National Register of Historic Places listings in Madison, Wisconsin
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Madison, Wisconsin.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Madison, Wisconsin, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in an online map.[1]
There are 260 properties and districts listed on the National Register in Dane County, including 11 National Historic Landmarks. The city of Madison is the location of 155 of these properties and districts, including 8 of the National Historic Landmarks; they are listed here, while the remaining properties and districts are listed separately.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 1, 2024.[2]
Current listings
edit[3] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[4] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Agricultural Chemistry Building | June 19, 1985 (#85001356) |
420 Henry Mall, University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′26″N 89°24′38″W / 43.073889°N 89.410556°W | Madison | Georgian revival-style building designed by Paul Cret and Warren Laird, built in 1912, where Elmer McCollum discovered vitamins A and B, Harry Steenbock found that vitamin D could be concentrated by irradiating food, Conrad Elvehjem isolated niacin, and Karl Link isolated the anticoagulant dicoumarol. | |
2 | Agricultural Dean's House | September 20, 1984 (#84003627) |
10 Babcock Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′37″N 89°24′46″W / 43.076944°N 89.412778°W | Madison | Queen Anne-style house built for William Arnon Henry, the first dean of the UW's College of Agriculture, designed by Conover and Porter and built in 1896. Now surrounded by Allen Centennial Gardens. | |
3 | Agricultural Engineering Building | June 27, 1985 (#85001404) |
460 Henry Mall, University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′29″N 89°24′38″W / 43.074803°N 89.410606°W | Madison | Designed by Arthur Peabody in Georgian revival style and built 1905 to 1907, the building hosted Edward Jones' investigations of soil erosion, Floyd Duffee's exploration of rural electrification, and Aldo Leopold's new Department of Wildlife Management. | |
4 | Agricultural Heating Station | March 14, 1985 (#85000570) |
1535 Observatory Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′34″N 89°24′42″W / 43.076111°N 89.411667°W | Madison | Designed by John T.W. Jennings in exuberant (for a heating plant) Richardsonian Romanesque style, and built in 1901. | |
5 | Agriculture Hall | March 14, 1985 (#85000571) |
1450 Linden Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′32″N 89°24′29″W / 43.075556°N 89.408056°W | Madison | Dignified Beaux Arts-style building with an octagonal 700-seat auditorium behind, designed by John T.W. Jennings and built in 1903. | |
6 | American Exchange Bank | August 18, 1980 (#80000115) |
1 N. Pinckney St. 43°04′33″N 89°22′59″W / 43.075833°N 89.383056°W | Madison | 3-story sandstone business block designed by Stephen Shipman in Italian Renaissance Revival style and built in 1871 on the site where the third session of the Wisconsin Territorial legislature met in 1838. | |
7 | American Tobacco Company Warehouses Complex | June 26, 2003 (#03000580) |
651 W. Doty St. 43°03′57″N 89°23′30″W / 43.065833°N 89.391667°W | Madison | Pair of brick warehouses built 1899-1901 for storing and processing leaf tobacco, when it was an important crop around Madison. Claude and Starck designed the second building. | |
8 | Badger State Shoe Company | April 11, 1989 (#89000232) |
123 N. Blount St. 43°04′52″N 89°22′42″W / 43.081111°N 89.378333°W | Madison | 6-story shoe factory just northeast of the capitol, designed by Ferdinand Kronenberg utilitarian with neo-Classical styling, and built in 1910. | |
9 | Bascom Hill Historic District | September 12, 1974 (#74000065) |
Bounded by Observatory Dr., University Ave., and N. Park, Langdon, and State Sts., UW campus 43°04′31″N 89°24′06″W / 43.075278°N 89.401667°W | Madison | Historic bits on the east side of the UW campus, including the UW's first building 1851 North Hall, 1857 Bascom Hall, the 1894 Red Gym, and the 1928 Memorial Union. | |
10 | Robert M. Bashford House | March 14, 1973 (#73000075) |
423 N. Pinckney St. 43°04′44″N 89°23′13″W / 43.078889°N 89.386944°W | Madison | Sandstone-clad Italian Villa style home built around 1858, in which Governor Edward Salomon lived, and later Robert McKee Bashford who served as mayor of Madison and on the state Supreme Court. | |
11 | Baskerville Apartment Building | October 13, 1988 (#88002006) |
121-129 S. Hamilton St. 43°04′17″N 89°23′05″W / 43.071389°N 89.384722°W | Madison | Neoclassical-styled flatiron-shaped apartments designed by Robert L. Wright and built 1913-14, early in Madison's apartment-building boom from 1910 to 1930. | |
12 | Bellevue Apartment Building | March 13, 1987 (#87000433) |
29 E. Wilson St. 43°04′22″N 89°22′48″W / 43.072778°N 89.38°W | Madison | Upscale apartments designed by Charles E. Marks and built 1913-14, which promised "relief from the servant problem" via modern conveniences like central vacuuming and dumbwaiters connected to a kitchen in the basement. | |
13 | Belmont Hotel | January 18, 1990 (#89002311) |
101 E. Mifflin St. 43°04′35″N 89°23′00″W / 43.076389°N 89.383333°W | Madison | 12-story Beaux-Arts-style hotel built in 1924 on the capitol square, reviving concern that skyscrapers would one day hide the capitol, and leading to legislation that still limits other buildings in the area to 90 feet. | |
14 | Bernard-Hoover Boathouse | July 30, 1981 (#81000036) |
