Current listings

edit
[1] Landmark name[2] Image Date listed Location City or Town Summary
1 NRHP Advance Thresher/Emerson-Newton Implement Company   September 20, 1977 700-704 S. 3rd St.
44°58′36.85″N 93°15′30.48″W / 44.9769028°N 93.2584667°W / 44.9769028; -93.2584667 (Advance Thresher/Emerson-Newton Implement Company)
Minneapolis Commercial buildings influenced by Louis Sullivan, with Classical Revival-style ornamentation[3]
2 NRHP Ames-Florida House   October 16, 1979 8131 Bridge St.
45°5′12.13″N 93°43′53.72″W / 45.0867028°N 93.7315889°W / 45.0867028; -93.7315889 (Ames-Florida House)
Rockford House built by George F. Ames and Joel Florida, the founders of Rockford, in 1856. They produced all the structural materials on site and built their own furniture.[4]
3 NRHP Anoka-Champlin Mississippi River Bridge   December 31, 1979 U.S. Route 52
45°11′25.42″N 93°23′45.22″W / 45.1903944°N 93.3958944°W / 45.1903944; -93.3958944 (Anoka-Champlin Mississippi River Bridge)
Champlin Bridge built in 1929, was torn down to its piers and rebuilt.
4 NRHP Architects and Engineers Building   February 23, 1984 1200 2nd Ave., S.
44°58′15.01″N 93°16′25.17″W / 44.9708361°N 93.2736583°W / 44.9708361; -93.2736583 (Architects and Engineers Building)
Minneapolis Renaissance Revival-style building with offices and shared spaces for design professionals[5]
5 NRHP George W. Baird House   March 27, 1980 4400 W. 50th St.
44°54′46.03″N 93°20′12.21″W / 44.9127861°N 93.3367250°W / 44.9127861; -93.3367250 (Baird, George W., House)
Edina Brick farmstead built in 1886 by prominent farmer in the Edina Mills community[6]
6 NRHP Bardwell-Ferrant House   August 9, 1984 2500 Portland Ave., S.
44°57′21.6″N 93°15′59.36″W / 44.956000°N 93.2664889°W / 44.956000; -93.2664889 (Bardwell-Ferrant House)
Minneapolis Queen Anne-style house with a Moorish Revival makeover[7]
7 NRHP Riley Lucas Bartholomew House   November 28, 1978 6901 Lyndale Ave., S.
44°52′38.17″N 93°17′17.35″W / 44.8772694°N 93.2881528°W / 44.8772694; -93.2881528 (Bartholomew, Riley Lucas, House)
Richfield 1852 home built by early Richfield settler, legislative representative, and a framer of the state constitution[8]
8 NRHP Basilica of St. Mary   March 26, 1975 Hennepin Ave. at 16th St.
44°58′23.01″N 93°17′9.49″W / 44.9730583°N 93.2859694°W / 44.9730583; -93.2859694 (Basilica of St. Mary--Catholic)
Minneapolis Beaux-Arts basilica; by same architect as the Cathedral of St. Paul[9]
9 NRHP Bennett-McBride House   September 19, 1977 3116 3rd Ave., S.
44°56′44.6″N 93°16′22.91″W / 44.945722°N 93.2730306°W / 44.945722; -93.2730306 (Bennett-McBride House)
Minneapolis Queen Anne style house with a variety of turned, sawn, and beaded wood ornament[10]
10 NRHP Fredrika Bremer Intermediate School   January 31, 1978 1214 Lowry Ave., N.
45°0′49.4″N 93°17′41.74″W / 45.013722°N 93.2949278°W / 45.013722; -93.2949278 (Bremer, Fredrika, Intermediate School)
Minneapolis One of the oldest (1888) school buildings in Mineapolis.
21 NRHP Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad Grade Separation   June 1, 2005 Parallel to 29th St. between Humboldt and 20th Aves., S. Minneapolis Grade-separated railroad corridor mandated by the City of Minneapolis to route the Milwaukee Road railroad tracks below street level and eliminate grade crossings[11]
22 NRHP Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Depot   November 25, 1969 W. 37th St. and Brunswick Ave.
44°56′13.29″N 93°21′28.45″W / 44.9370250°N 93.3579028°W / 44.9370250; -93.3579028 (Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Depot)
St. Louis Park Eastlake style railroad depot built in 1887[12]
24 NHL Christ Church Lutheran   June 20, 2001 3244 34th Ave., S
44°56′37.54″N 93°13′23.55″W / 44.9437611°N 93.2232083°W / 44.9437611; -93.2232083 (Christ Church Lutheran)
Minneapolis Eliel Saarinen-designed modern-style church[13], designated a National Historic Landmark in 2009[14]
83 HD Minneapolis Warehouse Historic District   November 3, 1989 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. Minneapolis Major concentration of warehouse buildings representing Minneapolis' prominence as a distribution center, with buildings designed by prominent local architects in a wide range of architectural styles[15]
84 NRHP Minneapolis YMCA Central Building   November 29, 1995 36 S. 9th St. (formerly 30 S. 9th St.)
44°58′33.8″N 93°16′29.82″W / 44.976056°N 93.2749500°W / 44.976056; -93.2749500 (Minneapolis YMCA Central Building)
Minneapolis Long, Lamoreaux, and Long-designed YMCA building in the Gothic Revival style[16]
93 HD Nokomis Knoll Residential Historic District   August 5, 1999 Bounded by W. 52nd St., West Lake Nokomis Parkway, E. 54th St., and Bloomington Ave. Minneapolis Middle-class residential development with Tudor Revival and other period revival styles popular in the 1920s and 1930s[17][18]
94 NRHP North East Neighborhood House   July 19, 2001 1929 2nd St., NE.
45°0′29.25″N 93°15′56.57″W / 45.0081250°N 93.2657139°W / 45.0081250; -93.2657139 (North East Neighborhood House)
Minneapolis Georgian Revival settlement house built in 1919 to serve immigrants and the unemployed[19]
95 NRHP Northwestern Knitting Company Factory   June 3, 1983 718 Glenwood Ave.
44°58′49.56″N 93°17′18.3″W / 44.9804333°N 93.288417°W / 44.9804333; -93.288417 (Northwestern Knitting Company Factory)
Minneapolis Manufacturer of "itchless" woolen underwear, plated with silk and cotton; became the leading national manufacturer of underwear in 1912[20]
96 NRHP Ogden Apartment Hotel   January 13, 1992 66-68 S. 12th St.
44°58′22.11″N 93°16′37.99″W / 44.9728083°N 93.2772194°W / 44.9728083; -93.2772194 (Ogden Apartment Hotel)
Minneapolis Unusual housing type for middle-class residents during the early 20th century: apartments with a common restaurant instead of kitchens[21]
97 NRHP Floyd B. Olson House   December 31, 1974 1914 W. 49th St.
44°54′52.19″N 93°18′14.12″W / 44.9144972°N 93.3039222°W / 44.9144972; -93.3039222 (Olson, Floyd B., House)
Minneapolis Home of Minnesota governor Floyd B. Olson, a leader in the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party and a crusader for social justice[22]
98 NRHP Dr. Oscar Owre House   March 8, 1984 2625 Newton Ave., S.
44°57′28.38″N 93°18′19.96″W / 44.9578833°N 93.3055444°W / 44.9578833; -93.3055444 (Owre, Dr. Oscar, House)
Minneapolis Purcell & Elmslie-designed Prairie School house overlooking Lake of the Isles[23]
100 NHL Peavey-Haglin Experimental Concrete Grain Elevator   December 19, 1978 Junction of Minnesota Highways 7 and 100
44°56′34.83″N 93°20′39.31″W / 44.9430083°N 93.3442528°W / 44.9430083; -93.3442528 (Peavey-Haglin Experimental Concrete Grain Elevator)
St. Louis Park First circular-shaped reinforced concrete grain elevator in the United States and possibly in the world[24]; listed as a National Historic Landmark in 1981[14]
101 NRHP Pence Automobile Company Building   December 27, 2007 800 Hennepin Ave.
44°58′38″N 93°16′35″W / 44.97722°N 93.27639°W / 44.97722; -93.27639 (Pence Automobile Company Building)
Minneapolis Office building, with terra cotta ornamentation inspired by Louis Sullivan's work, of an early 20th century automobile dealer and banker[25]
102 NRHP Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity House   September 15, 2005 1129 University Ave., SE.
44°58′51.91″N 93°14′21.15″W / 44.9810861°N 93.2392083°W / 44.9810861; -93.2392083 (Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity House)
Minneapolis Fraternity house designed by Viennese architect Carl B. Stravs, inspired by the Vienna Secession; unusual design at a time when most houses were built in period revival styles[26]
103 NHL Pillsbury A Mill   November 13, 1966 301 Main St., SE.
44°59′2.18″N 93°15′9.59″W / 44.9839389°N 93.2526639°W / 44.9839389; -93.2526639 (Pillsbury A Mill)
Minneapolis Built in 1881 and was the largest flour mill in the world for 40 years[27];listed as a National Historic Landmark in 1966[14]

