftop site overlooking Pike Island and the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers. The fort, first named Fort Saint Anthony and later Fort Snelling, became an island of civilization in the wilderness.[1]
In 1837, Franklin Steele established a claim for the land on the east side of Saint Anthony Falls. Within the next ten years, he established a sawmill at the falls, and lumbermen from the north began cutting trees and sending them to Steele's sawmill. In 1849, Steele subdivided his property and filed a plat for the town of Saint Anthony. Sawmilling and early flour milling attempts proved successful, and by 1855 the fledgling town of Saint Anthony had more than three thousand residents.[1] The west side of the river was part of the Fort Snelling military reservation until it was released for development in 1854. In 1849, John H. Stevens obtained 160 acres (0.65 km2) of land on the west side of the falls in exchange for maintaining a ferry at the falls. Hennepin County was established in 1852, and the settlement on the west side of the river was given the name Minneapolis, as coined by Charles Hoag. The two towns prospered as a result of industries and businesses based around the falls, but business was better on the west side of the falls. Minneapolis incorporated as a city in 1867, and three years later it merged with the village of Saint Anthony.[1]
Eventually, flour mills overtook sawmills as a dominant industry at the falls. In 1860, flour production stood at 30,000 barrels; it reached 256,100 barrels in 1869. By 1874, Charles A. Pillsbury and Company owned five mills at the falls, and in 1879, Washburn-Crosby Company (now General Mills) owned four mills. The former Washburn "A" Mill building on the west side of the falls exploded on May 2, 1878, but its owners quickly rebuilt the west side district, including a new, larger Washburn "A" Mill. Meanwhile, in 1880, Pillsbury began building the huge Pillsbury "A" Mill on the east side of the falls. It had a capacity of 4,000 barrels per day when it first opened.[2] Improvements in milling technology made it possible to grind the tougher spring wheat into a finer product, producing Minnesota "patent" flour, the finest bread flour in the world at that time. By 1900, Minneapolis was grinding 14.1 percent of the world's grain.[3]
Current listings
[edit]
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 8, 2024.[4]
[5] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[6] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Abbott Hospital | June 1, 2011 (#11000323) |
110 E. 18th St. 44°57′56″N 93°16′34″W / 44.9656°N 93.2761°W | Minneapolis | Hospital building constructed in five phases 1910–1958, reflecting the growing specialization and sophistication of the medical industry in the 20th century. Also a contributing property to the Stevens Square Historic District.[7] | |
2 | Advance Thresher/Emerson-Newton Implement Company | September 20, 1977 (#77000736) |
700–704 S. 3rd St. 44°58′36″N 93°15′32″W / 44.9767°N 93.2588°W | Minneapolis | Adjoining 1900 and 1904 buildings exemplifying the Sullivanesque style influencing large industrial and commercial properties at the turn of the 20th century.[8] | |
3 | Alano Society of Minneapolis Clubhouse | October 13, 2021 (#100007071) |
2218 1st Ave. S. 44°57′36″N 93°16′37″W / 44.9601°N 93.2769°W | Minneapolis | Headquarters 1942–1968 of Minnesota's first and most influential chapter of Alcoholics Anonymous, based in an 1887 house with 1916 and 1950 additions.[9] | |
4 | Ames-Florida House | October 16, 1979 (#79003714) |
8131 Bridge St. 45°05′12″N 93°43′54″W / 45.0868°N 93.7318°W | Rockford | 1856 Greek Revival house of the mill owners who founded Rockford.[10] Now a museum.[11] | |
5 | Anoka-Champlin Mississippi River Bridge | December 31, 1979 (#79001181) |
U.S. Route 169 over Mississippi River 45°11′30″N 93°23′43″W / 45.1918°N 93.3952°W | Champlin | 1929 example of the open-spandrel concrete arch bridges developed in the Twin Cities area in the late 1920s; also noted for providing a key connection between two river communities. Extends into Anoka County.[12] | |
6 | Architects and Engineers Building | February 23, 1984 (#84001414) |
1200 2nd Ave. S. 44°58′15″N 93°16′26″W / 44.9708°N 93.2740°W | Minneapolis | 1920 joint office building for design professionals, noted for its exceptional Renaissance Revival architecture by Hewitt and Brown and association with several leading architects, engineers, and interior designers.[13] | |
7 | George W. Baird House | March 27, 1980 (#80002067) |
4400 W. 50th St. 44°54′47″N 93°20′13″W / 44.9131°N 93.337°W | Edina | 1886 Queen Anne house designed by noted Minneapolis architect Charles S. Sedgwick for George and Sarah Baird, early settlers and Grange leaders.[14] | |
8 | Bardwell-Ferrant House | August 9, 1984 (#84001416) |
2500 Portland Ave. S. 44°57′26″N 93°16′05″W / 44.9571°N 93.2680°W | Minneapolis | Circa-1883 house given a Moorish Revival remodel in 1890; a picturesque local example of the late-19th-century fascination with exoticism.[15] | |
9 | Riley Lucas Bartholomew House | November 28, 1978 (#78001545) |
6901 Lyndale Ave. S. 44°52′39″N 93°17′18″W / 44.8776°N 93.2884°W | Richfield | Circa-1853 house of prominent early Minnesotan Riley Bartholomew (1807–1894), a justice of the peace, delegate to the Minnesota Constitutional Convention, state senator, and volunteer soldier during the Dakota War of 1862. Now a museum.[16] | |
10 | Basilica of St. Mary | March 26, 1975 (#75000985) |
1600 Hennepin Ave. 44°58′23″N 93°17′11″W / 44.9731°N 93.2863°W | Minneapolis | Landmark church built 1907–14 concurrently with the Cathedral of Saint Paul; noted for its exemplary Baroque Revival architecture, association with Minnesota's religious heritage, and honor as the first Catholic basilica proclaimed in the United States.[17] | |
11 | Bennett-McBride House | September 19, 1977 (#77000737) |
3116 3rd Ave. S. 44°56′46″N 93°16′24″W / 44.9461°N 93.2732°W | Minneapolis | Exemplary Queen Anne house built in 1891, particularly noted for the preservation of its interior and exterior millwork.[18] Also a contributing property to the Healy Block Residential Historic District.[19] | |
12 | Fredrika Bremer Intermediate School | January 31, 1978 (#78001536) |
1214 Lowry Ave. N. 45°00′49″N 93°17′42″W / 45.0135°N 93.2950°W | Minneapolis | Minneapolis's oldest intact school, dating to 1886; representative of the 19th-century emphasis on education through its castle-like architecture and origin during a frenzy of construction by Minneapolis Public Schools.[20] | |
13 | Bridge No. 90646 | February 2, 2016 (#15001016) |
Spanning Minnehaha Creek on Wooddale Ave. 44°54′42″N 93°20′21″W / 44.9118°N 93.3392°W | Edina | Multi-plate arch bridge crossing Minnehaha Creek with decorative limestone facing designed to harmonize with a nearby church.[21] | |
14 | Charles H. Burwell House | May 2, 1974 (#74001025) |
13209 E. McGinty Rd. 44°56′29″N 93°26′53″W / 44.9414°N 93.4481°W | Minnetonka | 1883 Carpenter Gothic/Stick style house and outbuildings built by the manager of the Minnetonka Mills Company, the first mill west of Minneapolis and nucleus of the first town in western Hennepin County.[22] Now a house museum and park. | |
15 | Butler Brothers Company | March 11, 1971 (#71000437) |
518 1st Ave. N. 44°58′48″N 93°16′30″W / 44.9801°N 93.2749°W | Minneapolis | Exemplary Chicago School warehouse/office building designed by Minneapolis architect Harry Wild Jones and constructed 1906–8.[23] Now known as Butler Square. | |
16 | Buzza Company Building | January 24, 2012 (#11001039) |
1006 W. Lake St. 44°56′55″N 93°17′32″W / 44.9486°N 93.2923°W | Minneapolis | One of the nation's few surviving factories associated with the early greeting card industry, in use 1923–1942; also noted for its wartime conversion to producing crucial military optics 1942–1946.[24] | |
17 | Cahill School | October 9, 1970 (#70000297) |
4924 Eden Ave. 44°54′39″N 93°20′59″W / 44.9108°N 93.3498°W | Edina | 1864 example of the one-room schoolhouses built across rural Minnesota in the 19th century.[25] Now managed by the Edina Historical Society alongside the Minnehaha Grange Hall.[26] | |
18 | Calhoun Beach Club | December 23, 2003 (#03001335) |
2730 W. Lake St. 44°57′00″N 93°18′55″W / 44.9499°N 93.3153°W | Minneapolis | Apartment hotel primarily built 1928–29, a rare local example of a distinctive urban housing option of the 1920s.[27] | |
19 | Calvary Baptist Church | May 19, 2021 (#100006586) |
2608 Blaisdell Ave. S. 44°57′19″N 93°16′48″W / 44.9553°N 93.28°W | Minneapolis | 1889 Romanesque Akron Plan church with 1903 and 1928 additions, a highly intact example of the work of architects Warren H. Hayes and Harry Wild Jones.[28] | |
20 | Calvary Lutheran Church | April 7, 2022 (#100007577) |
3901 Chicago Ave. 44°55′56″N 93°15′44″W / 44.9321°N 93.2621°W | Minneapolis | 1930 church with a 1953 addition, an exemplary work of the prolific Minneapolis architectural firm of Lang and Raugland.[29] | |
21 | Cameron Transfer and Storage Company Building | July 14, 2014 (#14000390) |
756 N. 4th St. 44°59′14″N 93°16′49″W / 44.9872°N 93.2804°W | Minneapolis | Warehouse built 1909–1911 in sections that juxtapose traditional timber framing with newly developed reinforced concrete construction, encapsulating a major shift in early-20th-century warehouse engineering.[30] | |
22 | Cappelen Memorial Bridge | November 28, 1978 (#78001537) |
Franklin Ave. and the Mississippi River 44°57′49″N 93°13′23″W / 44.9637°N 93.2230°W | Minneapolis | Leading example of the Twin Cities' renowned concrete arch bridges of the 1920s, whose 435-foot (133 m) main span was the world's longest of its type upon completion in 1923. Better known as the Franklin Avenue Bridge.[31] | |
23 | Aaron Carlson Corporation Factory | October 7, 2020 (#100005672) |
1505 Central Ave. NE 45°00′11″N 93°14′45″W / 45.0031°N 93.2459°W | Minneapolis | Two-building complex of a local millwork company significant for manufacturing pontoon bridge components during World War II, becoming the only Minneapolis lumber factory to win the Army-Navy "E" Award.[32] | |
24 | Elbert L. Carpenter House | September 13, 1977 (#77000738) |
314 Clifton Ave. 44°57′59″N 93°17′03″W / 44.9664°N 93.2841°W | Minneapolis | 1906 house of Elbert Carpenter (1862–1945), a lumber executive and founding sponsor of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra. Also noted for its Georgian Revival design by William Channing Whitney.[33] | |
25 | Eugene J. Carpenter House | September 13, 1977 (#77001566) |
300 Clifton Ave. 44°57′58″N 93°17′00″W / 44.9662°N 93.2833°W | Minneapolis | 1906 house of Eugene Carpenter (1865–1922), a notable lumber executive and patron of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.[34] | |
26 | J.I. Case Building | May 17, 2021 (#100006558) |
233 Park Ave. 44°58′39″N 93°15′31″W / 44.9774°N 93.2585°W | Minneapolis | Warehouse occupied 1907–1958 by the J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company, one of the nation's leading farm equipment manufacturers. Also noted for anchoring a new warehouse district in a previously disreputable part of Minneapolis.[35] | |
27 | Cedar Avenue Bridge | November 6, 1989 (#89001845) |
10th Ave. over the Mississippi River 44°58′43″N 93°14′38″W / 44.9787°N 93.2438°W | Minneapolis | Leading example, completed in 1929, of the monumental reinforced-concrete arch bridges built to span the Twin Cities' high river bluffs at the beginning of the automobile era; the master work of engineer Kristoffer Olsen Oustad. Now the 10th Avenue Bridge.[36] | |
28 | Cedar Square West | December 28, 2010 (#10001090) |
