National Register of Historic Places listings in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
This list comprises buildings, sites, structures, districts, and objects in Milwaukee County, which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. There are 259 NRHP sites listed in Milwaukee County, including 188 in the City of Milwaukee included in the National Register of Historic Places listings in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and 71 outside of the city, listed below. Seven previously listed sites (outside of Milwaukee) have been removed.
- This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted October 11, 2018.[1]
Current listings
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Albert and Edith Adelman House | August 26, 2005 (#05000951) |
7111 N. Barnett Ln. 43°08′45″N 87°53′57″W / 43.145833°N 87.899167°W |
Fox Point | Budget-conscious home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1948. Adelman founded a large dry-cleaning business. | |
2 | Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church | December 19, 1974 (#74000100) |
9400 W. Congress St. 43°05′51″N 88°01′48″W / 43.0975°N 88.03°W |
Wauwatosa | Greek Orthodox church in which Frank Lloyd Wright reinterpreted traditional Byzantine architectural forms. Designed in 1956, one of Wright's last. | |
3 | APPOMATTOX (shipwreck) | January 20, 2005 (#04001547) |
Off Atwater Beach Boundary increase (listed September 15, 2011): 150 yards. off Atwater Beach 43°05′37″N 87°51′58″W / 43.093611°N 87.866111°W |
Shorewood | 330-foot wooden steam freighter, built in 1896 by James Davidson. One of the largest wooden ships ever built, she mostly carried iron ore east on the Great Lakes and returned with coal. Ran aground in a fog bank in November 1905. | |
4 | Rufus Arndt House | September 12, 1985 (#85002016) |
4524 N. Cramer St. 43°05′55″N 87°53′09″W / 43.098611°N 87.885833°W |
Whitefish Bay | Cotswold Cottage-styled house built in 1925 according to one of Ernest Flagg's designs by Arnold F. Meyer & Co. | |
5 | Barfield-Staples House | September 12, 1985 (#85002017) |
5461-5463 Danbury Rd. 43°06′57″N 87°54′04″W / 43.115833°N 87.901111°W |
Whitefish Bay | Limestone-clad, Tudor Revival-styled duplex built in 1924 by Arnold F. Meyer & Co. using one of Ernest Flagg's designs.[4][5] | |
6 | Thomas Bossert House | September 12, 1985 (#85002018) |
2614 E. Menlo Blvd. 43°05′03″N 87°52′36″W / 43.084167°N 87.876667°W |
Shorewood | Limestone-clad, 2-story French Provincial-styled home with a square tower at each corner, built in 1925 by Arnold F. Meyer & Co. using Ernest Flagg's system.[6][7] | |
7 | Brown Deer School | December 10, 1993 (#93001427) |
4800 W. Green Brook Dr. 43°10′56″N 87°58′18″W / 43.182222°N 87.971667°W |
Brown Deer | Simple, frame, rural one-room schoolhouse, built in 1884 by Friedrich Gierach and expanded in 1900. Served students until 1922, then housed St. Paul's Lutheran, then Witt Sheetmetal. Now restored as a school museum.[8][9] | |
8 | Church Street Historic District | August 10, 1989 (#89001099) |
1448-1630 Church St. and 7758 W. Menomonee River Pkwy. 43°03′05″N 88°00′36″W / 43.051389°N 88.01°W |
Wauwatosa | One-block neighborhood of historic homes and one church on Wauwatosa's first residential street, ranging from the 1857 Carpenter Gothic-style Hart house to the 1920 Prairie Style Nase house. | |
9 | Benjamin Church House | February 23, 1972 (#72000059) |
Parkway Dr., Eastabrook Park 43°05′29″N 87°53′53″W / 43.091389°N 87.898056°W |
Shorewood | Modest Temple-style Greek Revival home built by carpenter Benjamin Church in 1843-44 for his own family. Believed to be the oldest surviving house in Milwaukee. | |
10 | Erwin Cords House | September 12, 1985 (#85002019) |
1913 E. Olive St. 43°05′36″N 87°53′09″W / 43.093333°N 87.885833°W |