622 E. Gorham St. 43°04′55″N 89°22′55″W / 43.081944°N 89.381944°W | Madison | Built on Lake Mendota in 1915 by William Bernard, this is the best surviving representative of an era of boat-building, rental, and excursion businesses in the city of four lakes. | |
15 | Biederstaedt Grocery | March 25, 1982 (#82000647) |
851-853 Williamson St. 43°04′45″N 89°22′10″W / 43.079167°N 89.369444°W | Madison | Italianate-style corner grocery built in 1874 by Charles Biedersdaedt - the most intact survivor of many such stores that once dotted Madison. | |
16 | Blackhawk Country Club Mound Group (47 DA 131) | August 1, 1979 (#79000068) |
3606 Blackhawk Dr 43°04′47″N 89°27′39″W / 43.079684°N 89.460834°W | Madison | Mounds organized like many around Madison's lakes: 3 bear effigies on the flat near the water, a goose effigy and some linear mounds heading away from the lake, and conical mounds at the top of the hill.[5][6] | |
17 | James B. Bowen House | March 1, 1982 (#82000648) |
302 S. Mills St. 43°03′50″N 89°24′16″W / 43.063889°N 89.404444°W | Madison | Italianate-style farmhouse built by Seth Van Bergen in 1855, clad in local sandstone. Later home of Bowen, Dane County's first homeopathic physician and mayor of Madison. | |
18 | Harold C. Bradley House | February 23, 1972 (#72000047) |
106 N. Prospect Ave. 43°04′11″N 89°25′18″W / 43.0697222°N 89.4216667°W | Madison | Prairie School-styled house designed by Louis Sullivan and George Grant Elmslie, built in 1909 for Professor Bradley and his well-connected wife Josephine. | |
19 | Judge Arthur B. Braley House | November 28, 1980 (#80000116) |
422 N. Henry St. 43°04′33″N 89°23′29″W / 43.075833°N 89.391389°W | Madison | Gothic revival house with Aesthetic details on dormers, built around 1875 for Judge and Philinda Braley. Arthur was the long-serving first judge of Dane County's municipal court, a writer, and mentor to Ella Wheeler Wilcox. | |
20 | Brittingham Park Boathouse | June 30, 1982 (#82000649) |
N. Shore Dr. 43°03′55″N 89°23′18″W / 43.065278°N 89.388333°W | Madison | Built in 1910 as the Madison Parks and Pleasure Drive Association created Madison's first public parks, motivated in part by City Beautiful movement. Designed by John Nolen and Ferry & Clas with Arts and Crafts detailing. Oldest surviving public park building in Madison. | |
21 | Charles E. Brown Indian Mounds | January 5, 1984 (#84003630) |
University of Wisconsin–Madison Arboretum 43°02′48″N 89°25′38″W / 43.046703°N 89.427146°W | Madison | Groups of mounds above springs that flow into Lake Wingra, including linear, conical, one bird effigy and two panther mounds.[7] | |
22 | Burrows Park Effigy Mound and Campsite | December 31, 1974 (#74000066) |
25 Burrows Rd. 43°06′07″N 89°22′02″W / 43.101956°N 89.367283°W | Madison | Straight-winged bird effigy with 128-foot wingspan, built beside Lake Mendota by Late Woodland people between 700 and 1200 A.D. | |
23 | Camp Randall | June 7, 1971 (#71000036) |
Camp Randall Memorial Park, University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′11″N 89°24′34″W / 43.069722°N 89.409444°W | Madison | Civil War training and staging ground where 70,000 of Wisconsin's 91,000 troops mustered. Also briefly a prison for Confederate POWs. | |
24 | Cardinal Hotel | September 2, 1982 (#82000650) |
416 E. Wilson St. 43°04′32″N 89°22′37″W / 43.075556°N 89.376944°W | Madison | 5-story railroad hotel designed by Ferdinand Kronenberg and built ca. 1908. The old hotel became a hub of Madison's gay and Cuban communities after Ricardo Gonzalez took ownership in the 1970s. | |
25 | City Market | November 28, 1978 (#78000085) |
101 N. Blount St. 43°04′52″N 89°22′41″W / 43.081111°N 89.378056°W | Madison | City-owned enclosed farmers' market designed in Prairie Style by Robert Wright and built in 1909. | |
26 | Bascom B. Clarke House | November 28, 1980 (#80000117) |
1150 Spaight St. 43°04′55″N 89°21′46″W / 43.081944°N 89.362778°W | Madison | 1899 Queen Anne-style house with Arts and Crafts elements - an early, traditional design by Claude and Starck. Clarke was a businessman, writer, and publisher of American Thresherman. | |
27 | William Collins House | December 3, 1974 (#74000067) |
704 E. Gorham St. 43°04′57″N 89°22′50″W / 43.0825°N 89.380556°W | Madison | A later Prairie style design of Claude and Starck, built ca. 1911. Collins and his brother were partners in a lumber processing and wholesaling business. | |
28 | John R. Commons House | March 14, 1985 (#85000572) |
1645 Norman Way 43°04′56″N 89°28′44″W / 43.082222°N 89.478889°W | Madison | 1913 home of progressive and influential UW economist John R. Commons - a bungalow designed by Cora Tuttle, the first woman known to practice architecture in Wisconsin. | |
29 | Coolidge Street-Myrtle Street Historic District | March 30, 2020 (#100005149) |
2301-2826 Myrtle St., 2302-2826 Coolidge St. (Even), 912-1001 Kedzie St., 902-1002 North St. 43°06′34″N 89°20′58″W / 43.1095°N 89.3494°W | Madison | Neighborhood of modest prefab 1.5-story houses developed by John W. Tilton. The first forty were built 1942-1943, working within wartime rationing of materials to house families employed in defense work. The second batch of 119 were built 1946-1948 for returning veterans.[8] | |
30 | Curtis-Kittleson House | April 10, 1980 (#80000118) |
1102 Spaight St. 43°04′51″N 89°21′51″W / 43.080833°N 89.364167°W | Madison | Queen Anne style mansion designed by Gordon and Paunack and built in 1901 for William Curtis whose family fortune grew on horse collar pads. Later home of Isaac Kittleson, who served three terms as mayor. | |
31 | Judson C. Cutter House | July 12, 1978 (#78000086) |