1600 S. 6th St. 44°58′08″N 93°14′54″W / 44.9688°N 93.2484°W | Minneapolis | Prominent six-building apartment complex constructed 1970–74, a nationally significant example of urban renewal as the first project funded under Title VII. Also noted as a major work of Minneapolis architect Ralph Rapson. Now known as Riverside Plaza.[37] | |
29 | Loren L. Chadwick Cottages | February 9, 1984 (#84001417) |
2617 W. 40th St. 44°55′49″N 93°18′50″W / 44.9303°N 93.3139°W | Minneapolis | Two tiny 1902 cottages, unique examples of the simple summer lodgings built in the Minneapolis lake district. Joined as a single residence in the 1970s.[38] | |
30 | Chamber of Commerce Building | November 23, 1977 (#95000821) |
400 4th St. S. 44°58′39″N 93°15′49″W / 44.9776°N 93.2637°W | Minneapolis | Long-serving commodity marketplace that helped make Minneapolis a major international grain trade center, with three buildings constructed 1902–28. Also noted architecturally for the city's first steel building and one of its few Sullivanesque designs. Renamed the Minneapolis Grain Exchange in 1947.[39] | |
31 | Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad Grade Separation | June 1, 2005 (#05000508) |
Parallel to 29th St. between Humboldt and 20th Aves. S. 44°57′01″N 93°16′18″W / 44.9503°N 93.2717°W | Minneapolis | 2.8-mile (4.5 km) trench and 28 bridges built 1912–1916 to separate rail and street traffic, an urban planning accomplishment to improve both safety and industry. Now part of the Midtown Greenway rail trail.[40] | |
32 | Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Depot | November 25, 1969 (#69000072) |
W. 37th St. and Brunswick Ave. 44°56′13″N 93°21′29″W / 44.9370°N 93.3580°W | St. Louis Park | 1887 railway station that served as the primary local connection to Minneapolis; one of St. Louis Park's few surviving early buildings and a symbol of its growth.[41] Now a museum.[42] | |
33 | Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Depot Freight House and Train Shed | November 28, 1978 (#78001542) |
201 3rd Ave. S. 44°58′48″N 93°15′48″W / 44.9800°N 93.2632°W | Minneapolis | Minneapolis' oldest surviving railway station, built 1897–9, with an earlier 1879 freight house. Also significant for their architecture, association with the milling district, and preservation of one of the nation's few remaining truss-roofed train sheds.[43] Now a commercial complex known as The Depot.[44] | |
34 | Christ Church Lutheran | June 20, 2001 (#01000654) |
3244 34th Ave. S. 44°56′37″N 93°13′24″W / 44.9435°N 93.2233°W | Minneapolis | Nationally influential modernist church built 1948–9; the master work of major 20th-century architect Eliel Saarinen, with a 1962 addition by his equally prominent son Eero Saarinen.[45] | |
35 | Church of the Incarnation and Rectory | January 11, 2022 (#100007352) |
3801–3817 Pleasant Ave. 44°56′02″N 93°16′57″W / 44.93375°N 93.282638°W | Minneapolis | Roman Catholic church complex built 1913–1932, a locally distinctive example of early-20th-century architectural eclecticism.[46] | |
36 | Church of St. Stephen (Catholic) | August 15, 1991 (#91001058) |
2201 Clinton Ave. S. 44°57′39″N 93°16′16″W / 44.9607°N 93.2711°W | Minneapolis | Well preserved early example of a Richardsonian Romanesque/Romanesque Revival church, built 1889–1891.[47] | |
37 | Amos B. Coe House | January 12, 1984 (#84001418) |
1700 S. 3rd Ave. 44°57′58″N 93°16′23″W / 44.9661°N 93.273°W | Minneapolis | 1884 house and 1886 carriage house exemplifying the Queen Anne residences of the late-19th-century upper-middle class.[48] | |
38 | Coliseum Building and Hall | March 24, 2022 (#100007557) |
2708 E. Lake St. 44°56′55″N 93°13′58″W / 44.9487°N 93.2327°W | Minneapolis | Commercial building with an event hall, constructed in 1917 and expanded multiple times. Anchor of a prominent 20th-century commercial district in Longfellow, Minneapolis.[49] | |
39 | Como-Harriet Streetcar Line and Trolley | October 17, 1977 (#77000739) |
42nd St. W. and Queen Ave. S. 44°55′40″N 93°18′35″W / 44.9277°N 93.3096°W | Minneapolis | 1908 streetcar and restored .5-mile (0.80 km) track, a working remnant of the Twin Cities' major public transit system until 1954.[50] Now operated by the Minnesota Streetcar Museum.[51] | |
40 | Country Club Historic District | April 26, 1982 (#82002958) |
Roughly bounded by 45th St., Arden Ave., 50th St., and Browndale Ave. 44°55′00″N 93°20′24″W / 44.9167°N 93.3399°W | Edina | Suburban residential district established in 1922, one of Minnesota's first comprehensive planned communities and the prototype for Edina's housing developments. Also noted for its homogeneous Period Revival architecture.[52] | |
41 | Crane Island Historic District | August 5, 1991 (#91001005) |
Crane Island in Lake Minnetonka 44°54′02″N 93°39′45″W / 44.9006°N 93.6625°W | Minnetrista | Island with 14 turn-of-the-20th-century summer cottages, representative of the era's rise in white-collar jobs, inter-urban rail transit for commuting, and the adoption of seasonal residences among Minnesota's middle class.[53] | |
42 | John R. Cummins Farmhouse | September 2, 1982 (#82002957) |
13600 Pioneer Trail 44°49′48″N 93°26′56″W / 44.8299°N 93.4490°W | Eden Prairie | Rare surviving example of a southern Hennepin County farmhouse, built in 1879 and expanded in 1910; owned by a noted local horticulturalist and diarist (1834–1921).[54] | |
43 | B. O. Cutter House | January 30, 1976 (#76001058) |
400 10th Ave. SE. 44°58′58″N 93°14′27″W / 44.9828°N 93.2407°W | Minneapolis | Only surviving example of the Twin Cities' once-common Carpenter Gothic cottages, built by master carpenter B.O. Cutter for himself in 1856 and later owned by early Minneapolis leading citizen John Gilfillan (1835–1924).[55] | |
44 | Dayton's Department Store | July 1, 2019 (#100004147) |
700 Nicollet Mall 44°58′36″N 93°16′21″W / 44.9767°N 93.2724°W | Minneapolis | First Dayton's department store, built in 1902 and expanded multiple times in the 20th century; the flagship location and corporate headquarters of an influential local retailer.[56] | |
45 | District No. 99 School | January 4, 2024 (#100009722) |
10980 West River Rd. 45°09′14″N 93°20′25″W / 45.154°N 93.3404°W | Champlin | One-room school active 1876–1947; the only venue for formal education available to most local youths in what was then a rural township. Also known as the Dunning School.[57] | |
46 | District No. 107 School | November 1, 2018 (#100003081) |
22995 County Rd. 10 45°07′24″N 93°37′31″W / 45.1234°N 93.6253°W | Corcoran | 1894 one-room school with its original outhouses, embodying local efforts to provide education in rural Hennepin County. Also known as the Burschville School.[58] | |
47 | East Lake Branch Library | May 26, 2000 (#00000542) |
2916 E. Lake St. 44°56′55″N 93°13′45″W / 44.948635°N 93.229058°W | Minneapolis | 1924 branch library associated with the influential evolution of Minneapolis Public Library 1894–1936, and its nationally renowned director Gratia Countryman (1866–1953).[59] | |
48 | Eitel Hospital | December 27, 2007 (#07001313) |
1367 Willow St. 44°58′09″N 93°16′54″W / 44.969053°N 93.281642°W | Minneapolis | 1911 surgical hospital associated with a major evolutionary period in hospitals, and with influential local medical professionals George G. (1858–1928) and Jeanette Eitel (1875–1951).[60] | |
49 | Excelsior Commercial Historic District | October 20, 2021 (#100007070) |
Roughly bounded by Lake St., West Dr., 3rd St., and East Dr. 44°54′13″N 93°33′58″W / 44.9035°N 93.5662°W | Excelsior | Two-block business district reflecting Exelsior's early years as a tourist destination and its mid-20th-century suburban diversification, with 32 contributing properties built 1886–1958.[61] | |
50 | Excelsior Public School | November 13, 1980 (#80002068) |
261 School Ave. 44°54′05″N 93°33′53″W / 44.901483°N 93.564809°W | Excelsior | Landmark school building constructed 1899–1901, symbolizing the maturation of Excelsior via its refined architecture and prominent siting.[62] | |
51 | Farmers and Mechanics Savings Bank | January 12, 1984 (#84001419) |
115 S. 4th St. 44°58′43″N 93°16′04″W / 44.978738°N 93.26779°W | Minneapolis | Bank building constructed 1891–92 and remodeled in 1908, significant as a prominent early example of the Beaux-Arts/Neoclassical style that became popular in Minneapolis.[63] Now houses a strip club. | |
52 | Farmers and Mechanics Savings Bank | March 2, 2006 (#06000094) |
88 S. 6th St. 44°58′40″N 93°16′13″W / 44.977759°N 93.270242°W | Minneapolis | Minnesota's only long-lived mutual savings bank, whose 1942 relocation to this building and prominent 1963 addition also convey the flight from and then stand against mid-20th-century urban decay in downtown Minneapolis as well as the architectural shift from Streamline Moderne to International Style.[64] | |
53 | Fire Station No. 19 | January 14, 1982 (#82002960) |
2001 University Ave. SE. 44°58′34″N 93°13′37″W / 44.976001°N 93.226844°W | Minneapolis | 1893 fire station representative of late-19th/early-20th-century design during the last years of horse-drawn equipment. Also significant as the site where kittenball, a forerunner of softball, originated among exercising firefighters seeking a more compact form of baseball.[65] | |
54 | First Church of Christ, Scientist | June 20, 1986 (#86001340) |
614-620 E. 15th St. 44°58′06″N 93°16′00″W / 44.968302°N 93.266669°W | Minneapolis | 1897 church noted for its exemplary small-scale Beaux-Arts architecture and status as the first Christian Science church in the Upper Midwest.[66] | |
55 | First Congregational Church | January 15, 1979 (#79001249) |
500 8th Ave. SE. 44°59′06″N 93°14′34″W / 44.984979°N 93.242705°W | Minneapolis | 1886 Richardsonian Romanesque church designed by Warren H. Hayes on the Akron Plan for Minnesota's first congregational church, established in 1851 and noted for its community involvement.[67] | |
56 | First National Bank–Soo Line Building | May 12, 2008 (#08000402) |
101 S. 5th St. 44°58′40″N 93°16′09″W / 44.97788°N 93.269039°W | Minneapolis | 1915 office building significant as the headquarters for two of the city's major companies: the First National Bank of Minneapolis and the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railroad.[68] | |
57 | First Presbyterian Church of Oak Grove Cemetery | November 24, 2014 (#14000956) |
10340 Lyndale Ave. S. 44°48′55″N 93°17′23″W / 44.815255°N 93.289740°W | Bloomington | Cemetery established in 1856 whose pioneer and Dakota burials and 1890 soldiers' monument reflect Bloomington's transition from frontier settlement to participant in state affairs like military service.[69] | |
58 | Woodbury Fisk House | October 6, 1983 (#83003654) |
424 5th St. SE. 44°59′11″N 93°14′53″W / 44.986296°N 93.247997°W | Minneapolis | One of Minneapolis's leading examples of Italian Villa architecture, built circa 1870.[70] | |
59 | Flour Exchange Building | August 29, 1977 (#77000740) |
310 4th Ave. S. 44°58′42″N 93°15′50″W / 44.978257°N 93.263964°W | Minneapolis | High-rise office building begun in 1892 and completed in 1909, the first in Minneapolis to be designed in unadorned commercial style architecture.[71] | |
60 | Fort Snelling | October 15, 1966 (#66000401) |
Bounded by Minnehaha Park, the Mississippi River, the airport, and Bloomington Rd. 44°53′34″N 93°10′51″W / 44.892774°N 93.180719°W | Minneapolis | Military complex established in 1819 and in use till 1946, instrumental in the development of the Upper Midwest and in the transition of the U.S. Army from a small frontier force into a major army.[72] Extends into Dakota County. | |
61 | Fort Snelling National Cemetery | March 8, 2016 (#16000060) |
7601 34th Ave. S. 44°52′20″N 93°13′09″W / 44.872121°N 93.219032°W | Minneapolis | National cemetery dating to 1939, one of seven established in the years after World War I in a major expansion of the national cemetery program due to the increased number of veterans and dwindling burial space elsewhere.[73] | |