Shorewood | Limestone-clad, 1.5-story home built in 1925 by Arnold F. Meyer & Co. using Ernest Flagg's system, similar to a design in Flagg's book, and similar to McCall's Magazine's 1924 demonstration home.[10] | |
11 | Cudahy Chicago and North Western Railway Depot | September 18, 2013 (#13000750) |
4647 South Kinnickinnic Avenue 42°57′36″N 87°51′52″W / 42.9600°N 87.8645°W |
Cudahy | Queen Anne-styled station built in 1893 at Patrick Cudahy's urging to serve the community growing around his new meat-packing plant. | |
12 | Jeremiah Curtin House | November 7, 1972 (#72000060) |
8685 W. Grange Ave. 42°56′40″N 88°01′19″W / 42.944444°N 88.021944°W |
Greendale | Boyhood home of Jeremiah Curtin, linguist and folklorist. Built about 1846, with 18-inch walls of local limestone. | |
13 | Lowell Damon House | February 23, 1972 (#72000061) |
2107 N. Wauwatosa Ave. 43°03′22″N 88°00′28″W / 43.056111°N 88.007778°W |
Wauwatosa | Wauwatosa's oldest residence, built 1844-46 by immigrants from New Hampshire who mixed Colonial and Greek Revival styles in a way unusual for Wisconsin. | |
14 | H. R. Davis House | September 12, 1985 (#85002020) |
6839 Cedar St. 43°02′26″N 87°59′48″W / 43.040556°N 87.996667°W |
Wauwatosa | Another Flagg-system home built by Meyer & Co., this one 1.5 stories and clad in Tennessee quartzite, with a steep Tudor Revival roofline, ridge dormers, and round-capped chimneys. Built 1924.[11][12] | |
15 | Elderwood | December 4, 1980 (#80000165) |
6789 N. Elm Tree Rd. 43°08′24″N 87°55′10″W / 43.14°N 87.919444°W |
Glendale | 2-story concrete cottage with red tile jerkinhead roof designed by Eugene Liebert for Milwaukee decorator Charles Solomon in 1909. Later the summer home of Gustav Trostel of the Trostel Tannery, who developed the surrounding land as a botanical garden.[13][14] | |
16 | EMBA Shipwreck (Self-Unloading Barge) | July 3, 2013 (#13000468) |
5 miles East of North Point in Lake Michigan 43°03′54″N 87°44′59″W / 43.065093°N 87.749585°W |
Lake Michigan | 181-foot schooner-barge built in 1890 by Frank Wheeler Company of West Bay City. Hauled bulk coal, grain and lumber around Lake Michigan as a tow-barge. Converted to a self-unloader in 1923 to haul coal, and renamed for Employes' Mutual Benefit Association. Scuttled in 1933, considered obsolete.[15][16] | |
17 | J. H. Fiebing House | September 12, 1985 (#85002021) |
7707 Stickney 43°03′31″N 88°00′37″W / 43.058611°N 88.010278°W |
Wauwatosa | Another Flagg-system home built by Meyer & Co.. This one too is 1.5 stories and clad in Tennessee quartzite, with a steep Tudor Revival roofline, ridge dormers, and round-capped chimneys. Built in 1925 for Fiebing, the head of a chemical company and Arnold Meyer's father-in-law.[17][18] | |
18 | George Gabel House | September 12, 1985 (#85002023) |
4600 N. Cramer St. 43°05′59″N 87°53′10″W / 43.099722°N 87.886111°W |
Whitefish Bay | Another Flagg-system home built in 1925 by Meyer & Co. - this one 1.5 stories and clad in limestone, with a U-shaped footprint, ridge dormers, round-capped chimneys, and an attached garage.[19][20] | |
19 | Warren B. George House | September 12, 1985 (#85002024) |
7105 Grand Pkwy. 43°02′15″N 88°00′03″W / 43.0375°N 88.000833°W |
Wauwatosa | Another Flagg-system home built in 1925 by Meyer & Co. - this one 1.5 stories and clad in limestone, with a square corner tower, a wood-shake roof, and round-capped chimneys.[21][22] | |
20 | Grace A. Channon (canaller) Shipwreck | December 4, 2017 (#100001874) |
12.75 miles (20.52 km) NE of the Bender Park boat launch in L. Michigan Coordinates missing |
Oak Creek | Largely intact 141-foot wooden 3-masted schooner designed to fit maximum cargo through the Welland Canal, built in 1873 by Ellenwood & Co. of East Saginaw, and named for the daughter of an owner. Mostly hauled grain east and coal west on the Great Lakes. In August 1877, she was struck by the propeller-driven steam barge Favorite and quickly sank.[23][24][25] | |