1030 Jenifer St. 43°04′50″N 89°21′58″W / 43.080556°N 89.366111°W | Madison | Built in 1882, this is considered Madison's best Stick/Eastlake style house. | |
32 | Nathaniel W. Dean House | November 7, 1980 (#80000119) |
4718 Monona Dr. 43°04′06″N 89°19′32″W / 43.068333°N 89.325556°W | Madison | Simple brick Italianate-style farmhouse built in 1856 in then-rural Blooming Grove for businessman, realtor and state assemblyman Dean. | |
33 | Christian Dick Block | December 19, 2002 (#02001572) |
106 E. Doty St. 43°04′28″N 89°22′50″W / 43.074500°N 89.380609°W | Madison | Cream brick wedge-shaped Richardsonian Romanesque building designed by Conover & Porter and built in 1889 for liquor wholesaler Christian Dick. | |
34 | Dowling Apartment Building | October 7, 2002 (#02001127) |
445-447 W. Wilson St. 43°04′05″N 89°23′14″W / 43.068056°N 89.387222°W | Madison | 1922, early 20th-century apartment house design - home and business of tireless public servant Margaret Dowling. | |
35 | East Dayton Street Historic District | December 27, 1988 (#88000217) |
649-53 E. Dayton St. and 114 N. Blount St. 43°04′51″N 89°22′43″W / 43.080833°N 89.378611°W | Madison | Three buildings from the early 1900s that remain from Madison's first Black neighborhood. | |
36 | East Wilson Street Historic District | April 3, 1986 (#86000618) |
402-524 E. Wilson and 133 S. Blair Sts. 43°04′36″N 89°22′34″W / 43.076667°N 89.376111°W | Madison | Remnants of a neighborhood of depots, railroad hotels, saloons, and other businesses that grew around Madison's east-side railroad station. | |
37 | Edgewood College Mound Group Archeological District | June 7, 1991 (#91000669) |
Address Restricted | Madison | 1 bird effigy, 2 linear mounds, about 8 conicals, and possibly part of a bear effigy, all paralleling the shore of Lake Wingra.[9] | |
38 | Ernest Eggiman House | June 17, 1994 (#94000599) |
857 S. Shore Dr. 43°03′25″N 89°23′52″W / 43.056944°N 89.397778°W | Madison | Prefabricated, modular house built in 1936 - an attempt to provide fast, inexpensive housing during the Great Depression. This product was marketed as the Motohome and it's the only one in Wisconsin. | |
39 | Edward C. Elliott House | August 11, 1978 (#78000087) |
137 N. Prospect Ave. 43°04′15″N 89°25′07″W / 43.070833°N 89.418611°W | Madison | Prairie School home designed by George W. Maher and built ca. 1911. | |
40 | Elmside Park Mounds | April 10, 1991 (#91000358) |
Elmside Park, corner of Maple and Lakeland[10] 43°05′25″N 89°20′24″W / 43.090310°N 89.339991°W | Madison | Effigies of a lynx and a bear above Lake Monona. Once this group also had several bird and oval mounds, including a bird with a 563-foot wingspan. | |
41 | Richard T. Ely House | December 16, 1974 (#74000068) |
205 N. Prospect Ave. 43°04′18″N 89°24′58″W / 43.071667°N 89.416111°W | Madison | Home of Ely, the prominent Progressive economist who was attacked for advocating labor unions and whose academic freedom was supported in the "sifting and winnowing" statement. His house was designed by Charles Sumner Frost in Georgian revival style and built in 1896. | |
42 | Farwell's Point Mound Group | December 27, 1974 (#74000069) |
301 Troy Dr. Coordinates missing | Madison | 11 conicals and remnants of 2 panther effigies, 1 bird, and 3 linear mounds on high ground above Lake Mendota. | |
43 | Fess Hotel | September 21, 1978 (#78003204) |
123 E. Doty Street 43°04′28″N 89°22′48″W / 43.074444°N 89.38°W | Madison | Hotel/restaurant begun by George Fess in the 1850s and remodeled 1901 by J. O. Gordon and F. W. Paunack. Operated under the Fess family until 1972, and still has unusually intact 19th century architecture. | |
44 | Fire Station No. 4 | March 1, 1984 (#84003637) |
1329 W. Dayton St. 43°04′15″N 89°24′31″W / 43.070833°N 89.408611°W | Madison | Station designed by Lew Porter and built 1904, when fire engines were still pulled by horses. Now the oldest intact fire station in Madison. | |
45 | First Church of Christ Scientist | November 24, 1982 (#82001841) |
315 Wisconsin Ave. 43°04′39″N 89°23′13″W / 43.0775°N 89.386944°W | Madison | Christian Science church building designed by Frank M. Riley in Classical Revival style and built in 1929. | |
46 | Forest Hill Cemetery Mound Group | December 27, 1974 (#74000070) |
1 Speedway Rd Coordinates missing | Madison | Effigy of a goose flying downhill toward Lake Wingra, below two water spirits and a linear mound. | |
47 | Forest Products Laboratory | August 25, 1995 (#95001037) |
1 Gifford Pinchot Dr. 43°04′28″N 89°25′41″W / 43.074444°N 89.428056°W | Madison | National lab building designed by Holabird & Root in Art Deco and International style and built in 1932. Researchers here have developed pulp paper processes, particle board, and laminated arches, and advanced our understanding of wood chemistry and genetics. | |
48 | Fourth Lake Ridge Historic District | February 26, 1998 (#98000167) |
Roughly bounded by Lake Mendota, N. Brearly, E. Johnson, and N. Franklin Sts. 43°05′03″N 89°22′44″W / 43.084167°N 89.378889°W | Madison | Historic neighborhood north of the capitol on the ridge along Lake Mendota, with homes built as early as 1856, including homes of governors and businessmen, and many designed by Madison architects Claude & Starck. | |
49 | Garver's Supply Company Factory and Office | August 7, 2017 (#100001445) |
3244 Atwood Ave. 43°05′40″N 89°20′04″W / 43.094537°N 89.334501°W | Madison | In 1905, when sugar beets were an important crop around Madison, U.S. Sugar Company built the main building as a beet processing plant. In 1930 James Garver converted the plant to produce livestock feed. | |