62 | Fort Snelling–Mendota Bridge | December 1, 1978 (#78001534) |
Minnesota Highway 55 over the Minnesota River 44°53′15″N 93°10′39″W / 44.8875°N 93.1775°W | Minneapolis | 4,119-foot (1,255 m) bridge constructed 1925–26, noted for its sophisticated design and original status as the world's longest continuous concrete arch bridge. Extends into Dakota County.[74] | |
63 | Foshay Tower | September 20, 1978 (#78001538) |
821 Marquette Ave. 44°58′28″N 93°16′18″W / 44.97443°N 93.271563°W | Minneapolis | Lavish office building constructed 1927–29 to be Minneapolis's tallest skyscraper; noted for its unique obelisk-shaped design and its embodiment of the conspicuous consumption of the Roaring Twenties.[75] | |
64 | Lawrence A. and Mary Fournier House | May 18, 1995 (#95000618) |
3505 Sheridan Ave. N. 45°01′08″N 93°18′44″W / 45.018866°N 93.312343°W | Minneapolis | 1910 bungalow exhibiting the emergence of Prairie School architecture within the Arts and Crafts movement.[76] | |
65 | Fowler Methodist Episcopal Church | January 30, 1976 (#76001062) |
2011 Dupont Ave. S. 44°57′45″N 93°17′34″W / 44.962428°N 93.292809°W | Minneapolis | Church begun by Warren H. Hayes in 1894 and completed by Harry Wild Jones in 1906, the only combined work of these major Minnesota architects. Also a symbol of the community works of the Scottish Rite since becoming the Scottish Rite Temple in 1915.[77] | |
66 | Franklin Branch Library | May 26, 2000 (#00000545) |
1314 E. Franklin Ave. 44°57′47″N 93°15′21″W / 44.96296°N 93.255866°W | Minneapolis | 1914 Carnegie library associated with the influential evolution of Minneapolis Public Library 1894–1936, and its nationally renowned director Gratia Countryman (1866–1953).[78] | |
67 | Gethsemane Episcopal Church | March 8, 1984 (#84001424) |
901-905 4th Ave. S. 44°58′20″N 93°16′06″W / 44.972296°N 93.268244°W | Minneapolis | 1884 church noted for its Gothic Revival architecture and its status as one of the oldest surviving churches in Minneapolis.[79] | |
68 | Peter Gideon Farmhouse | September 17, 1974 (#74001019) |
24590 Glen Rd. 44°54′13″N 93°35′32″W / 44.903692°N 93.592206°W | Shorewood | House and orchard where horticulturalist Peter Gideon (1820–1899) experimented beginning in 1854 to produce winter-hearty fruit trees, succeeding most notably with the Wealthy apple.[80] | |
69 | Glen Lake Children's Camp | August 5, 1999 (#99000932) |
6350 Indian Chief Rd. 44°53′16″N 93°27′55″W / 44.887678°N 93.465265°W | Eden Prairie | One of the nation's few surviving examples of a summer camp for children with tuberculosis, active 1925–1950, with five contributing properties. Also noted for its association with the Glen Lake Sanatorium and philanthropists George and Leonora Christian. Now Camp Eden Wood.[81] | |
70 | John G. and Minnie Gluek House and Carriage House | February 9, 1990 (#90000103) |
2447 Bryant Ave. S. 44°57′27″N 93°17′25″W / 44.957576°N 93.290287°W | Minneapolis | Influential Georgian Revival house and carriage house, both built in 1902, the former by important local residential architect William Kenyon.[82] | |
71 | Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church | January 9, 1997 (#96001557) |
324 Harvard St. SE. 44°58′22″N 93°13′50″W / 44.97279°N 93.230686°W | Minneapolis | Church of a Swedish American congregation built 1915–17, noted for its Gothic Revival architecture and deliberate Americanization efforts to attract younger members not socially reliant on an ethnic church.[83] | |
72 | Grain Belt Beer Sign | August 4, 2016 (#16000511) |
4 Island Ave. W. 44°59′10″N 93°15′48″W / 44.986135°N 93.263440°W | Minneapolis | Billboard installed in 1950, a local landmark and the only surviving large, free-standing, 20th-century advertisement for Grain Belt Beer, an enduringly popular Minnesota brand.[84] | |
73 | Great Northern Implement Company | September 13, 1977 (#77000745) |
616 S. 3rd St. 44°58′37″N 93°15′35″W / 44.977077°N 93.259603°W | Minneapolis | 1910 commercial/industrial building noted for its highly restrained ornamentation, inspired by the work of influential architect Louis Sullivan. Also known as the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company Building.[85] | |
74 | Great Northern Railroad Depot | July 7, 1981 (#81000322) |
402 E. Lake St. 44°58′12″N 93°30′59″W / 44.969868°N 93.516318°W | Wayzata | 1906 passenger/freight depot noted for its architecture and association with Wayzata's late-19th-century opposition to and early-20th-century embrace of the Great Northern Railway's route along its lakeside downtown.[86] Now houses a museum.[87] | |
75 | Jonathan Taylor Grimes House | March 16, 1976 (#76001056) |
4200 W. 44th St. 44°55′16″N 93°20′14″W / 44.921°N 93.337249°W | Edina | 1869 Gothic Revival house of an early Minnesota horticulturalist (1818–1903), who supplied Minneapolis with many of its shade trees and planted the first ginkgo and catalpa trees in the state.[88] | |
76 | Hagel Family Farm | December 27, 2006 (#06001182) |
11475 Tilton Trail S. 45°09′46″N 93°34′10″W / 45.162838°N 93.569394°W | Rogers | Unusually intact example of the diversified family farms that characterized Minnesota agriculture in the late 19th and first half of the 20th centuries. Established circa 1855, with 18 contributing properties mostly built in the 1890s.[89] | |
77 | Hanover Bridge | December 11, 1979 (#79001268) |
Off County Highway 19 over the Crow River 45°09′12″N 93°39′43″W / 45.153352°N 93.661915°W | Hanover | Oldest and most intact example—built in 1885—of the pin-connected Pratt truss bridges once common in the area. Now restricted to pedestrian traffic. Extends into Wright County.[90] | |
78 | Healy Block Residential Historic District | May 27, 1993 (#93000417) |
3101–3145 2nd Ave. S. and 3116–3124 3rd Ave. S. 44°56′45″N 93°16′25″W / 44.945851°N 93.27369°W | Minneapolis | 14 similar houses built 1886–1898 by contractor Theron P. Healy, exemplifying the phenomenon of upper-middle-class residential blocks designed and built by single contractors during Minneapolis's late-19th-century boom years.[19] | |
79 | Hennepin County Library | October 2, 1978 (#78001546) |
4915 N. 42nd Ave. 45°01′52″N 93°20′31″W / 45.03116°N 93.341981°W | Robbinsdale | 1925 library established entirely through local fundraising led by the Robbinsdale Library Club, symbolizing the self-improvement culture of the early 20th century.[91] Now the Robbinsdale Historical Society Museum.[92] | |
80 | Hennepin Theatre | January 19, 1996 (#95001548) |
910 Hennepin Ave. 44°58′35″N 93°16′39″W / 44.97632°N 93.27749°W | Minneapolis | Leading 1921 example of the ornate vaudeville theatres of the early 20th century, associated with the entertainment district and popular culture of Minneapolis and with major national chain the Orpheum Circuit.[93] Now the Orpheum Theatre.[94] | |
81 | Edwin H. Hewitt House | April 6, 1978 (#78001539) |
126 E. Franklin Ave. 44°57′47″N 93°16′30″W / 44.96293°N 93.274991°W | Minneapolis | 1906 Tudor Revival house built for himself by prominent Minnesota architect Edwin Hawley Hewitt.[95] Now a funeral home.[96] | |
82 | Hiawatha Golf Course | April 27, 2023 (#100008905) |
4553 Longfellow Ave. 44°55′13″N 93°14′37″W / 44.9202°N 93.2437°W | Minneapolis | Municipal golf course with the city's first clubhouse to be desegregated, in 1952, leading to further civil rights advances by Black golfers in Minnesota, with Hiawatha as a recreational and social nexus.[97] | |
83 | Hinkle-Murphy House | September 20, 1984 (#84001438) |
619 10th St. S. 44°58′12″N 93°15′57″W / 44.969867°N 93.265749°W | Minneapolis | Minnesota's oldest surviving Georgian Revival house, built 1886–7; one of the first examples of a wave of Colonial Revival architecture introduced to the state by architects William Channing Whitney and Harry Wild Jones in the late 1880s.[98] | |
84 | Hollywood Theater | February 5, 2014 (#13001145) |
2815 Johnson St. NE 45°01′09″N 93°14′13″W / 45.019060°N 93.236814°W | Minneapolis | 1935 Streamline Moderne movie theater designed by prominent theater architects Liebenberg & Kaplan; also emblematic of the growth of locally owned, streetcar-accessible neighborhood cinemas during the Great Depression.[99] | |
85 | Hopkins Commercial Historic District | January 21, 2022 (#100007369) |
Mainstreet between 8th and 11th Avenues North 44°55′28″N 93°24′41″W / 44.92436°N 93.41144°W | Hopkins | ||
86 | Intercity Bridge | November 6, 1989 (#89001838) |
Ford Parkway over the Mississippi River 44°55′04″N 93°12′05″W / 44.917861°N 93.201361°W | Minneapolis | Monumental 1927 reinforced-concrete continuous-rib arch bridge designed by Martin Sigvart Grytbak. Extends into Ramsey County and better known as the Ford Bridge.[100] | |
87 | Interlachen Bridge | November 6, 1989 (#89001840) |
William Berry Dr. over a Minnesota Transportation Museum street railway track in William Berry Park 44°55′53″N 93°18′32″W / 44.931351°N 93.308832°W | Minneapolis | Minnesota's oldest documented bridge of reinforced concrete, built in 1900; a very early and unaltered example using the Melan reinforcing system.[101] | |
88 | Harry W. Jones House | June 7, 1976 (#76001060) |
5101 Nicollet Ave. 44°54′37″N 93°16′40″W / 44.910239°N 93.277741°W | Minneapolis | 1887 house also known as Elmwood, built for himself by major Minneapolis architect Harry Wild Jones (1859–1935) in the style of a Norman chateau.[102] | |
89 | Lake Harriet Methodist Episcopal Church | May 19, 2014 (#14000217) |
4401 Upton Ave. S. 44°55′24″N 93°18′53″W / 44.923201°N 93.314694°W | Minneapolis | Prominent Classical Revival church built in 1916, an unusual manifestation of the City Beautiful movement in an ecclesiastical building.[103] | |
90 | Lake Street Sash and Door Company | July 11, 2016 (#16000440) |
4001–4041 Hiawatha Ave. 44°55′46″N 93°13′30″W / 44.929444°N 93.225°W | Minneapolis | Factory complex of one of Minneapolis's leading millwork companies, with three buildings constructed 1926–28 representative of the industry's early-to-mid-20th-century facilities.[104] | |
91 | Lakewood Cemetery Memorial Chapel | October 20, 1983 (#83003657) |
3600 Hennepin Ave. 44°56′10″N 93°17′57″W / 44.936075°N 93.299141°W | Minneapolis | Exemplary Byzantine Revival cemetery chapel built 1908–10, modeled on the Hagia Sophia and containing Minnesota's finest Byzantine-style mosaic interior.[105] | |
92 | Laurel Apartments | May 29, 2020 (#100005245) |
15 15th St. N. 44°58′27″N 93°17′04″W / 44.9743°N 93.2845°W | Minneapolis | 1893 apartment complex noted for its opulent Queen Anne design by local architect Septimus J. Bowler.[106] | |
93 | Arthur and Edith Lee House | July 11, 2014 (#14000391) |
4600 Columbus Ave. S. 44°55′10″N 93°15′51″W / 44.919558°N 93.26414°W | Minneapolis | 1923 house whose 1931–1933 occupancy by an African American family in a traditionally white neighborhood sparked one of Minnesota's largest racially motivated protests, a major incident in the broader saga of housing discrimination in Minneapolis.[107] | |
94 | Harry F. Legg House | June 3, 1976 (#76001061) |
1601 Park Ave. S. 44°58′01″N 93°15′53″W / 44.967001°N 93.264733°W | Minneapolis | 1887 Queen Anne home representative of the period's housing developments and middle class residences.[108] | |
95 | Lincoln Bank Building | October 15, 2012 (#12000846) |
730 Hennepin Ave. 44°58′39″N 93°16′34″W / 44.97755°N 93.276139°W | Minneapolis | 1921 commercial building representative of 1920s consolidation in the banking industry, housing one of the city's first branch offices of a national bank.[109] | |
96 | Linden Hills Branch Library | May 26, 2000 (#00000540) |