References

edit
  1. ^ Numbers 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.
  2. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2008-04-24.
  3. ^ Millett p. 77
  4. ^ Kennedy, Roger G. (2006). Historic Homes of Minnesota. St. Paul, Minnesota: Minnesota Historical Society. p. 20. ISBN 0-87351-557-9.
  5. ^ Millett p. 38
  6. ^ "About Town: Official Magazine of the City of Edina" (PDF). City of Edina, Minnesota. Spring 2003. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  7. ^ Millett p. 188
  8. ^ "Riley Lucas Bartholomew House". Richfield Historical Society. Retrieved 2007-10-15.
  9. ^ Millett pp. 86-87
  10. ^ Millett pp. 194-195
  11. ^ "Bennett Lumber Site Environmental Assessment Worksheet" (PDF). City of Minneapolis. 2006. Retrieved 2006-07-06.
  12. ^ "St. Louis Park Historical Society - History". Retrieved 2008-08-12.
  13. ^ Millett pp. 159-160
  14. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference nhl was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  15. ^ "North Loop Warehouse District". Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission. April 2007. Retrieved 2008-09-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  16. ^ Millett p. 29
  17. ^ Nord pp. 97-98
  18. ^ Millett p. 169
  19. ^ Nord p. 98
  20. ^ "Northwestern Knitting Company/Munsingwear". Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission. February 2007. Retrieved 2008-03-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  21. ^ "Ogden Apartment Hotel". Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission. February 2007. Retrieved 2008-03-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  22. ^ "Floyd B. Olson House". Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission. February 2007. Retrieved 2008-03-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  23. ^ Millett p. 281
  24. ^ James Shiere (May 23, 1981), "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Peavey-Haglin Experimental Concrete Grain Elevator" (PDF). (520 KB), National Park Service {{citation}}: External link in |title= (help); templatestyles stripmarker in |title= at position 1 (help) and "Accompanying images" (PDF). (356 KB)
  25. ^ Lileks, James. "Pence Building". Retrieved 2008-09-25.
  26. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form: Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity House" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-09-25.
  27. ^ Stephen Lissandrello (August 7, 1975), "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Pillsbury "A" Mill" (PDF). (340 KB), National Park Service {{citation}}: External link in |title= (help); templatestyles stripmarker in |title= at position 1 (help) and "Accompanying 5 images, including photos from early 1900s to 1975" (PDF). (830 KB)