50 | Eugene A. Gilmore House | March 14, 1973 (#73000077) |
120 Ely Pl. 43°04′15″N 89°25′06″W / 43.070833°N 89.418333°W | Madison | A.k.a. the Airplane house. Prairie Style house on a hilltop in west Madison designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and built in 1908. Gilmore was a UW law professor. | |
51 | Grace Episcopal Church | January 1, 1976 (#76000055) |
6 N. Carroll St. 43°04′26″N 89°23′08″W / 43.0739°N 89.3856°W | Madison | Gothic revival-style, sandstone-clad Episcopal church designed by James Douglas and built 1855-58. Home of the oldest congregation in Madison. | |
52 | Philip H. and Margaret Gray House | March 22, 2021 (#100006286) |
6115 North Highlands Ave. 43°04′52″N 89°29′10″W / 43.0811°N 89.4862°W | Madison | Large Wrightian-style house designed by William V. Kaeser and built in 1940 for Philip Gray, a UW professor of English literature.[11] | |
53 | Grimm Book Bindery | April 3, 1986 (#86000625) |
454 W. Gilman St. 43°04′26″N 89°23′43″W / 43.0739°N 89.3953°W | Madison | Small commercial Georgian revival shop designed by Alvan Small and built in 1926, modeled on Ben Franklin's printing office. Housed the only dedicated book-binding business in Madison for 60 years. | |
54 | Halvorson Mound Group | March 25, 1993 (#93000215) |
Yahara Heights County Park[12] 43°09′17″N 89°23′31″W / 43.1548°N 89.3919°W | Madison | A 208-foot water spirit effigy mound and a bear. These remain from a larger group that once included a possible fox effigy.[13][14] | |
55 | Dr. Charles and Judith Heidelberger House | June 26, 2017 (#100001255) |
118 Vaughn Ct. 43°03′54″N 89°26′41″W / 43.0650°N 89.4447°W | Madison | Modest-sized Contemporary-style house designed by Herbert Fritz Jr. and built in 1951 for Dr. Heidelberger, a cancer researcher at the UW. | |
56 | Henry Mall Historic District | January 22, 1992 (#91001986) |
420, 425, 440, 445, 460 and 465 Henry Mall and 1450 Linden Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′30″N 89°24′40″W / 43.075°N 89.4111°W | Madison | Landscaped mall and the academic ag buildings of the UW that face it, built starting in 1903 after the Bascom Hill mall was filled. | |
57 | Louis Hirsig House | December 2, 1974 (#74000072) |
1010 Sherman Ave. 43°05′14″N 89°22′32″W / 43.0872°N 89.3756°W | Madison | Modest Prairie Style house designed by Alvan Small and built about 1913 for Hirsig, a partner in a hardware store on the capitol square. | |
58 | Holy Name Seminary | July 14, 2015 (#15000424) |
702 S. High Point Rd. 43°03′04″N 89°31′21″W / 43.0510°N 89.5225°W | Madison | Catholic high school seminary on the west side, designed by Krueger, Kraft and Associates in Neo-Colonial Revival style and built in 1963. Now houses offices and apartments. | |
59 | Horticulture and Agricultural Physics and Soil Science Building | March 14, 1985 (#85000574) |
1525 Observatory Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′35″N 89°24′38″W / 43.0764°N 89.4106°W | Madison | The main section was designed by J.T.W. Jennings in Richardsonian Romanesque style and built in 1894 and 1896. In early years a windmill was mounted on the west tower for Dr. Franklin Hiram King's experiments. Now called King Hall. | |
60 | Hotel Loraine | October 10, 2002 (#02001125) |
119-123 W. Washington Ave. 43°04′23″N 89°23′08″W / 43.0731°N 89.3856°W | Madison | 10-story high-rise hotel designed by Herbert Tullgren and built in 1925 for Walter Schroeder. Madison's leading hotel for 45 years. | |
61 | Frank W. Hoyt Park | August 17, 2018 (#100002815) |
3902 Regent St., 90 & 91 Owen Pkwy. 43°04′08″N 89°26′30″W / 43.0688°N 89.4417°W | Madison | City park on the west side. The Sunset Point section was developed by UW French professor Edward Owen in 1892, a gift to the city. The stone structures were added in the 1930s as CWA and WPA work-relief projects. | |
62 | Hyer's Hotel | September 22, 1983 (#83003370) |
854 Jenifer St. 43°04′43″N 89°22′09″W / 43.0786°N 89.3692°W | Madison | Built in 1854 as a hotel for ordinary travelers, with Greek Revival and Italianate stylings. Room and board was 50 cents a day, and the innkeeper could pull your bad tooth if needed. | |
63 | Italian Workmen's Club | July 24, 2024 (#100010597) |
914 Regent Street 43°04′04″N 89°24′07″W / 43.0677°N 89.4019°W | Madison | Social hall built in 1922 by the Italian Worker's Club, a mutual benefit organization formed in 1912. The hall is one of the few survivors of the old Italian Greenbush neighborhood. The brick building was designed by Law, Law and Potter.[15] | |
64 | Jackman Building | March 27, 1980 (#80000121) |
111 S. Hamilton St. 43°04′22″N 89°23′02″W / 43.072778°N 89.383889°W | Madison | Wedge-shaped office building designed by Claude and Starck and built 1913-14 for Jackman's law firm, with Classical Revival styling outside and Prairie Style inside. | |
65 | Herbert and Katherine Jacobs First House | July 24, 1974 (#74000073) |
441 Toepfer Ave. 43°03′31″N 89°26′29″W / 43.058611°N 89.441389°W | Madison | Low-cost Modernist house with glass walls facing the private backyard, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and built in 1937. Considered by many the first and purest Usonian house. | |
66 | Herbert and Katherine Jacobs Second House | December 31, 1974 (#74000074) |
3995 Shawn Trail 43°04′26″N 89°32′05″W / 43.073889°N 89.534722°W | Madison | Wright's first hemicycle home, and a solar hemicycle, oriented to catch the sun's heat and shelter from cold winter winds. Built 1946-48, it was an early foray into passive solar. | |
67 | Jenifer-Spaight Historic District | October 13, 2004 (#04001153) |