21 | Paul S. Grant House | September 12, 1985 (#85002025) |
984 E. Circle Dr. 43°06′55″N 87°53′55″W / 43.115278°N 87.898611°W |
Whitefish Bay | Another Flagg-system home built in 1925 by Meyer & Co. - this one 1.5 stories Cotswold Cottage style, and clad in limestone, with a stone fireplace, square-topped chimneys, and an attached garage.[26][27] | |
22 | Greendale Historic District | July 29, 2005 (#05000763) |
Roughly bounded by W. Grange Ave. and Catalpa St. 42°56′29″N 87°59′45″W / 42.941389°N 87.995833°W |
Greendale | Planned 'greenbelt town' outside Milwaukee, designed by the U.S. government and built 1936-38 with help from several New Deal agencies, aiming to create jobs and affordable housing. | |
23 | Greenfield School | March 29, 2006 (#06000207) |
8405 W. National Ave. 43°00′41″N 88°01′03″W / 43.011389°N 88.0175°W |
West Allis | Cream brick, Romanesque Revival-styled two-room school, built in 1887. Now houses the West Allis Historical Museum. | |
24 | Harrison Hardie House | September 12, 1985 (#85002026) |
4540 N. Cramer St. 43°05′58″N 87°53′10″W / 43.099444°N 87.886111°W |
Whitefish Bay | Another Flagg-system home built in 1925 by Meyer & Co. - this one 2 stories and clad in limestone, with a half-basement and an attached garage with an unusual arched-stone doorway.[28][29] | |
25 | Thomas B. Hart House | October 10, 1985 (#85003135) |
1609 Church St. 43°03′07″N 88°00′37″W / 43.051944°N 88.010278°W |
Wauwatosa | Gothic Revival cottage with elaborate bargeboards, probably built in the 1840s, possibly for blacksmith Perley J. Shumway. Later home to prominent businessman Thomas B. Hart and Dr. Stanley J. Seeger. | |
26 | Horace W. Hatch House | September 12, 1985 (#85002027) |
739 E. Beaumont 43°07′09″N 87°54′01″W / 43.119167°N 87.900278°W |
Whitefish Bay | Another Flagg-system home built in 1925 by Meyer & Co. - this one 1.5 stories, Tudor Revival style, and clad in limestone, with an octagonal tower that contains a stairway to the second floor.[30][31] | |
27 | Seneca W. & Bertha Hatch House | September 12, 1985 (#85002028) |
3821 N. Prospect Ave. 43°05′12″N 87°52′48″W / 43.086667°N 87.88°W |
Shorewood | ||
28 | Henni Hall | July 24, 1974 (#74000103) |
3257 S. Lake Dr. 42°58′56″N 87°52′19″W / 42.982222°N 87.871944°W |
St. Francis | 1855 Roman Catholic seminary | |
29 | Honey Creek Parkway | July 8, 2010 (#10000458) |
Located between STH 181 at I-94 and N. 72nd St. 43°01′58″N 88°00′52″W / 43.032778°N 88.014444°W |
Wauwatosa | ||
30 | Willis Hopkins House | September 12, 1985 (#85002030) |
325 Glenview 43°02′03″N 88°01′01″W / 43.034167°N 88.016944°W |
Wauwatosa | ||
31 | W. Ben Hunt Cabin | February 13, 2008 (#08000028) |
5885 S. 116th St. 42°56′15″N 88°03′33″W / 42.9375°N 88.059167°W |
Hales Corners | 1925 Rustic style handmade cabin housing Native American crafts | |
32 | Halbert D. Jenkins House | September 12, 1985 (#85002031) |
1028 E. Lexington Blvd. 43°06′49″N 87°53′53″W / 43.113611°N 87.898056°W |
Whitefish Bay | ||
33 | Juneau Highlands Residential Historic District | March 21, 2011 (#11000116) |
6600-6734 W. Grant St., 2109-2180 S. Livingston Terrace, 6608-6656 W. Revere Pl., and 6627-29 W. Revere Pl. 43°00′20″N 87°59′44″W / 43.005556°N 87.995556°W |
West Allis | ||
34 | Kegel's Inn | October 12, 2010 (#10000823) |
5901-5905 W. National Ave. 43°01′04″N 87°59′10″W / 43.017778°N 87.986111°W |
West Allis | ||
35 | Kneeland-Walker House | January 19, 1989 (#88003212) |
7406 Hillcrest Dr. 43°03′19″N 88°00′15″W / 43.055278°N 88.004167°W |
Wauwatosa | 1889 Queen Anne-style home of early Wauwatosa politician, Norman Kneeland. | |
36 | Kopperud Park Residential Historic District | September 11, 2017 (#100001598) |
837-871 S. 76th (odd only), 824-862 S. 77th (even only) & 7624 W. Walker Sts. 43°01′18″N 88°00′29″W / 43.021734°N 88.00795°W |
West Allis | ||