2900 W. 43rd St. 44°55′30″N 93°18′59″W / 44.925021°N 93.316484°W | Minneapolis | 1931 branch library associated with the influential evolution of Minneapolis Public Library 1894–1936, and its nationally renowned director Gratia Countryman (1866–1953).[110] | |
97 | Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged | September 21, 1978 (#78001540) |
215 Broadway Ave. NE. 44°59′56″N 93°15′55″W / 44.998935°N 93.265376°W | Minneapolis | Landmark charitable senior housing complex whose 1895 original section is a rare surviving work by Minneapolis architect Frederick Corser.[111] | |
98 | McLeod and Smith Inc. Headquarters | May 24, 2016 (#16000277) |
700–708 Central Ave. NE. 44°59′27″N 93°15′04″W / 44.99091°N 93.251165°W | Minneapolis | 1897 factory and adjacent 1909 warehouse/showroom (expanded in 1922) built for Minneapolis's earliest and largest furniture manufacturer, progenitor of a significant local industry and the anchor of a large furniture-making district.[112] | |
99 | Lock and Dam No. 2 | June 13, 2003 (#03000522) |
Mississippi River north of Lake St/Marshall Ave. 44°57′14″N 93°12′28″W / 44.953889°N 93.207778°W | Minneapolis | Remains of the first lock and dam complex on the Upper Mississippi River, in use 1907–1912; better known as the Meeker Island Lock and Dam. Extends into Ramsey County.[113] | |
100 | John Lohmar House | April 18, 1977 (#77000742) |
1514 Dupont Ave. N. 44°59′41″N 93°17′32″W / 44.994798°N 93.292338°W | Minneapolis | Well preserved example of an upper-middle-class house in late Queen Anne style, built in 1898.[114] | |
101 | Long Meadow Bridge | May 28, 2013 (#13000324) |
Old Cedar Avenue at Minnesota River 44°49′48″N 93°14′31″W / 44.830°N 93.242°W | Bloomington | Minnesota's longest through truss bridge, constructed in 1920 with five camelback sections to cross a wide backwater lake. Also known as the Old Cedar Avenue Bridge.[115] | |
102 | Lumber Exchange Building | May 19, 1983 (#83000903) |
425 Hennepin Ave., 10 S. 5th St. 44°58′47″N 93°16′18″W / 44.979644°N 93.271783°W | Minneapolis | One of Minneapolis's last Richardsonian Romanesque business blocks, built 1885–1890. Also noted for its early fire-resistant design by Long and Kees and its association with the city's lumber commerce.[116] | |
103 | Charles J. Martin House | April 26, 1978 (#78001541) |
1300 Mount Curve Ave. 44°58′04″N 93°17′46″W / 44.967807°N 93.295978°W | Minneapolis | 1903 Renaissance Revival mansion and grounds, a well-preserved example of an early-20th-century urban estate.[117] | |
104 | Masonic Temple | September 5, 1975 (#75000987) |
528 Hennepin Ave. 44°58′45″N 93°16′26″W / 44.979192°N 93.273904°W | Minneapolis | 1888 Masonic headquarters noted for its Richardsonian Romanesque architecture by Long and Kees and fine stonework.[118] Now the Hennepin Center for the Arts. | |
105 | Maternity Hospital | March 27, 1980 (#80002069) |
300 Queen Ave. N. 44°58′49″N 93°18′32″W / 44.980257°N 93.308809°W | Minneapolis | Surviving three buildings (constructed 1909–1916) of a pioneering women's hospital established by social reformer and women's rights advocate Dr. Martha Ripley (1843–1912).[119] | |
106 | Milwaukee Avenue Historic District | May 2, 1974 (#74001021) |
Milwaukee Ave. from Franklin Ave. to 24th St. 44°57′39″N 93°14′24″W / 44.960967°N 93.240041°W | Minneapolis | Minneapolis's first planned community for working class families—platted in 1883—with 32 surviving small houses also noted for their architectural consistency.[120][121] | |
107 | Minneapolis Armory | September 26, 1985 (#85002491) |
500-530 6th St. S. 44°58′31″N 93°15′49″W / 44.975208°N 93.263481°W | Minneapolis | Armory built 1935–36, noted for its exemplary PWA Moderne architecture and innovative use of a reinforced concrete floor system.[122] | |
108 | Minneapolis Brewing Company | June 21, 1990 (#90000988) |
Junction of Marshall St. and 13th Ave. NE. 44°59′59″N 93°16′13″W / 44.99975°N 93.270147°W | Minneapolis | Landmark brewery complex built 1891–1910, significant for its architecture by several notable architects and as a representative of a major industry of the Upper Midwest.[122] | |
109 | Minneapolis City Hall-Hennepin County Courthouse | December 4, 1974 (#74001022) |
400 S. 4th Ave. 44°58′39″N 93°15′55″W / 44.977373°N 93.265359°W | Minneapolis | Long-serving Richardsonian Romanesque government building constructed 1889–1905, called "one of the most impressive nineteenth century public buildings in the state and the Midwest" in its nomination.[123] | |
110 | Minneapolis Fire Department Repair Shop | May 19, 2005 (#05000447) |
24 University Ave. NE. and 222 1st Ave. NE. 44°59′19″N 93°15′26″W / 44.9887°N 93.257253°W | Minneapolis | 1909 maintenance shop of the Minneapolis Fire Department with a 1922 addition, associated with centralization of city operations and the department's conversion to motorized vehicles.[124] | |
111 | Minneapolis Pioneers and Soldiers Memorial Cemetery | June 6, 2002 (#02000612) |
2925 Cedar Ave. S. 44°56′59″N 93°14′41″W / 44.9496°N 93.2448°W | Minneapolis | Minneapolis's oldest extant cemetery, dating to 1858 and redeveloped 1928–1936, reflecting both the city's pioneer days and an early historic preservation movement.[125] | |
112 | Minneapolis Public Library, North Branch | December 7, 1977 (#77000743) |
1834 Emerson Ave. N. 44°59′55″N 93°17′38″W / 44.9986°N 93.2938°W | Minneapolis | Nation's first library purpose-built with publicly accessible stacks, constructed in 1893; a Near North neighborhood landmark and one of Minneapolis's few intact works by Frederick Corser.[126] | |
113 | Minneapolis Warehouse Historic District | November 3, 1989 (#89001937) |
Roughly bounded by River St., 1st Ave. N., 6th St. N., 2nd Ave. N., 5th St. N., 5th Ave. N., 3rd St. N., and 10th Ave. N. 44°59′08″N 93°16′26″W / 44.9856°N 93.2739°W | Minneapolis | 30-block warehouse district representing Minneapolis's rise as a major distribution center in the late-19th/early-20th century, with 142 contributing properties built 1865–1930 by leading local architects.[127] | |
114 | Minneapolis YMCA Central Building | November 29, 1995 (#95001375) |
36 S. 9th St. (formerly 30 S. 9th St.) 44°58′33″N 93°16′32″W / 44.9759°N 93.2756°W | Minneapolis | Uncommon example of late Gothic Revival architecture in downtown Minneapolis, built 1917–19.[128] | |
115 | Minnehaha (steamboat) | October 25, 2021 (#100007073) |
140 George St. 44°54′11″N 93°34′29″W / 44.90313°N 93.574642°W | Excelsior | Only operating example of the Twin City Rapid Transit Company passenger boats that served summer residents and tourists around Lake Minnetonka 1906–1926 as an extension of the streetcar system. Scuttled in 1926, raised in 1980, reconstructed and relaunched as a museum ship in 1996.[129] | |
116 | Minnehaha Grange Hall | October 9, 1970 (#70000914) |
4918 Eden Ave. 44°54′39″N 93°20′58″W / 44.9107°N 93.3495°W | Edina | 1879 hall of Minnesota's oldest subordinate Grange, organized in 1873. A longstanding social venue and only survivor of Edina's original four buildings.[130] Now managed by the Edina Historical Society alongside Cahill School.[26] | |
117 | Minnehaha Historic District | November 25, 1969 (#69000369) |
Roughly Hiawatha and Minnehaha Aves. and Godfrey Rd. 44°54′56″N 93°12′39″W / 44.9156°N 93.2108°W | Minneapolis | 1889 park surrounding Minnehaha Falls, noted for its urban planning and several historic sites associated with pioneer life, transportation, commerce, and architecture.[131] | |
118 | Minnesota Bridge 2440 | July 25, 2024 (#100010560) |
Trunk Highway 65 / Third Avenue South / Central Avenue Southeast over the Mississippi River 44°59′00″N 93°15′32″W / 44.9833°N 93.2589°W | Minneapolis | AKA the Third Avenue Bridge. | |
119 | Minnesota Linseed Oil Company | May 28, 2013 (#13000325) |
1101 S. 3rd St. and 312 11th Ave. S. 44°58′26″N 93°15′13″W / 44.9740°N 93.2537°W | Minneapolis | 1904 facility of Minneapolis's leading producer of linseed oil and its products, a major Minnesota industry in the early 20th century.[132] | |
120 | Minnesota Soldiers' Home Historic District | March 2, 1989 (#89000076) |
Roughly bounded by Minnehaha Ave., the Mississippi River, and Godfrey Parkway 44°54′44″N 93°12′14″W / 44.9123°N 93.2038°W | Minneapolis | State old soldiers' home with 16 contributing properties built 1888–1937, noted for its architecture, influential approach to veteran care, and landscape design by Horace Cleveland.[133] | |
121 | Minnetonka Beach Water Tower | December 16, 2019 (#100004758) |
2510 Woodbridge Rd. 44°56′23″N 93°35′01″W / 44.9398°N 93.5837°W | Minnetonka Beach | 1928 water tower, linchpin of the municipal water supply system that allowed Minnetonka Beach to grow from an upper-class resort to a community of year-round residents, and a well-preserved example of a once-common early-20th-century design.[134] | |
122 | Minnetonka Town Hall | March 15, 2021 (#86003815) |
13231 Minnetonka Dr. 44°56′25″N 93°26′53″W / 44.9402°N 93.4481°W | Minnetonka | ||
123 | Moline, Milburn and Stoddard Company | February 20, 1975 (#75000986) |
250 3rd Ave. N. 44°59′02″N 93°16′25″W / 44.9840°N 93.2737°W | Minneapolis | A leading Minneapolis example of Chicago School architecture, built in 1886.[135] Also a contributing property to the Minneapolis Warehouse Historic District.[136] Now the Traffic Zone Center for Visual Art. | |
124 | Elisha and Lizzie Morse Jr. House | July 28, 1995 (#76001057) |
2325-2327 Pillsbury Ave. S. 44°57′33″N 93°16′51″W / 44.9593°N 93.2809°W | Minneapolis | 1874 Italianate house with wood siding cut and textured to look like stone, one of Minneapolis's few surviving specimens exhibiting this style and aspirational middle-class pretense.[137] | |
125 | Frieda and Henry J. Neils House | May 26, 2004 (#04000531) |
2801 Burnham Blvd. 44°57′30″N 93°19′04″W / 44.9582°N 93.3177°W | Minneapolis | 1950 house representative of the Usonian style of Frank Lloyd Wright, and the architect's only residential project in marble.[138] | |
126 | New Main-Augsburg Seminary | October 6, 1983 (#83003653) |
731 21st Ave. S. 44°57′56″N 93°14′31″W / 44.9656°N 93.2420°W | Minneapolis | 1901 seminary turned campus center, noted for its integrity and longstanding importance as an educational institution. Now Augsburg University's Old Main.[139] | |
127 | George R. Newell House | September 15, 1977 (#77000744) |
1818 LaSalle Ave. 44°57′53″N 93°16′48″W / 44.9648°N 93.2799°W | Minneapolis | 1888 Richardsonian Romanesque house of a pioneering grocery merchant (1845–1921) whose company grew into major retailer SuperValu.[140] | |
128 | Noerenberg Estate Barn | August 18, 2015 (#15000527) |
2865 N. Shore Dr. 44°57′26″N 93°35′41″W / 44.9572°N 93.5947°W | Orono | Exceptionally intact and well crafted barn built circa 1912, a rare vestige of the working farms established by wealthy estate owners around Lake Minnetonka in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[141] | |
129 | Nokomis Knoll Residential Historic District | August 5, 1999 (#99000938) |
Bounded by W. 52nd St., W. Lake Nokomis Pkwy., E. 54th St., and Bloomington Ave. 44°54′26″N 93°15′04″W / 44.9072°N 93.2512°W | Minneapolis | Well-preserved subdivision on the former urban fringe, reflecting the explosion of the middle class, adoption of automobiles, and popularity of period revival architecture in the 1920s and 30s.[142] | |
130 | North East Neighborhood House | July 19, 2001 (#01000749) |
1929 2nd St. NE. 45°00′30″N 93°15′57″W / 45.0082°N 93.2659°W | Minneapolis | 1919 settlement house, a notable social institution created to assist the poor and to acculturate and unite immigrants.[143] | |
131 | Northrop Mall Historic District | January 19, 2018 (#100001973) |
Roughly bounded by Pillsbury Dr. SE, East River Rd., Union St. SE, and Delaware St. SE. 44°58′28″N 93°14′07″W / 44.9745°N 93.23535°W | Minneapolis | Formal academic campus at the University of Minnesota, the state's largest City Beautiful complex, with 19 contributing properties planned in 1910 and gradually built through 1971.[144] | |