Jenifer and Spaight Sts. roughly bounded by S. Brearly St. and Williamson St. 43°04′42″N 89°22′07″W / 43.078333°N 89.368611°W | Madison | Historic neighborhood between Williamson St and Lake Monona, with structures as old as 1854, but most built from the 1890s to 1920s. | |
68 | Adolph H. Kayser House | November 28, 1980 (#80000122) |
802 E. Gorham St. 43°05′03″N 89°22′44″W / 43.084167°N 89.378889°W | Madison | 1902 house designed by Claude and Starck, mixing Prairie School with classical detailing. Kayser was a German immigrant who ran a lumber company and later became mayor of Madison. | |
69 | King Street Arcade | March 30, 2020 (#100005150) |
107-113 King St., 115-117 South Pinckney St. 43°04′29″N 89°22′54″W / 43.0747°N 89.3818°W | Madison | Early covered shopping mall with 24 small shops and offices, designed by Henry Charles Huart in 20th Century Commercial style and built in 1927 for developer J.N. Hobbins.[16][17] | |
70 | Klueter and Company Wholesale Grocery Warehouse | October 19, 2018 (#100003034) |
901 E Washington Ave. 43°04′57″N 89°22′23″W / 43.0824°N 89.3731°W | Madison | 5 story grocery warehouse designed by Alvin Small in Prairie Style and built in 1916 for the Klueter business.[18] Later owned by Simon Bros, Mautz Paint Co, and now Hotel Indigo.[19] | |
71 | Lake Farms Archeological District | December 22, 1978 (#78000088) |
Lake Farm County Park 43°01′35″N 89°19′53″W / 43.02651°N 89.331338°W | Madison | Seasonal site of Early Woodland people, who left behind remains of fish, mammals, waterfowl and nuts, along with pottery fragments. | |
72 | Lake View Sanatorium | April 15, 1993 (#93000258) |
1204 Northport Dr. 43°08′18″N 89°22′29″W / 43.138333°N 89.374722°W | Madison | Former county tuberculosis sanatorium built 1929-30, designed by Law, Law & Potter and E. A. Stubenrauch in Art Deco style. | |
73 | Lamb Building | August 2, 1984 (#84003645) |
114 State St. 43°04′29″N 89°23′14″W / 43.07484996812497°N 89.387190250903°W | Madison | 3-story commercial building designed by Claude and Starck in Queen Anne style and built in 1905. | |
74 | Robert M. Lamp House | January 3, 1978 (#78000089) |
22 N. Butler St. 43°04′37″N 89°22′56″W / 43.076944°N 89.382222°W | Madison | Built in 1903, this is the oldest building by Frank Lloyd Wright in Madison, designed for his childhood friend Robie Lamp. Style is Chicago School transitioning to Prairie School. | |
75 | Langdon Street Historic District | June 26, 1986 (#86001394) |
Roughly bounded by Lake Mendota, Wisconsin Ave., Langdon, and N. Lake Sts. 43°04′37″N 89°23′37″W / 43.076944°N 89.393611°W | Madison | Historic neighborhood east of the UW campus, where some of Madison's most prominent residents lived in the 1800s, but were squeezed out by fraternity and sorority houses starting around 1890. | |
76 | August Cornelius Larson House | May 19, 1994 (#94000451) |
1006 Grant St. 43°03′49″N 89°24′53″W / 43.063611°N 89.414722°W | Madison | Textbook Prairie Style house built in 1911, probably designed by Claude and Starck. | |
77 | Lathrop Hall | July 11, 1985 (#85001503) |
1050 University Ave., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′25″N 89°24′09″W / 43.073611°N 89.4025°W | Madison | Women's gym and union designed in neo-Renaissance style by Paul Cret with input from Warren Laird and Arthur Peabody and built in 1910. Housed the first dance major in the U.S. starting in 1926. | |
78 | William T. Leitch House | July 18, 1975 (#75000061) |
752 E. Gorham St. 43°05′02″N 89°22′45″W / 43.083889°N 89.379167°W | Madison | Well-preserved home of two Wisconsin governors, built 1857-58. The design is attributed to August Kutzbock and considered "the best example of mid-19th century Gothic Revival style" in Madison. | |
79 | William Ellery Leonard House | February 25, 1993 (#93000071) |
2015 Adams St. 43°03′40″N 89°25′01″W / 43.061111°N 89.416944°W | Madison | Home of Leonard, the brilliant poet-professor who at times couldn't travel far from his house. Craftsman style, designed by Eugene Marks, built 1915. | |
80 | Lincoln School | August 28, 1980 (#80000123) |
728 E. Gorham St. 43°04′59″N 89°22′49″W / 43.083056°N 89.380278°W | Madison | Prairie Style public school designed by Claude and Starck and built in 1915. Operated until 1963. Now apartments. | |
81 | Longfellow School | March 7, 1996 (#96000239) |
1010 Chandler St. 43°03′53″N 89°24′09″W / 43.064722°N 89.4025°W | Madison | 2-story public grade school that served the Greenbush neighborhood. Designed by Law, Law, and Potter in Tudor Revival style and built in 1917, with additions in 1924 and 1938. | |
82 | George A. Lougee House | June 7, 1978 (#78000090) |
620 S. Ingersoll St. 43°04′48″N 89°21′49″W / 43.08°N 89.363611°W | Madison | 2-story stucco-clad Prairie Style home designed by Claude and Starck and built in 1907 for George Lougee, who ran the Madison Park Hotel. | |
83 | Luther Memorial Church | March 26, 2018 (#100002284) |
1021 University Ave. 43°04′23″N 89°24′12″W / 43.07298°N 89.40345°W | Madison | Neogothic style Lutheran church, designed by Claude & Starck with a soaring ceiling to suggest a European cathedral, and built 1921-23. | |
84 | Machinery Row | April 12, 1982 (#82000654) |
601-627 Williamson St. 43°04′33″N 89°22′29″W / 43.075833°N 89.374722°W | Madison | A long brick business block designed by Conover and Porter in industrial Richardsonian Romanesque style and built 1898-1914. Many early tenants were distributors of farm machinery who used the adjacent railroad tracks to distribute their threshers and reapers around this part of the Midwest. | |