37 | Lawson Airplane Company-Continental Faience and Tile Company | September 3, 2001 (#01000964) |
909 Menomonee Ave. 42°54′19″N 87°51′36″W / 42.905278°N 87.86°W |
South Milwaukee | Designer of the first commercial passenger airplanes in the U.S. | |
38 | LUMBERMAN shipwreck (schooner) | January 14, 2009 (#08001331) |
10 miles (16 km) north of Wind Point[32] 42°52′10″N 87°45′25″W / 42.869533°N 87.757°W |
Oak Creek | 126-foot schooner, built in 1862, capsized in 1893 | |
39 | John F. McEwens House | September 12, 1985 (#85002032) |
829 E. Lake Forest 43°07′00″N 87°54′00″W / 43.116667°N 87.9°W |
Whitefish Bay | ||
40 | Alexander Herschel and Pauline G. McMicken House | October 8, 2010 (#10000816) |
1508 S. 80th St. 43°00′53″N 88°00′43″W / 43.014722°N 88.011944°W |
West Allis | ||
41 | Henry A. Meyer House | September 12, 1985 (#85002033) |
3559 N. Summit Ave. 43°05′01″N 87°52′30″W / 43.083611°N 87.875°W |
Shorewood | ||
42 | Starke Meyer House | September 12, 1985 (#85002034) |
7896 N. Club Circle 43°09′38″N 87°53′46″W / 43.160556°N 87.896111°W |
Fox Point | ||
43 | Milwaukee County Home for Dependent Children-Administriation Building | January 7, 1999 (#98001587) |
9508 Watertown Plank Rd. 43°02′46″N 88°01′53″W / 43.046111°N 88.031389°W |
Wauwatosa | ||
44 | Milwaukee County School of Agriculture and Domestic Economy Historic District | March 19, 1998 (#98000258) |
9722 Watertown Plank Rd. 43°03′00″N 88°02′09″W / 43.05°N 88.035833°W |
Wauwatosa | Early technical school, opened 1912. Campus designed by Alexander C. Eschweiler. | |
45 | MILWAUKEE (steam screw) Shipwreck | July 27, 2015 (#15000479) |
3 mi. E. of Fox Point 43°08′11″N 87°49′56″W / 43.136317°N 87.832283°W |
Fox Point | A steel hulled train ferry that sank in 1929 taking her whole crew with her. | |
46 | George E. Morgan House | September 12, 1985 (#85002035) |
4448 N. Maryland Ave. 43°05′49″N 87°52′55″W / 43.096944°N 87.881944°W |
Shorewood | ||
47 | Muirdale Tuberculosis Sanatorium | August 31, 2018 (#100002857) |
10437 & 10457 W. Innovation Dr. 43°02′36″N 88°02′35″W / 43.0434°N 88.043°W |
Wauwatosa | ||
48 | Mary L. Nohl Art Environment | October 3, 2005 (#05001109) |
7328 N. Beach Rd. 43°09′01″N 87°53′31″W / 43.150278°N 87.891944°W |
Fox Point | Embellished home and sculpture garden of folk artist | |
49 | Pearl C. Norton House | September 12, 1985 (#85002036) |
2021 Church St. 43°03′25″N 88°00′36″W / 43.056944°N 88.01°W |
Wauwatosa | ||
50 | Oak Creek Parkway | June 27, 2011 (#11000416) |
Between Grant Park at Hawthorne Ave. & Rawson Ave. 42°54′48″N 87°51′05″W / 42.913333°N 87.851389°W |
South Milwaukee | Milwaukee County Parkway System MPS | |
51 | Painesville Chapel | November 7, 1977 (#77000039) |
2740 W. Ryan Rd. 42°52′23″N 87°57′08″W / 42.873056°N 87.952222°W |
Franklin | 1852 Greek Revival-styled meeting hall of a group of German immigrant Freethinker farmers. | |
52 | Range Line Road Bridge | July 7, 2015 (#15000405) |
Range Line Rd. over Milwaukee R. 43°10′14″N 87°56′41″W / 43.170637°N 87.944739°W |
River Hills | ||
53 | Root River Parkway | January 29, 2013 (#12001253) |
Between W. Layton Ave. & S. 76th St. 42°56′36″N 88°00′49″W / 42.943355°N 88.013635°W |
Greendale | ||
54 | Shorewood Village Hall | September 7, 1984 (#84003739) |
3930 N. Murray Ave. 43°05′18″N 87°53′05″W / 43.088333°N 87.884722°W |
Shorewood | 1908 school, became village hall in 1915 | |
55 | South Milwaukee Passenger Station | August 3, 1978 (#78000119) |
Milwaukee Ave. 42°54′35″N 87°51′47″W / 42.909722°N 87.863056°W |
South Milwaukee | 1893 Romanesque brick railway station. | |
56 | South Milwaukee Post Office | October 24, 2000 (#00001251) |
2210 Tenth Ave. 42°54′33″N 87°51′40″W / 42.909167°N 87.861111°W |
South Milwaukee | 1931 Classical revival post office | |
57 | Frederick Sperling House | September 12, 1985 (#85002037) |
1016 E. Lexington Blvd. 43°06′49″N 87°53′54″W / 43.113611°N 87.898333°W |