132 | Northrup, King & Company Complex | January 19, 2021 (#100006005) |
1500 Jackson St. NE 45°00′13″N 93°15′01″W / 45.0035°N 93.2502°W | Minneapolis | Office and factory complex of Northrup-King, the nation's largest seed wholesaler for much of the 20th century, with seven contributing properties built 1916–1947.[145] | |
133 | Northstar Center | July 11, 2016 (#16000441) |
625 Marquette Ave. & 608, 618, & 618½ 2nd Ave. S. 44°58′36″N 93°16′14″W / 44.9766°N 93.2706°W | Minneapolis | Minneapolis's first mixed-use development with office, retail, entertainment, and hotel space; opened in 1963 and expanded in 1966, playing a key role in revitalizing downtown.[146] | |
134 | Northwestern Knitting Company Factory | June 3, 1983 (#83000904) |
718 Glenwood Ave. 44°58′49″N 93°17′20″W / 44.980241°N 93.288989°W | Minneapolis | Factory complex built 1904–1915 for leading national underwear brand Munsingwear. Also noted for the first frameless reinforced concrete building in Minneapolis.[147] Now International Market Square.[148] | |
135 | Northwestern National Life Insurance Company Home Office | July 16, 2012 (#12000414) |
430 Oak Grove St. 44°58′05″N 93°17′08″W / 44.967975°N 93.285671°W | Minneapolis | Headquarters built in 1924 for Minnesota's largest life insurance company, dating to 1885. Also significant for its Beaux-Arts architecture.[149] Now 430 Oak Grove apartments. | |
136 | Ogden Apartment Hotel | January 13, 1992 (#91001956) |
66-68 S. 12th St. 44°58′22″N 93°16′39″W / 44.972792°N 93.277433°W | Minneapolis | 1910 example of the once-common apartment hotel, a middle-class urban housing option of the early 20th century offering furnished and unfurnished rooms and meals from a central kitchen.[150] Now The Continental group residential housing. | |
137 | Floyd B. Olson House | December 31, 1974 (#74001023) |
1914 W. 49th St. 44°54′52″N 93°18′15″W / 44.914392°N 93.304101°W | Minneapolis | 1922 house of progressive leader Floyd B. Olson (1891–1936), three-term governor of Minnesota during the Great Depression and an organizer of the Minnesota Farmer–Labor Party.[151] | |
138 | Osseo Water Tower | June 5, 2017 (#100001023) |
25 4th St. 45°07′14″N 93°24′10″W / 45.120540°N 93.402789°W | Osseo | 1915 water tower associated with Osseo's community planning and development, and one of a dwindling number of examples of a style commonplace between 1890 and 1940.[152] | |
139 | Dr. Oscar Owre House | March 8, 1984 (#84001446) |
2625 Newton Ave. S. 44°57′28″N 93°18′22″W / 44.95765°N 93.305996°W | Minneapolis | 1912 house noted for its Prairie School design by Purcell, Feick, & Elmslie and association with a noted professor from the University of Minnesota School of Dentistry.[153] | |
140 | Charles and Grace Parker House | June 11, 1992 (#92000699) |
4829 Colfax Ave. S. 44°54′54″N 93°17′30″W / 44.915083°N 93.291665°W | Minneapolis | Exemplary 1913 Prairie School house designed by Purcell, Feick, & Elmslie.[154] | |
141 | Peavey–Haglin Experimental Concrete Grain Elevator | December 19, 1978 (#78001547) |
Junction of Minnesota Highways 7 and 100 44°56′33″N 93°20′43″W / 44.942388°N 93.3452°W | St. Louis Park | World's first known example of a cylindrical reinforced-concrete grain elevator, built 1899–1900 as a prototype of a structure which came to be widely used across North America's grain producing regions.[155] | |
142 | Peavey Plaza | January 14, 2013 (#12001173) |
1101 Nicollet Mall 44°58′21″N 93°16′32″W / 44.972425°N 93.275621°W | Minneapolis | 1975 Modernist urban park plaza designed by M. Paul Friedberg and Associates. Also significant as a major component in the 1960s–70s revitalization of downtown Minneapolis.[156] | |
143 | Pence Automobile Company Building | December 27, 2007 (#07001314) |
800 Hennepin Ave. 44°58′38″N 93°16′35″W / 44.977222°N 93.276389°W | Minneapolis | 1909 car dealership symbolizing the sudden growth of the early automobile industry; also associated with leading local dealer Harry E. Pence (1867–1933).[157] | |
144 | Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity House | September 15, 2005 (#05001040) |
1129 University Ave. SE. 44°58′52″N 93°14′21″W / 44.980974°N 93.239298°W | Minneapolis | Early modernist chapter house designed by Carl B. Stravs in 1912, and an influence on the architecture and planning of fraternity housing at the University of Minnesota.[158] | |
145 | Pillsbury A Mill | November 13, 1966 (#66000402) |
301 Main St. SE. 44°59′02″N 93°15′11″W / 44.983825°N 93.252983°W | Minneapolis | Only intact major facility of Minneapolis's milling district, completed in 1881 and for many years the world's largest and most advanced flour mill.[159] Also a contributing property to the St. Anthony Falls Historic District.[160] | |
146 | Plymouth Building | February 5, 2014 (#13001146) |
12 S. 6th St. 44°58′44″N 93°16′23″W / 44.978756°N 93.272945°W | Minneapolis | 1911 commercial building significant as an influential early example of concrete frame construction and other advancements in engineering and building techniques.[161] | |
147 | Gideon H. Pond House | July 16, 1970 (#70000296) |
401 E. 104th St. 44°48′48″N 93°16′17″W / 44.813332°N 93.271319°W | Bloomington | 1856 house/mission school of Gideon Hollister Pond (1810–1878), an early missionary to the Dakota people who produced an alphabet and dictionary for the Dakota language.[162] Now preserved within Pond-Dakota Mission Park.[163] | |
148 | Prospect Park Residential Historic District | May 12, 2015 (#15000213) |
Roughly bounded by University & Williams Aves. SE., Emerald St. SE., and I-94 44°57′58″N 93°12′46″W / 44.966°N 93.2128°W | Minneapolis | Unique suburban-like Minneapolis neighborhood with 692 contributing properties built 1884–1968, noted for its landscape architecture over hilly terrain, diverse housing stock, and cohesive social spirit through such innovations as the city's first community association.[164] | |
149 | Prospect Park Water Tower and Tower Hill Park | November 13, 1997 (#97001426) |
55 Malcolm Ave. SE. 44°58′07″N 93°12′46″W / 44.968673°N 93.212688°W | Minneapolis | 1906 park and its distinctive 1913 "Witch's Hat" water tower, associated with city planning, urban infrastructure, architectural eclecticism, and the work of architect Frederick William Cappelen.[165] Also contributing properties to the Prospect Park Residential Historic District.[164] | |
150 | William Gray Purcell House | October 29, 1974 (#74001024) |
2328 Lake Pl. 44°57′33″N 93°18′03″W / 44.959269°N 93.300807°W | Minneapolis | 1913 house of architect William Gray Purcell; a leading example of the Prairie School residences designed by his firm Purcell & Elmslie.[166] Now the Purcell-Cutts House of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.[167] | |
151 | Queen Avenue Bridge | November 6, 1989 (#89001847) |
Linden Hills Blvd. over Como-Harriet Streetcar Line 44°55′28″N 93°18′41″W / 44.924464°N 93.311272°W | Minneapolis | Minnesota's third-oldest surviving reinforced concrete arch bridge, built in 1905.[168] | |
152 | Elizabeth C. Quinlan House | July 25, 2012 (#12000428) |
1711 Emerson Ave. S. 44°58′01″N 93°17′39″W / 44.966864°N 93.294124°W | Minneapolis | 1925 Renaissance Revival house representative of 1920s eclecticism in architecture and the high-end residences designed by Frederick L. Ackerman.[169] | |
153 | Rand Tower | April 14, 1994 (#84003937) |
527-529 Marquette Ave. 44°58′39″N 93°16′11″W / 44.977365°N 93.269662°W | Minneapolis | 1929 skyscraper noted for its stepped Art Moderne design by Holabird & Root.[170] | |
154 | Roosevelt Branch Library | May 26, 2000 (#00000543) |
4026 28th Ave. S. 44°55′47″N 93°13′57″W / 44.929594°N 93.232502°W | Minneapolis | 1927 branch library associated with the influential evolution of Minneapolis Public Library 1894–1936, and its nationally renowned director Gratia Countryman (1866–1953).[171] | |
155 | St. Olafs Norwegian Lutheran Church | June 2, 2022 (#100007534) |
2901 Emerson Ave. N. 45°00′35″N 93°17′41″W / 45.0098°N 93.2948°W | Minneapolis | 1911 church playing a key role in the Norwegian-American heritage and social history of Near North, Minneapolis.[172] | |
156 | Schmid Farmhouse Ruin | December 1, 2015 (#15000849) |
.38 mi. NE. of jct. of Cty Rd. 44 and Minnesota State Highway 7 44°53′49″N 93°40′14″W / 44.896936°N 93.670441°W | Minnetrista | Ruins of an 1876 farmhouse providing a window on the life and construction techniques of a latter-19th-century German immigrant community on Lake Minnetonka. Preserved within Lake Minnetonka Regional Park.[173] | |
157 | Sears, Roebuck and Company Mail-Order Warehouse and Retail Store | July 29, 2005 (#05000745) |
2929 Chicago Ave. S. 44°56′57″N 93°15′39″W / 44.9493°N 93.2609°W | Minneapolis | Warehouse/shop complex dating to 1927, marking the transition of major American retailer Sears from mail-order to brick-and-mortar, and the emergence of motorist-oriented commerce. Now the Midtown Exchange.[174] | |
158 | Anne C. and Frank B. Semple House | February 26, 1998 (#98000151) |
100–104 W. Franklin Ave. 44°57′47″N 93°16′47″W / 44.9630°N 93.2798°W | Minneapolis | 1901 house and carriage house significant for their Renaissance Revival architecture.[175] Now Semple Mansion event and wedding venue. | |
159 | Sam S. Shubert Theatre | October 31, 1995 (#95001230) |
516 Hennepin Ave. S. 44°58′46″N 93°16′24″W / 44.9794°N 93.2734°W | Minneapolis | Exemplary 1910 Shubert Brothers theatre designed by William Albert Swasey, important in the development of the early fine theatre scene in Minneapolis.[176] Now the Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts. | |
160 | H. Alden Smith House | March 16, 1976 (#76001063) |
1403 Harmon Pl. 44°58′21″N 93°16′55″W / 44.9724°N 93.282°W | Minneapolis | 1887 house noted for its exemplary Richardsonian Romanesque architecture and design by William Channing Whitney.[177] Now Minneapolis Community and Technical College's Wells Family College Center. | |
161 | Lena O. Smith House | September 26, 1991 (#91001472) |
3905 5th Ave. S. 44°55′56″N 93°16′07″W / 44.9321°N 93.2686°W | Minneapolis | House inhabited by pioneering black female lawyer Lena O. Smith (1885–1966), a prominent figure in local civil rights and activism in the period 1927–1940.[178] | |
162 | St. Anthony Falls Historic District | March 11, 1971 (#71000438) |
Around the Mississippi River between Plymouth and S. 10th Aves. 44°58′58″N 93°15′31″W / 44.9827°N 93.2587°W | Minneapolis | 800-acre (320 ha) district surrounding Saint Anthony Falls, nucleus of Minnesota's largest city: early landmark, source of power to Minneapolis's foundational milling industry, and site of the nation's first hydroelectric plant in 1882.[160] | |
163 | Station 13 Minneapolis Fire Department | December 23, 2003 (#03001340) |
4201 Cedar Ave. S. 44°55′36″N 93°14′49″W / 44.9267°N 93.2469°W | Minneapolis | 1923 American Craftsman fire station built to blend into a residential neighborhood, representing progressive planning for fire protection and urban design during a period of high growth in Minneapolis.[179] | |
164 | Station 28 Minneapolis Fire Department | November 12, 1993 (#93001235) |
2724 W. 43rd St. 44°55′29″N 93°18′50″W / 44.9247°N 93.3138°W | Minneapolis | 1914 fire station representing the extension of city services to Minneapolis' last outlying neighborhood, Linden Hills, and the Minneapolis Fire Department's transition to motorized equipment.[180] | |
165 | Stevens Square Historic District | July 1, 1993 (#93000594) |
Roughly bounded by E. 17th St., 3rd Ave. S., Franklin Ave., and 1st Ave. S. 44°57′53″N 93°16′29″W / 44.9646°N 93.2746°W | Minneapolis | Minneapolis' most cohesive example of high-density middle-class housing from the early 20th century, with 54 apartment buildings constructed 1912–1926 around a 1908 park.[181] | |