85 | Madison Brass Works | October 24, 2016 (#16000738) |
206-214 Waubesa St. 43°05′45″N 89°20′37″W / 43.095784°N 89.343479°W | Madison | Small foundry started in 1918, which survived until 1994 despite discriminatory rail rates for shipping from Madison. | |
86 | Madison Candy Company | March 28, 1997 (#97000294) |
744 Williamson St. 43°04′41″N 89°22′19″W / 43.078056°N 89.371944°W | Madison | Candy factory designed by John Nader and built in 1903. | |
87 | Madison Gas and Electric Company Powerhouse | December 6, 2002 (#02001126) |
100 S. Blount St. 43°04′43″N 89°22′29″W / 43.078611°N 89.374722°W | Madison | Earliest part of the complex was built in 1902, an example of Neoclassical industrial design by Claude and Starck. | |
88 | Madison Masonic Temple | September 13, 1990 (#90001456) |
301 Wisconsin Ave. 43°04′39″N 89°23′12″W / 43.0775°N 89.386667°W | Madison | Masonic temple built 1925, designed by James R. & Edward J. Law in Neoclassical style. | |
89 | Madison Saddlery Company | November 3, 2022 (#100008333) |
313-317 East Wilson St. 43°04′30″N 89°22′40″W / 43.0749°N 89.3779°W | Madison | 4-story brick industrial loft designed by Alvan Small and built in 1907, which housed the factory, warehouse, and sales room for Carl Hoebel's saddlery company.[20] | |
90 | Madison Vocational School | March 21, 2019 (#100003545) |
211 N. Carroll St. 43°04′33″N 89°23′16″W / 43.0757°N 89.3877°W | Madison | 4-story Collegiate Gothic-style school with its initial section designed by Ferdinand Kronenberg and built in 1921. 1949 addition was designed by Law, Law, Potter & Nystrom. Now a campus site of the Madison Area Technical College. A boundary decrease was approved October 10, 2023. | |
91 | Madison Waterworks | August 18, 1980 (#80000125) |
E. Gorham St. between N. Franklin and N. Hancock St. 43°04′49″N 89°22′59″W / 43.080278°N 89.383056°W | Madison | Early 20th-century utilitarian design with Prairie School and Arts and Crafts detailing, designed by Balch & Lippert and built in 1921. | |
92 | Mansion Hill Historic District | June 4, 1997 (#97000552) |
Roughly bounded by E. Dayton, E. Johnson, E. Gorham, N. Butler, Langdon, and W. Gilman Sts., and Lake Mendota 43°04′39″N 89°23′17″W / 43.0775°N 89.388056°W | Madison | Residential neighborhood northwest of the capitol, where some of Madison's leading families built grand, stylish houses as early as the 1850s. Since the 1880s most of those old families have left the neighborhood, to be replaced by students. | |
93 | Marquette Bungalows Historic District | April 14, 1997 (#97000329) |
Bounded by S. Thornton Ave., Rutledge, S. Dickinson, and Spaight Sts. 43°05′06″N 89°21′25″W / 43.085°N 89.356944°W | Madison | Two blocks of bungalow-style homes built by Karrels Development from 1924 to 1930. | |
94 | Timothy C. and Katherine McCarthy House | July 17, 2002 (#02000813) |
848 Jenifer St. 43°04′41″N 89°22′11″W / 43.078056°N 89.369722°W | Madison | 2.5-story elaborate Queen Anne style house designed by Lew Porter and built in 1897 for McCarthy, whose construction firm built a lot of the current state capitol, along with other important buildings. | |
95 | McCormick-International Harvester Company Branch House | April 27, 2010 (#10000231) |
301 South Blount St. 43°04′39″N 89°22′25″W / 43.077622°N 89.373586°W | Madison | 3-story sales-warehouse built in 1898 by McCormick to house distribution of their farm machinery, then expanded in 1910 after McCormick merged into International Harvester. Utilitarian-commercial/industrial design. | |
96 | Mendota State Hospital Mound Group | December 27, 1974 (#74000076) |
301 Troy Dr. Coordinates missing | Madison | 3 eagle effigies (one with almost 600-foot wingspan), 2 panthers (one with an unusual curved tail), 2 bears, 1 unusual four-legged deer, and several conical mounds, next to a village site from 1000 CE. | |
97 | Merrill Springs Mound Group II Archeological District | June 7, 1991 (#91000670) |
5030-5046 Lake Mendota Dr.[21] 43°04′52″N 89°27′58″W / 43.081095°N 89.465978°W | Madison | 2 linears, 2 conicals, and remnants of 2 effigies | |
98 | Miller House | November 8, 1979 (#79000339) |
647 E. Dayton St. 43°04′51″N 89°22′44″W / 43.080833°N 89.378889°W | Madison | Home of Black community leaders William and Anna Mae Miller. Built 1853, moved from corner of Pinckney & Johnson Streets in 1904. Oldest surviving Black-owned building in Madison. | |
99 | Mills Woods Mound | June 7, 1991 (#91000667) |
Hudson Park, corner of Hudson and Lakeland[22] 43°05′24″N 89°20′43″W / 43.090027°N 89.345217°W | Madison | Effigy may be a lizard, turtle, or panther. | |
100 | Simeon Mills House | August 13, 1987 (#87001386) |
2709 Sommers Ave. 43°05′34″N 89°20′39″W / 43.092778°N 89.344167°W | Madison | East-side Italianate-style country house built in 1863 for Mills, a businessman and public servant. | |
101 | Nakoma Historic District | February 26, 1998 (#98000168) |
Roughly bounded by Odana Rd., Manitou Way, Mohawk Dr., and Whenona Dr. 43°02′36″N 89°26′38″W / 43.043333°N 89.443889°W | Madison | Largely intact collection of Period Revival homes in a subdivision that was developed from 1914 to the 1940s, with Colonial Revival the most common style. | |
102 | North Hall, University of Wisconsin | October 15, 1966 (#66000021) |
1050 Bascom Mall 43°04′32″N 89°24′11″W / 43.075556°N 89.403056°W | Madison | The first building of the UW, designed by John F. Rague in Greek Revival style and built in 1851. For the first four years it more or less was the whole UW, housing dorm rooms, lecture rooms, study rooms, and a chapel. | |
103 | Observatory Hill Mound Group | March 31, 2004 (#04000255) |