Whitefish Bay | ||
58 | Sunnyhill Home | September 25, 1997 (#97001268) |
8000 W. Milwaukee Ave. 43°03′11″N 88°00′46″W / 43.053056°N 88.012778°W |
Wauwatosa | Home of physician and amateur geologist, Dr. Fisk Holbrook Day | |
59 | Town of Milwaukee Town Hall | October 9, 1986 (#86002852) |
5909 N. Milwaukee River Pkwy. 43°07′33″N 87°55′48″W / 43.125833°N 87.93°W |
Glendale | Town Hall from 1872 to 1962 | |
60 | Trimborn Farm | July 31, 1980 (#80000170) |
8801 W. Grange Ave. 42°56′39″N 88°01′26″W / 42.944167°N 88.023889°W |
Greendale | Lime kilns and farm buildings dating to the 1840s through the 1860s | |
61 | Herman Uihlein House | December 22, 1983 (#83004313) |
5270 N. Lake Dr. 43°06′44″N 87°53′37″W / 43.112222°N 87.893611°W |
Whitefish Bay | Classic Beaux Arts-style mansion overlooking Lake Michigan, built for the head of Lavine Gear. | |
62 | Fred W. Ullius Jr. House | January 7, 1987 (#86003658) |
5775 N. Santa Monica Blvd. 43°07′20″N 87°54′25″W / 43.122222°N 87.906944°W |
Whitefish Bay | ||
63 | William Van Altena House | September 12, 1985 (#85002038) |
1916 E. Glendale 43°06′00″N 87°53′07″W / 43.1°N 87.885278°W |
Whitefish Bay | ||
64 | G. B. Van Devan House | September 12, 1985 (#85002039) |
4601 N. Murray Ave. 43°05′59″N 87°53′06″W / 43.099722°N 87.885°W |
Whitefish Bay | ||
65 | Wadham's Gas Station | August 11, 2004 (#04000849) |
1647 S. 76th St. 43°00′43″N 88°00′27″W / 43.011944°N 88.0075°W |
West Allis | One of Wadham's signature Japanese pagoda-style gas stations, designed by Alexander Eschweiler | |
66 | Washington Highlands Historic District | December 18, 1989 (#89002121) |
Bounded by N. 68th St., W. Lloyd St., N. 60th St., and Milwaukee Ave. 43°03′14″N 87°59′33″W / 43.053889°N 87.9925°W |
Wauwatosa | 1910's planned subdivision | |
67 | Wauwatosa Arcade Building | March 21, 1997 (#97000270) |
7210-26 W. North Ave. 43°03′39″N 88°00′08″W / 43.060833°N 88.002222°W |
Wauwatosa | ||
68 | Wauwatosa Avenue Residential Historic District | June 20, 2012 (#12000354) |
1809-1845 (odd only) & 1907 to 2242 Wauwatosa, & 7606 & 7624 Stickney Aves. 43°03′31″N 88°00′27″W / 43.058478°N 88.007491°W |
Wauwatosa | ||
69 | Wauwatosa Woman's Club Clubhouse | July 1, 1998 (#98000828) |
1626 Wauwatosa Ave. 43°03′08″N 88°00′24″W / 43.052222°N 88.006667°W |
Wauwatosa | 1924 social center for women in Wauwatosa | |
70 | West Allis Post Office | February 23, 2001 (#01000174) |
7440 W. Greenfield Ave. 43°01′01″N 88°00′19″W / 43.016944°N 88.005278°W |
West Allis | ||
71 | Frank J. Williams House | September 12, 1985 (#85002040) |
912 E. Lexington Blvd. 43°06′49″N 87°53′59″W / 43.113611°N 87.899722°W |
Whitefish Bay |
Former listings
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | City or town | Summary |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Clark Row House | January 16, 1986 (#86000102) | April 27, 1989 | 2103-2109 W. Kilbourn Ave. |
Milwaukee | ||
2 | Milwaukee County Home for Dependent Children School | December 17, 1998 (#98001535) | September 6, 2002 | 9658 Watertown Plank Road |
Wauwatosa | ||
3 | Elizabeth Plankinton House | April 1, 1976 (#76002287) | Unknown | 1492 W. Wisconsin Ave. |
Milwaukee | ||
4 | Old Coast Guard Station | August 7, 1989 (#89001047) | July 1, 2009 | 1600 N. Lincoln Memorial Drive |
Milwaukee | ||
5 | Old St. Peter's Church | July 25, 1974 (#74002338) | Unknown | 3257 S. Lake Dr. |
St. Francis | Is now located at Old World Wisconsin. | |
6 | Whitefish Bay National Guard Armory | June 6, 2002 (#02000650) | April 6, 2011 | 1225 E. Henry Clay St. 43°06′37″N 87°53′43″W / 43.1103°N 87.8953°W |
Whitefish Bay | Fortress-like 1929 National Guard training site (demolished in 2004). | |
7 | William G. Spence House | September 13, 1991 (#91001393) | July 3, 1996 | 1741 N Farwell Ave. |
Milwaukee |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. |
References