166 | Stewart Memorial Presbyterian Church | November 28, 1978 (#78001543) |
116 E. 32nd St. 44°56′43″N 93°16′32″W / 44.9452°N 93.2756°W | Minneapolis | Rare example of a Prairie School church, built in 1909 from designs by William Gray Purcell and George Feick, Jr.[182] | |
167 | Strutwear Knitting Company Building | November 17, 2015 (#15000791) |
1010 S. 7th St. 44°58′17″N 93°15′26″W / 44.9714°N 93.2572°W | Minneapolis | 1920s garment factory significant as the site of a successful eight-month strike in 1935–36, a major turning point for the labor movement in Minneapolis history.[183] | |
168 | Studio 80 | August 3, 2020 (#100005399) |
2709 E. 25th St. 44°57′26″N 93°13′58″W / 44.9573°N 93.2328°W | Minneapolis | Top-of-the-line recording studio in use 1971–1981, attracting internationally famous artists while popularizing the music of Minnesota, and where Prince (1958–2016) recorded early work that largely established the Minneapolis sound.[184] | |
169 | Sumner Branch Library | May 26, 2000 (#00000539) |
611 Emerson Ave. N. 44°59′05″N 93°17′41″W / 44.9847°N 93.2946°W | Minneapolis | 1915 Carnegie library associated with the influential evolution of Minneapolis Public Library 1894–1936, and its nationally renowned director Gratia Countryman (1866–1953).[185] | |
170 | Swinford Townhouses and Apartments | October 25, 1990 (#90001552) |
1213–1221 and 1225 Hawthorne Ave. 44°58′30″N 93°16′54″W / 44.9750°N 93.2818°W | Minneapolis | Complex of 1886 townhouses and 1897 apartments noted for their Renaissance Revival architecture; some of the earliest compact luxury housing in Minneapolis.[186] | |
171 | Tifereth B'nai Jacob Synagogue-First Church of God in Christ | November 5, 2024 (#100011012) |
810 Elwood Ave. N. 44°59′12″N 93°18′05″W / 44.9868°N 93.3013°W | Minneapolis | ||
172 | Thirty-sixth Street Branch Library | May 26, 2000 (#00000541) |
347 E. 36th St. 44°56′15″N 93°16′14″W / 44.9374°N 93.2706°W | Minneapolis | 1916 Carnegie library associated with the influential evolution of Minneapolis Public Library 1894–1936, and its nationally renowned director Gratia Countryman (1866–1953).[187] Now the Hosmer Library. | |
173 | Thompson Flats | May 10, 2019 (#100003916) |
1605–1607 Hennepin Ave. S. 44°58′20″N 93°17′09″W / 44.9723°N 93.2858°W | Minneapolis | Early example of an apartment building catering to middle-class families seeking to live near downtown Minneapolis; constructed in 1899 with ground-floor retail space.[188] | |
174 | Thompson Summer House | January 15, 1998 (#97001652) |
3012 Shoreline Dr. 44°56′20″N 93°36′00″W / 44.9390°N 93.6000°W | Minnetonka Beach | Rare intact summer house from 1887, also symbolizing the development of Lake Minnetonka as an upper-middle-class resort and the underlying economic boom of 1880s Minneapolis.[189] | |
175 | Swan Turnblad House | August 26, 1971 (#71000436) |
2600 Park Ave. 44°57′19″N 93°15′57″W / 44.9552°N 93.2658°W | Minneapolis | Châteauesque mansion of Swedish American cultural promoter Swan Turnblad (1860–1933), built 1903–1910 and converted into the American Swedish Institute in 1929.[190] | |
176 | Twin City Rapid Transit Company Steam Power Plant | November 25, 1994 (#94001385) |
600 Main St. SE 44°58′51″N 93°14′57″W / 44.9808°N 93.2491°W | Minneapolis | 1903 power plant for the Twin City Rapid Transit streetcar system, the metro's main public transportation into the 1950s.[191] | |
177 | United States Post Office | April 1, 2010 (#10000130) |
212 3rd Ave. S. 44°58′51″N 93°15′51″W / 44.9807°N 93.2641°W | Minneapolis | Post office built 1912–1915, noted for its exemplary Neoclassical architecture.[192] Now best known as the Old Federal Building. | |
178 | University of Minnesota Old Campus Historic District | August 23, 1984 (#84001463) |
Roughly bounded by University Ave., East River Rd., the Dinkytown Greenway, Arlington St., Pleasant St. SE, Pillsbury Dr. SE, and Church St. SE. 44°58′40″N 93°14′10″W / 44.977768°N 93.23612°W | Minneapolis | 13 campus buildings constructed 1886–1907, significant for their association with the University of Minnesota's first period of expansion and their designs by several notable Minnesota architects.[193] | |
179 | Horatio P. Van Cleve House | March 16, 1976 (#76001064) |
603 5th St. SE 44°59′10″N 93°14′45″W / 44.985999°N 93.245722°W | Minneapolis | Greek Revival house occupied 1862–1920s by Civil War general Horatio P. Van Cleve (1809–1891)—commander of the 2nd Minnesota Volunteer Infantry—and his wife Charlotte (1819–1907), a writer and humanitarian activist.[194] | |
180 | George W. and Nancy B. Van Dusen House | May 18, 1995 (#95000607) |
1900 LaSalle Ave. 44°57′50″N 93°16′47″W / 44.963967°N 93.279746°W | Minneapolis | Elaborate 1893 mansion designed by notable Minneapolis architect Edgar Joralemon in an eclectic Richardsonian Romanesque/Renaissance Revival mix to symbolize the prosperity of a local business leader.[195] | |
181 | Walker Branch Library | May 26, 2000 (#00000544) |
2901 Hennepin Ave. S. 44°56′59″N 93°17′53″W / 44.949829°N 93.298003°W | Minneapolis | 1911 library branch associated with the influential evolution of Minneapolis Public Library 1894–1936, and its nationally renowned director Gratia Countryman (1866–1953).[196] | |
182 | Washburn A Mill Complex | May 4, 1983 (#83004388) |
1st St. S. at Portland Ave. 44°58′44″N 93°15′25″W / 44.978889°N 93.256944°W | Minneapolis | Seven-building complex dating to 1879, associated with major innovations in the flour milling industry and the growth of General Mills.[197] Also contributing properties to the St. Anthony Falls Historic District.[160] Main building is now the Mill City Museum.[198] | |
183 | Washburn Park Water Tower | October 6, 1983 (#83003663) |
401 Prospect Ave. 44°54′39″N 93°17′04″W / 44.910733°N 93.284313°W | Minneapolis | 1932 water tower significant as a collaboration among architect Harry Wild Jones, engineer William S. Hewitt, and sculptor John K. Daniels.[199] | |
184 | Washburn-Fair Oaks Mansion District | February 17, 1978 (#78001544) |
1st and 2nd Aves., 22nd St., and Stevens Ave. 44°57′40″N 93°16′31″W / 44.961111°N 93.275278°W | Minneapolis | Seven mansions built 1884–1912, associated with the second generation of prominent Minneapolitans and embodying the fashionable architecture of the period by notable local architects.[200] | |
185 | Wayzata Bay Wreck | June 20, 2016 (#16000386) |
Location Restricted | Minnetonka vicinity | 1879 shipwreck, the nation's best preserved remains of a "model barge", a little-documented design pointed at both ends so it could be towed in either direction.[201] | |
186 | Wayzata Section House | May 18, 2021 (#100006584) |
738 Lake St. East 44°58′06″N 93°30′37″W / 44.9682°N 93.5103°W | Wayzata | Example of the distinctive two-story section houses built and maintained by the Great Northern Railway for employee housing, constructed in 1902 and expanded in 1944.[202] | |
187 | Wesley Methodist Episcopal Church | February 9, 1984 (#84001469) |
101 E. Grant St. 44°58′10″N 93°16′34″W / 44.969544°N 93.276133°W | Minneapolis | Leading work by the leading architect of a period of major church construction in Minneapolis, built 1890–91 using Warren H. Hayes' adaptation of the Akron Plan and other innovative features.[203] | |
188 | Westminster Presbyterian Church | June 26, 1998 (#98000716) |
83 12th St. S. 44°58′17″N 93°16′33″W / 44.971413°N 93.275892°W | Minneapolis | Church built 1896–97 for one of Minneapolis' oldest and most influential congregations, significant for providing social and community services since their establishment in 1857.[204] | |
189 | White Castle Building No. 8 | October 16, 1986 (#86002868) |
3252 Lyndale Ave. S. 44°56′35″N 93°17′18″W / 44.943037°N 93.288437°W | Minneapolis | 1936 prefabricated White Castle building, a rare surviving example of the earliest fast food stands and their pioneering architectural use of porcelain enameled steel.[205] | |
190 | Malcolm Willey House | February 23, 1984 (#84001472) |
255 Bedford St. SE. 44°57′38″N 93°12′31″W / 44.96053°N 93.208646°W | Minneapolis | Minnesota's most significant Depression-era Frank Lloyd Wright house, built in 1934 in a precursor to his Usonian style.[206] Also a contributing property to the Prospect Park Residential Historic District.[164] | |
191 | Theodore Wirth House–Administration Building | June 7, 2002 (#02000611) |
3954 Bryant Ave. S. 44°55′52″N 93°17′30″W / 44.931088°N 93.291706°W | Minneapolis | 1910 house/office and surrounding park associated with Theodore Wirth (1863–1949), nationally renowned landscape architect and influential superintendent of the Minneapolis park system.[207] | |
192 | The Woman's Club of Minneapolis | January 11, 2022 (#100007357) |
410 Oak Grove Dr. 44°58′04″N 93°17′05″W / 44.9678°N 93.2848°W | Minneapolis | 1927 clubhouse reflecting the woman's club movement in the United States and local women's involvement in the civic and cultural development of Minneapolis.[208] | |
193 | Allemarinda and James Wyer House | April 18, 1977 (#77000735) |
201 Mill St. 44°54′06″N 93°33′45″W / 44.9017°N 93.562446°W | Excelsior | The largest and best preserved of Excelsior's Eastlake style summer homes built around 1880.[209] | |
194 | Zinsmaster Baking Company Building | June 3, 2020 (#100005246) |
2900 Park Ave. 44°57′00″N 93°15′57″W / 44.95°N 93.265833°W | Minneapolis | State-of-the-art 1928 bread factory, epitomizing the rise of industrial bakeries and the era's shift in consumer preferences to mass-produced, store-bought bread.[210] |
Former listings
[edit][5] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Isaac Atwater House | December 2, 1970 (#70000913) | 1972 | 1607 S. 5th St. | Minneapolis | Relocated to the Shakopee Historic District in 1972.[211] | |
2 | Dania Hall | December 27, 1974 (#74001020) | August 2, 2000 | Corner of 5th St. and Cedar Ave. | Minneapolis | Burned down February 28, 2000.[212][213] | |
3 | Excelsior Fruit Growers Association Building | January 4, 1982 (#82002959) | July 1, 2002 | 450 3rd St. | Excelsior | 1910 hall of an agricultural organization.[214] Demolished in 2001.[212] | |
4 | Forum Cafeteria | March 16, 1976 (#76001059) | May 4, 1987 | 36-38 S. 7th St. | Minneapolis | 1929 Moderne restaurant.[215] Demolished in 1979 for new development, but interior preserved and reassembled at 40 S. 7th St.[216] | |
5 | New Century Mill | October 10, 1980 (#80002070) | April 29, 1993 | Oak and 5th Streets | Minneapolis | Originally listed in 1980 and expanded in 1987 (Ref #87002302). Burned down in 1990.[212][217] | |
6 | Nicollet Hotel | November 16, 1987 (#87002008) | March 15, 1993 | 235 Hennepin Avenue | Minneapolis | 1924 hotel.[218] Demolished in 1991.[212][219] | |
7 | Philander Prescott House | May 21, 1975 (#75000988) | June 25, 1986 | 4458-4460 Snelling Ave. S | Minneapolis | 1852 house of early pioneer and interpreter Philander Prescott (1801–1862). Demolished in 1980.[220][221] |
See also
[edit]- List of National Historic Landmarks in Minnesota
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Minnesota
Notes
[edit]- aNumbers represent an ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmark sites and National Register of Historic Places Districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- bNames listed on the National Register may differ from the current or most common names of the structures. For example, the Washburn "A" Mill is now known as the Mill City Museum.[222]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Kane, Lucile M. (1987) [1966]. The Falls of St. Anthony: The Waterfall That Built Minneapolis. St. Paul, Minnesota: Minnesota Historical Society.