Observatory Hill, University of Wisconsin–Madison[23] 43°04′34″N 89°24′36″W / 43.076191°N 89.410016°W | Madison | A bird effigy and a two-tailed water spirit (or a turtle?) on the isthmus above Lake Mendota.[24][25] | |
104 | Old Executive Mansion | April 11, 1973 (#73000078) |
130 E. Gilman St. 43°04′47″N 89°23′12″W / 43.079722°N 89.386667°W | Madison | Italianate style mansion built 1854-56 for insurance executive Julius White. Later home to lumber baron Joseph G. Thorp and his son-in-law Ole Bull. Bought in 1883 by Governor Rusk and used as official residence of Wisconsin governors until 1950. | |
105 | Old Spring Tavern | January 21, 1974 (#74000077) |
3706 Nakoma Rd. 43°03′00″N 89°26′15″W / 43.050066°N 89.4375°W | Madison | Built in 1854 as a stopping place on the Madison-Monroe stagecoach road, by Charles Morgan in Greek revival style. | |
106 | Old Synagogue | December 29, 1970 (#70000030) |
E. Gorham St. at N. Butler St. 43°04′48″N 89°23′05″W / 43.07993°N 89.38486°W | Madison | Madison's first synagogue, designed by August Kutzbock in Rundbogenstil (German version of Romanesque Revival) and built in 1863. | |
107 | Old U.S. Forest Products Laboratory | September 12, 1985 (#85002332) |
1509 University Ave., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′23″N 89°24′40″W / 43.073056°N 89.411111°W | Madison | First institution in the world created specifically to research wood and wood products, designed by Albert Gallistel under Arthur Peabody in Georgian revival style and built in 1909. | |
108 | Orpheum Theater | January 23, 2008 (#07001460) |
216 State St. 43°04′30″N 89°23′19″W / 43.075°N 89.388611°W | Madison | Designed by Rapp and Rapp and built 1925-27, the Orpheum remains Madison's best representative of the movie palace era. | |
109 | Orton Park | December 18, 1978 (#78000091) |
1100 Spaight St. 43°04′51″N 89°21′47″W / 43.080833°N 89.363056°W | Madison | Madison's first public park, developed in 1887, with residents of the east-side Sixth Ward leading the way. | |
110 | Orton Park Historic District | October 31, 1988 (#88000221) |
Roughly bounded by Spaight St., S. Few St., Lake Monona, and S. Ingersoll St. 43°04′50″N 89°21′46″W / 43.080651°N 89.362687°W | Madison | Cluster of 56 stylish historic homes that developed around Orton Park, most built from the 1880s to 1950s. | |
111 | John George Ott House | September 23, 1982 (#82000656) |
754 Jenifer St. 43°04′39″N 89°22′16″W / 43.0775°N 89.371111°W | Madison | Italianate-style brick house built in 1873 for Swiss immigrant storekeeper and businessman Ott. | |
112 | Pflaum-McWilliams Mound Group | June 7, 1991 (#91000666) |
Address Restricted | Madison | An animal effigy and six linear mounds - some very long - lined up on a ridge. | |
113 | Carrie Pierce House | October 18, 1972 (#72000048) |
424 N. Pinckney St. 43°04′43″N 89°23′15″W / 43.078611°N 89.3875°W | Madison | Elegant sandstone-clad mansion designed in Romanesque Revival style by Samuel Donnell and built in 1857 for Alexander McDonnell, with styling similar to the third state capitol, which both worked on. | |
114 | Plough Inn | May 29, 1980 (#80000127) |
3402 Monroe St. 43°03′12″N 89°26′05″W / 43.053333°N 89.434722°W | Madison | Stonecutter immigrant Frederick Paunack built the first stone section in 1853 and operated it as a stagecoach inn. The brick front was added in 1858 by English glass-blower John Whare, who sold plows there and entertained Union soldiers during the Civil War. | |
115 | Quisling Towers Apartments | January 9, 1984 (#84003648) |
1 E. Gilman St. 43°04′41″N 89°23′17″W / 43.078056°N 89.388056°W | Madison | Intact Streamline Moderne-style apartment building designed by Louis Monberg and built in 1937 for Dr. Abraham Quisling. | |
116 | St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church | September 16, 1982 (#82000657) |
404 E. Main St. 43°04′37″N 89°22′44″W / 43.076944°N 89.378889°W | Madison | Historic Catholic church designed by John Nader in an eclectic style influenced by Rundbogenstil and built 1888-89 to serve a largely Irish parish. | |
117 | Sherman Avenue Historic District | March 22, 1988 (#88000216) |
Sherman Ave. roughly between Marston Ave. and N. Brearly St. 43°05′24″N 89°22′27″W / 43.09°N 89.374167°W | Madison | Historic neighborhood along Lake Mendota on the east end of the isthmus, including homes in a variety of styles built from the mid-1890s to 1920s. | |
118 | Simeon Mills Historic District | June 25, 1987 (#87001063) |
102-118 King and 115-123 E. Main Sts. 43°04′29″N 89°22′50″W / 43.074722°N 89.380556°W | Madison | ||
119 | Hiram Smith Hall and Annex | March 14, 1985 (#85000573) |
1545 Observatory Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′33″N 89°24′42″W / 43.075833°N 89.411667°W | Madison | 1890-91, George B. Ferry and Alfred C. Clas, Queen Anne style | |
120 | Spring Harbor Mound Group | June 7, 1991 (#91000668) |
North of Spring Harbor Middle School[12] 43°04′54″N 89°28′21″W / 43.081767°N 89.472555°W | Madison | A bear effigy and a linear mound above Lake Mendota.[26][27] | |
121 | State Historical Society of Wisconsin | February 23, 1972 (#72000049) |
816 State St. 43°04′31″N 89°23′59″W / 43.075278°N 89.399722°W | Madison | 1896-1900, George B. Ferry & Alfred C. Clas, neo-Classicist style | |
122 | State Office Building | January 28, 1982 (#82000658) |
1 W. Wilson St. 43°04′19″N 89°22′54″W / 43.071944°N 89.381667°W | Madison | 1931-1959, Arthur Peabody, Art Deco style | |
123 | Halle Steensland House | November 30, 1982 (#82001843) |