- ↑ "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on October 11, 2018.
- 1 2 Numbers represent an 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.
- ↑ "Allen H. Barfield Duplex". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-19.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: Allen H. Barfield/Fred S. Staples home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-19. With one photo.
- ↑ "Thomas Bossert House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-19.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: Thomas Bossert home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-19. With two photos.
- ↑ "Brown Deer School". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-19.
- ↑ Leslie J. Vollmert (1993-01-20). "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Brown Deer School". National Park Service. Retrieved 2018-09-19. With 13 photos.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: Erwin Cords home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-22. With one photo.
- ↑ "H.R. Davis House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-22.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: H.R. Davis home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-22. With one photo.
- ↑ "Elderwood". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-28.
- ↑ Tom Jenkins; Ginny Jenkins; Diane H. Filipowicz (November 1979). "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Elderwood". National Park Service. Retrieved 2018-09-29. With three photos.
- ↑ "E.M.B.A. (Employees' Mutual Benefit Association) (1890)". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant, Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
- ↑ Tamara Thomsen; Keith Meverden (2012-11-26). "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: EMBA Shipwreck (Self-Unloading Barge)" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
- ↑ "J.H. Fiebing House (rental)". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: J.H. Fiebing home (rental property)". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-29. With two photos.
- ↑ "George Gabel House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: George Gabel home (rental property)". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-29. With one photo.
- ↑ "Warren B. and Anna George House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: Warren B. George home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-29. With one photo.
- ↑ "Grace A. Channon Shipwreck (Canaller)". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-10-05.
- ↑ "Grace A. Channon (1873)". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant, Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-10-05.
- ↑ Caitlin Zant; Tamara Thomsen (2016-11-01). "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Grace A. Channon Shipwreck (Canaller)" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2018-10-05.
- ↑ "Paul S. & Margaret E. Grant House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: Paul S. Grant home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-09-29. With one photo.
- ↑ "Harrison C. & Leah S. Hardie House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-10-05.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-27). "Intensive Survey Form: Harrison Hardie home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-10-05. With one photo.
- ↑ "Horace W. & Marion Hatch House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
- ↑ Virginia A. Palmer (1985-05-20). "Intensive Survey Form: Horace W. Hatch home". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2018-10-09. With one photo.
- ↑ Location given in Kohl, Cris (2001). The Great Lakes Diving Guide. West Chicago, Ill.: Seawolf Communications, Inc. NRIS lists site as "address restricted".
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