- ^ Anfinson, John O. (Spring 2003). "Spiritual Power to Industrial Might: 12,000 Years at St. Anthony Falls". Minnesota History. 58 (5): 252–269. ISSN 0026-5497.
- ^ Danbom, David B. (Spring 2003). "Flour Power: The Significance of Flour Milling at the Falls". Minnesota History. 58 (5): 271–285. ISSN 0026-5497.
- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved November 8, 2024.
- ^ a b Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ Gales, Elizabeth A.; Charlene K. Roise (2010-12-10). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Abbott Hospital" (PDF). Minnesota Historical Society. National Park Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-27. Retrieved 2015-04-19.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1976-11-30). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Advance Thresher/Emerson-Newton Company Bldgs". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-19.
- ^ Halvorsen, Tamara; Lauren Anderson (2021-03-22). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Alano Society of Minneapolis Clubhouse (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2022-06-25.
- ^ Hackett, John (April 1978). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Ames–Florida House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-19.
- ^ "Rockford Area Historical Society". Rockford Area Historical Society. Retrieved 2015-04-19.
- ^ Spaeth, Lynne VanBrocklin; Robert M. Frame (May 1979). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Anoka-Champlin Mississippi River Bridge". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-16.
- ^ Fey, David; Stuart MacDonald (1983-09-08). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Architects and Engineers Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-16.
- ^ Dunwiddie, Foster W. (1977-12-06). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Baird, George W., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (November 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Bardwell - Ferrant House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-16.
- ^ Dabrowski, Mario (1978-05-01). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Bartholomew, Riley Lucas, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1974-10-28). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Basilica of Saint Mary". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1976-11-26). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Bennett, Henry Harrison/McBride, John M. House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
- ^ a b Granger, Susan; Patricia Murphy (1992-12-12). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Healy Block Residential Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-10-16.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1977-06-01). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form:Fredrika Bremer Intermediate School". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-04-01.
- ^ Kellerhals, Kelli Andre; Gregory R. Mathis Sr. (May 2, 2014). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Bridge No. 90646" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-02-12.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1973-11-09). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Burwell House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-18.
- ^ Cavin, Brooks (1971-01-14). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Butler Brothers Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-17.
- ^ Hembree, Jennifer F. (2011-08-01). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Buzza Company Building" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2013-11-09.
- ^ Cavin, Brooks (1970-07-31). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Cahill School". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-16.
- ^ a b "Cahill School". Edina Historical Society. 2013. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
- ^ Trout-Oertel, Diane (March 2003). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Calhoun Beach Club". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-16.
- ^ McDowell, Alexa (2020-08-04). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Calvary Baptist Church (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-06-06.
- ^ Peterson, Rachel (October 2021). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Calvary Lutheran Church (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2022-06-13.
- ^ Richardson, Kit; Maureen Michalsky; Elizabeth Gales (2014-02-17). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Cameron Transfer and Storage Company Building" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-07.
- ^ Frame III, Robert M. (1978-05-12). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Cappelen Memorial Bridge". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-16.
- ^ Ludt, Tamara Halvorsen; Lauren Anderson (2020-05-21). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Aaron Carlson Corporation (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-12-20.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W.; Susan Zeik (1977-01-10). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Carpenter, Elbert L., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W.; Susan Zeik (1977-01-12). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Carpenter, Eugene J., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ^ Roise, Charlene; Jenna Rempfert (2020-12-01). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: J. I. Case Building (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-06-06.
- ^ Frame III, Robert M. (1988-08-15). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Cedar Avenue Bridge". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-11.
- ^ Hess, Roise and Company (2010-08-09). "Cedar Square West Statement of Significance" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form: Cedar Square West. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-05-28. Retrieved 2015-03-11.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (January 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Chadwick, L.L., Cottages". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-08.
- ^ Grabinski, Kari; Deborah Renz (1995-03-08). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Chamber of Commerce". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-03.
- ^ Vermeer, Andrea; William E. Stark (2004-12-23). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Chicago Milwaukee and St. Paul Grade Separation". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-03.
- ^ Grossman, John (1969-10-06). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-02.
- ^ "History of the Society and the Historic Milwaukee Road Depot". St. Louis Park Historical Society. 2020. Retrieved 2020-04-18.
- ^ Frame III, Robert M. (1978-05-12). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Company: Station, Train Shed, and Freight House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
- ^ "The Depot". CSM Lodging. 2015. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
- ^ Anderson, Rolf T. (2008-02-08). "National Historic Landmark Nomination: Christ Church Lutheran". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
- ^ Anderson, Lauren; Tamara Ludt (June 2021). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Church of the Incarnation and Rectory (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2022-05-14.
- ^ Koop, Michael (January 1990). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Church of St. Stephen (Catholic)". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-02-06.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (June 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Coe, Amos B., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-02-06.
- ^ Anderson, Lauren (November 2021). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Coliseum Building and Hall (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
- ^ Nagle, Liza (1977-01-17). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: "1300"/Como-Interurban-Harriet Streetcar Line". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-01-07.
- ^ "The Como-Harriet Streetcar Line". Minnesota Streetcar Museum. 2018. Retrieved 2018-02-15.
- ^ Spaeth, Lynne VanBrocklin (October 1980). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Country Club District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-01-07.
- ^ Sluss, Jacqueline (1991-03-26). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Crane Island Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-01-07.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W.; Susan Roth (1982-05-03). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Cummins, John R., Homestead". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-01-06.
- ^ Gilmore, Andrea M. (1975-08-01). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: B.O. Cutter House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-12-29.
- ^ Ludt, Tamara; Laurel Fritz; Lauren Anderson (October 2018). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minnetonka Beach Water Tower (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-03-28.
- ^ Anderson, Lauren; Alex Young (2023-07-12). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: District No. 99 School (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2024-05-04.
- ^ Gaut, Greg (2018-06-06). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: District No. 107 School" (PDF). Minnesota Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1998-12-31). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: East Lake Branch Library". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-12-29.
- ^ Pearson, Marjorie (July 2007). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Eitel Hospital". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-12-29.
- ^ Peterson, Rachel (March 2021). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Excelsior Commercial Historic District (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2022-06-23.
- ^ Naas, Bob; Charles W. Nelson (1980-05-09). "National Register of Historic Places—Nomination Form: Excelsior Public School" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-12-01.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille; Charles Nelson (August 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Farmers and Mechanics Savings Bank". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-29.
- ^ Roise, Charlene; Erin Hanafin Berg (July 2005). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Farmers and Mechanics Savings Bank" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-29.
- ^ Mack, Robert C. (1979-07-16). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Fire Station No. 19". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-29.
- ^ Larson, Paul Clifford (1985-08-22). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: First Church of Christ Scientist". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-29.
- ^ Bronner, Gail; Charles W. Nelson (1978-07-31). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: First Congregational Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-29.
- ^ Gales, Elizabeth A. (2007-12-20). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: First National Bank-Soo Line Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-29.
- ^ Zahn, Thomas; Peg Reilly; Bethany Gladhill (2014-05-04). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: First Presbyterian Church of Oak Grove Cemetery" (PDF). National Park Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-11. Retrieved 2015-02-26.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (February 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Fisk, Woodbury, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-29.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1976-11-30). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Flour Exchange Bldg". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-29.
- ^ Larew, Marilynn (1978-03-15). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Fort Snelling". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-21.
- ^ Person, Kristie L.; Staci Richey (2015-11-03). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Fort Snelling National Cemetery" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-06-25.
- ^ Frame III, Robert M. (1978-05-12). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Fort Snelling--Mendota Bridge". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-21.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1977-09-23). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Foshay Tower". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-21.
- ^ Wahlberg, Holly (1994-01-20). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Fournier, Lawrence A. and Mary, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-19.
- ^ Ruliffson, Harmon; H.W. Fridlund; Charles W. Nelson (1975-09-15). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Scottish Rite Temple/Fowler Methodist Episcopal Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-19.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1998-12-31). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Franklin Branch Library". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-19.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (March 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Gethsemane Episcopal Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-18.
- ^ Harren, Henry M. (1974-02-01). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Gideon, Peter, Homestead". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-18.
- ^ Anderson, Rolf (1999-03-29). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Glen Lake Children's Camp". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-12.
- ^ Larson, Paul Clifford (1989-07-12). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Gluek, John G. and Minnie, House and Carriage House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-12.
- ^ Rounds, Shawn P.; Charlene K. Roise (September 1996). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-11.
- ^ Gales, Elizabeth (2016-02-08). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Grain Belt Beer Sign" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-02-19.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1976-11-02). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
- ^ Anderson, Taimi T.; Dennis A. Gimmestad (February 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Great Northern Railroad Depot". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
- ^ "Wayzata Depot". Wayzata Historical Society. 2012. Archived from the original on 2009-04-02. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
- ^ Dunwiddie, Foster W. (1975-09-15). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Grimes, Jonathan Taylor, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-05.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Scott Kelly; John Hagel (2006-09-10). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Hagel Family Farm". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-05.
- ^ Hackett, John J. (April 1978). "Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Hanover Bridge". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
- ^ Baker, Verne (1977-10-03). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Hennepin County Library". National Park Service.
- ^ "Robbinsdale Historical Society". Robbinsdale Historical Society. 2014. Retrieved 2014-10-07.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1995-04-15). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Hennepin Theatre". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-10-16.
- ^ "Orpheum Theatre History". Hennepin Theatre Trust. 2013. Retrieved 2014-10-16.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W.; Susan Zeik (1977-01-10). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Hewitt, Edwin H., House". National Park Service.
- ^ "Facilities & Directions". Hodroff-Epstein Memorial Chapel. 2014. Retrieved 2014-10-07.
- ^ Roise, Charlene; Katie Randall; Elizabeth Gales (2022-11-04). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Hiawatha Golf Course (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2023-05-19.
- ^ Larson, Paul Clifford (1984-04-02). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Hinkle-Murphy House". National Park Service.
- ^ Donofrio, Gregory; Meghan Elliott; Ryan Salmon (2013-08-08). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Hollywood Theater" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-05.
- ^ Frame III, Robert M. (1988-08-15). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Intercity Bridge" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ^ Frame III, Robert M. (1988-08-15). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Interlachen Bridge" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-09-25.
- ^ Lund, Marjorie A.; Charles W. Nelson (1976-04-16). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Jones, Harry W., House ("Elmwood")" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
- ^ Lindberg, Tammy (2013-12-27). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lake Harriet Methodist Episcopal Church" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-14.
- ^ Hembree, Jennifer F. (2015-12-04). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lake Street Sash and Door Company" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-02-19.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (February 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Lakewood Memorial Chapel" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-29.
- ^ Peterson, Rachel; Jessica Berglin (2019-11-11). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Laurel Apartments (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
- ^ Fritz, Laurel; Greg Donofrio (2014-01-19). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lee, Arthur and Edith, House" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-05.
- ^ Vetrano, John B. (1976-02-23). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory--Nomination Form: Legg, Harry F., House" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-29.
- ^ Roise, Charlene K.; Elizabeth A. Gales (2012-05-30). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lincoln Bank Building" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2012-10-29.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1998-12-31). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Linden Hills Branch Library" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-29.
- ^ Lindoo, Peggy (December 1977). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged (St. Joseph's)" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-29.
- ^ Roise, Charlene; Rachel Peterson; Jennifer Hembree. "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: McLeod and Smith Inc., Headquarters" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-06-25.
- ^ Anfinson, John; Jack Maloney (2003-01-06). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lock and Dam No. 2" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2013-04-29.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1976-07-29). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Lohmar, John, House" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-11.
- ^ Stark, William E. (2013-01-09). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Long Meadow Bridge" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-01-16.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (September 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Lumber Exchange Building" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-11.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1977-11-08). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Martin, Charles J., House" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-11.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1975-02-26). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Masonic Temple" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
- ^ Roth, Susan (May 1979). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Maternity Hospital" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1973-11-13). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Milwaukee Avenue Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
- ^ "Milwaukee Avenue Historic District". Minnesota National Register Properties Database. Minnesota Historical Society. 2009. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
- ^ a b Koop, Michael (March 1988). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minneapolis Brewing Company". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1974-08-26). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Minneapolis City Hall/Hennepin County Courthouse". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
- ^ Zahn, Thomas R.; Bethany Gladhill (2004-12-20). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minneapolis Fire Department Repair Shop". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-05.
- ^ Pearson, Marjorie (July 2001). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minneapolis Pioneers and Soldiers Memorial Cemetery". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-05.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1977-04-01). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minneapolis Public Library: North Branch". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-07-01.
- ^ Anderson, Rolf T. (January 1987). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minneapolis Warehouse Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-07-01.
- ^ Roberts, Norene (1995-06-29). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minneapolis Y.M.C.A. Central Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
- ^ Hannah, Lindsay (March 2021). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minnehaha (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
- ^ Cavin, Brooks (1970-07-31). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Grange Hall". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
- ^ Grossman, John (1969-10-22). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Minnehaha Park Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-16.
- ^ Atwood, Stephanie K.; Charlene K. Roise; Penny A. Peterson (December 2012). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minnesota Linseed Oil Company" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2013-07-04.
- ^ Koop, Michael (1988-06-14). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minnesota Soldiers' Home Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-15.
- ^ McDowell, Alexa (2019-01-25). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minnetonka Beach Water Tower (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-03-28.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1974-10-28). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: F. C. Hayer Company Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-15.
- ^ "Minneapolis Warehouse Historic District". Minnesota National Register Properties Database. Minnesota Historical Society. 2009. Retrieved 2014-06-15.
- ^ Brown, Scott C. (1994-09-07). "National Register of Historic Places Registration From: Morse Jr., Elisha and Lizzie House". National Park Service.
- ^ Hession, Jane King (2004-01-16). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Neils, Frieda and Henry J., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-15.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille; Liz Holum (January 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Augsburg Old Main". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-15.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W.; Susan Zeik (1977-01-10). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Newell, George R., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-15.
- ^ Anderson, Rolf T. (2015-03-01). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Noerenberg Estate Barn" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-06-25.
- ^ Curran, Christine A.; Charlene K. Roise (August 1998). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Nokomis Knoll Residential Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
- ^ Gardner, Denis P. (March 2001). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: North East Neighborhood House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
- ^ Gales, Elizabeth; Rachel Peterson (2017-08-08). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Northrop Mall Historic District. Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office.
- ^ Lucas, Amy (2020-08-01). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Northrup, King & Company Complex (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-12-24.
- ^ Berglin, Jessica; Charlene Roise (2015-11-22). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Northstar Center" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- ^ Hess, Jeffrey; Colette Hyman (1983-01-15). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Northwestern Knitting Company Factory". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
- ^ "About". International Market Square. 2014. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
- ^ Atwood, Stephanie K.; Penny A. Petersen; Charlene K. Roise (February 2012). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Northwestern National Life Insurance Company Home Office" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2013-11-10.
- ^ Koop, Michael (1991-06-12). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Ogden Apartment Hotel". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-12.
- ^ Van Brocklin, Lynne; Charles Nelson (1974-08-26). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Olson, Floyd B., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-12.
- ^ McDowell, Alexa (2016-11-02). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Osseo Water Tower" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (March 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Owre, Dr. Oscar, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-10.
- ^ Roise, Charlene K. (1991-12-20). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Parker, Charles and Grace, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-10.
- ^ Sheire, James H. (1981-05-23). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form: Peavey–Haglin Experimental Concrete Grain Elevator". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
- ^ Roise, Charlene K.; Elizabeth A. Gales (August 2012). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Peavey Plaza" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-01-17.
- ^ Berg, Erin Hanafin; Charlene Roise (July 2007). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Pence Automobile Company Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
- ^ Zellie, Carole (2005-02-01). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-06.
- ^ Lissandrello, Stephen (1975-08-07). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Pillsbury "A" Mill". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-03.
- ^ a b c Coddington, Donn (1971-02-01). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: St. Anthony Falls Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-11.
- ^ Atwood, Stephanie K.; Charlene Roise (August 2013). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Plymouth Building" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-03.
- ^ Cavin, Brooks (1970-05-13). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Pond, Gideon H., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-07.
- ^ "Pond-Dakota Mission Park and Gideon Pond House". City of Bloomington. Retrieved 2014-11-07.
- ^ a b c Roise, Charlene; Stephanie K. Atwood; Marjorie Pearson (August 2014). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Prospect Park Residential Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-11. Retrieved 2016-06-25.
- ^ Curran, Christine A.; Charlene K. Roise (June 1997). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Prospect Park Water Tower and Tower Hill Park". National Park Service.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1974-03-15). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Purcell, William Gray, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-06-02.
- ^ "Purcell-Cutts House". Minneapolis Institute of Arts. 2014. Retrieved 2014-06-02.
- ^ Frame III, Robert M. (1988-08-15). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Queen Avenue Bridge". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
- ^ Stark, William E. (2012-02-15). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Quinlan, Elizabeth C., House" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (August 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Rand Tower". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1998-12-31). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Roosevelt Branch Library". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
- ^ Wolf, Kelly; Alyssa R. Auten (2021-07-06). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: St. Olafs Norwegian Lutheran Church (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2022-06-14.
- ^ Pizza, Andrea C. (2015-07-07). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Schmid Farmhouse Ruin" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-06-26.
- ^ Gales, Elizabeth A.; Charlene K. Roise; Garneth O. Peterson (February 2005). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Sears, Roebuck and Company Mail-Order Warehouse and Retail Store". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
- ^ Sabongi, Margaret H. (1997-07-18). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Semple. Anne C. and Frank B., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-29.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1995-04-15). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Sam S. Shubert Theatre". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-29.
- ^ Gilmore, Andrea; Charles W. Nelson (1975-09-03). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Smith, H. Alden, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
- ^ Sluss, Jacqueline (1990-07-16). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Smith, Lena O., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
- ^ Zellie, Carole S. (2003-05-01). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Station 13 Minneapolis Fire Department (MFD)". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Patricia Murphy (1993-05-11). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Station 28 Minneapolis Fire Department". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
- ^ Zellie, Carole (1993-01-05). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Stevens Square Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
- ^ Burrows, John R. (1978-01-10). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Stewart Memorial Church (Presbyterian)". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
- ^ Berglin, Jessica; Charlene Roise (2015-05-21). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Strutwear Knitting Company Building" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-06-26.
- ^ Zschomler, Kristen; Barbara Howard (2020-02-04). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Sound 80 (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-12-24.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1998-12-31). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Sumner Branch Library". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
- ^ Koop, Michael (1988-01-27). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Swinford Townhouses and Apartments". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1998-12-31). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Thirty-sixth Street Branch Library". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
- ^ Adsit, Mina (2018-12-31). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Thompson Flats (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-02-13.
- ^ Morris, Stacey B.; Jackie Sluss (May 1997). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Thompson Summer House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-21.
- ^ Cavin, Brooks (1971-01-29). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: American Swedish Institute". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-21.
- ^ Weber, Deanne Zibell; Jeffrey A. Hess (February 1994). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Twin City Rapid Transit Company Steam Power Plant". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
- ^ Schmidt, Andrew J. (January 2010). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: United States Post Office". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
- ^ State Historic Preservation Office Staff (February 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: University of Minnesota Old Campus Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
- ^ Gilmore, Andrea M. (1975-07-25). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Van Cleve, Horatio P., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
- ^ Zellie, Carole (1995-01-03). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Van Dusen, George W. and Nancy B., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-11-07.
- ^ Granger, Susan; Kay Grossman (1998-12-31). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Walker Branch Library". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-16.
- ^ Adams, George R.; James B. Gardner (September 1978). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Washburn A Mill Complex". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-16.
- ^ "Building History". Minnesota Historical Society. 2014. Retrieved 2014-05-16.
- ^ Kudzia, Camille (August 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Washburn Park Water Tower". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-05-15.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1977-09-19). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Washburn-Fair Oaks Mansion District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-04-24.
- ^ Merriman, Ann; Christopher Olson (2015-09-28). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Wayzata Bay Wreck" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-02-19.
- ^ Anderson, Lauren; Tamara Halvorsen Ludt (December 2020). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Wayzata Section House (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-12-24.
- ^ Fey, David A.; Robert C. Mack (1982-09-30). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Wesley United Methodist Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-04-24.
- ^ Roise, Charlene K.; Christine A. Curran (February 1998). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Westminster Presbyterian Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-04-22.
- ^ Wilson, Kristin L.; Nella L. Bean (1986-06-05). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: White Castle Building # 8". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-04-21.
- ^ Nelson, Charles; Camille Kudzia (August 1981). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Willey, Malcolm, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-04-17.
- ^ Pearson, Marjorie (December 2001). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Wirth, Theodore, House/Administration Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-04-17.
- ^ Lucas, Amy (2021-08-04). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: The Woman's Club of Minneapolis (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
- ^ Nelson, Charles W.; Kari Rice (1976-09-10). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Wyer-Pearce House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-04-14.
- ^ Peterson, Rachel (2019-11-21). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Zinsmaster Baking Company Building (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-12-24.
- ^ "Isaac Atwater House was placed on a trailer to be moved to Scott County". Minneapolis Star. July 21, 1971. p. 2. Retrieved July 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d Nord, Nary Ann (2003). The National Register of Historic Places in Minnesota: A Guide. ISBN 978-0-87351-448-4.
- ^ "Fire destroys immigrants' haven". Minneapolis Star Tribune. February 29, 2000. p. 1. Retrieved July 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Excelsior Fruit Growers Association Building (removed)". Minnesota National Register Properties Database. Minnesota Historical Society. 2009. Retrieved 2013-08-28.
- ^ "Forum Cafeteria (removed)". Minnesota National Register Properties Database. Minnesota Historical Society. 2009. Retrieved 2013-08-28.
- ^ El-Hai, Jack (2000). Lost Minnesota: Stories of Vanished Places. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-3515-3.
- ^ "Warehouse fire embers ignite arena's roof". St. Cloud Times. August 13, 1990. p. 2B. Retrieved July 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Nicollet Hotel (removed)". Minnesota National Register Properties Database. Minnesota Historical Society. 2009. Retrieved 2013-08-28.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Nicollet Hotel becoming a memory". Minneapolis Star Tribune. February 7, 1991. p. 7B. Retrieved July 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Philander Prescott House". Landmarks & Historic Districts. City of Minneapolis, MN. 2019-02-07. Retrieved 2019-08-01.
- ^ "Prescott House - going, going..." Minneapolis Star Tribune. July 19, 1980. p. 6A. Retrieved July 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 24, 2008.
External links
[edit]Media related to National Register of Historic Places in Hennepin County, Minnesota at Wikimedia Commons
- Minnesota National Register Properties Database Archived 2013-01-23 at the Wayback Machine—Minnesota Historical Society
- Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission - Minneapolis Landmarks & Historic Districts