315 N. Carroll St. 43°04′35″N 89°23′18″W / 43.076389°N 89.388333°W | Madison | 1901, Gordon and Paunack, Queen Anne style. Moved around the corner to 401 N. Carroll, fronting Gorham Street, in 2015.[28] | |
124 | Steinle Turret Machine Company | December 13, 2007 (#07001272) |
149 Waubesa St. 43°05′48″N 89°20′37″W / 43.096667°N 89.343611°W | Madison | 1903 with additions up to 1920, utilitarian-industrial design | |
125 | Breese Stevens Municipal Athletic Field | August 3, 2015 (#15000502) |
917 E. Mifflin St. 43°04′59″N 89°22′23″W / 43.08306°N 89.37306°W | Madison | Multi-purpose stadium designed by Madison architectural firm Claude and Starck in Mediterranean Revival style, constructed from 1925 to 1926. | |
126 | Stock Pavilion | July 11, 1985 (#85001504) |
1675 Linden Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′29″N 89°24′54″W / 43.074722°N 89.415°W | Madison | 1909, Warren Laird, Paul Cret, and Arthur Peabody, vernacular style with Tudor revival elements | |
127 | Joseph J. Stoner House | January 17, 1980 (#80000129) |
321 S. Hamilton St. 43°04′11″N 89°23′04″W / 43.069722°N 89.384444°W | Madison | 1858, Italianate style, sandstone in a distinctive masonry pattern | |
128 | John J. Suhr House | June 17, 1982 (#82000660) |
121 Langdon St. 43°04′38″N 89°23′27″W / 43.077222°N 89.390833°W | Madison | John Nader, 1886, Second Empire style, replaced porch | |
129 | Sunset Hills Historic District | June 15, 2015 (#15000356) |
Bounded by Owen Pkwy., Regent & Larkin Sts., Hillcrest Dr. 43°03′54″N 89°26′41″W / 43.0651°N 89.4447°W | Madison | ||
130 | Sylvan Avenue - Ridge Road Historic District | April 8, 2020 (#100005173) |
Roughly bounded by South Franklin St., Ridge Rd., Glenway St., and Sylvan Ave. 43°04′00″N 89°26′15″W / 43.0666°N 89.4376°W | Madison | ||
131 | Tenney Building | October 26, 2017 (#100001775) |
110 E. Main St. 43°04′30″N 89°22′54″W / 43.074908°N 89.381568°W | Madison | 1929-30, Law, Law and Potter, Art Deco style | |
132 | Tenney Park – Yahara River Parkway | September 17, 1999 (#99001173) |
1220 E. Johnson St.; 501 S. Thornton Ave. 43°05′23″N 89°21′48″W / 43.089722°N 89.363333°W | Madison | ||
133 | Thompson's Block | June 7, 1984 (#84003654) |
119 E. Main St. 43°04′30″N 89°22′51″W / 43.075°N 89.380833°W | Madison | 1868, perhaps August Kutzbock, Italianate style | |
134 | Thorstrand | August 11, 1980 (#80000131) |
1-2 Thorstrand Rd. 43°05′28″N 89°28′56″W / 43.091111°N 89.482222°W | Madison | 1922, Law and Law, Mediterranean Revival style mansions | |
135 | United States Post Office and Federal Courthouse | November 27, 2002 (#02001443) |
215 Martin Luther King Junior Blvd. 43°04′23″N 89°22′52″W / 43.073056°N 89.381111°W | Madison | 1927-29, James A. Wetmore, neo-Classical style. Also known as the Madison Municipal Building | |
136 | University Heights Historic District | December 17, 1982 (#82001844) |
Roughly bounded by Regent, Allen, Lathrop Sts., and Kendall Ave. (both sides) 43°04′12″N 89°25′08″W / 43.07°N 89.418889°W | Madison | ||
137 | University Hill Farms Historic District | August 11, 2015 (#15000402) |
Roughly bounded by N. & S. Midvale Blvd., Sheboygan Ave., N. & S. Whitney Way, N. Rock & Mineral Point Rds. 43°03′59″N 89°27′42″W / 43.066386°N 89.461681°W | Madison | ||
138 | University of Wisconsin Arboretum | January 28, 2019 (#16000518) |
1207 Seminole Hwy. 43°02′29″N 89°25′51″W / 43.0414°N 89.4307°W | Madison | Designated a National Historic Landmark in 2021. | |
139 | University of Wisconsin Armory and Gymnasium | November 4, 1993 (#93001618) |
716 Langdon St., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′34″N 89°23′53″W / 43.076111°N 89.398056°W | Madison | 1892, Conover and Porter, Richardsonian Romanesque, aka the Old Red Gym | |
140 | University of Wisconsin Dairy Barn | May 31, 2002 (#02000600) |
1915 Linden Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′28″N 89°25′06″W / 43.074444°N 89.418333°W | Madison | 1897, John T.W. Jennings, Normandy barn style, experimental round tower silo | |
141 | University of Wisconsin Field House | July 1, 1998 (#98000829) |
1450 Monroe St., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′07″N 89°24′45″W / 43.068611°N 89.4125°W | Madison | Covered auditorium just south of Camp Randall, designed in Italian Renaissance style by William F. Stevens, John Knudsen, and Arthur Peabody and built in 1930. Clad in Madison sandstone.[29] | |
142 | University of Wisconsin Memorial Union | May 19, 2015 (#15000255) |
800 Langdon St., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′35″N 89°24′00″W / 43.076389°N 89.4°W | Madison | ||
143 | University of Wisconsin Science Hall | November 4, 1993 (#93001616) |
550 N. Park St., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′33″N 89°24′03″W / 43.075833°N 89.400833°W | Madison | 1887, Allan Conover and Henry C. Koch, Richardsonian Romanesque | |
144 | University Presbyterian Church and Student Center | October 16, 2002 (#02001185) |
731 State St. 43°04′29″N 89°23′55″W / 43.074722°N 89.398611°W | Madison | ||
145 | Vilas Circle Bear Effigy Mound and the Curtis Mounds | December 30, 1974 (#74000078) |
Bear Mound Park and adjacent property 43°03′47″N 89°24′41″W / 43.063057°N 89.411439°W | Madison | Late Woodland bear effigy in a small city park/traffic circle. One linear mound in adjacent private property remains from the larger Curtis Mound group. | |
146 | Vilas Park Mound Group | April 10, 1991 (#91000357) |
Vilas Park 43°03′34″N 89°24′29″W / 43.059494°N 89.408013°W | Madison | A bird effigy, 1 linear and 6 conical mounds in a Late Woodland group near Lake Wingra. | |
147 | Wakeley-Giles Commercial Building | February 23, 1988 (#88000081) |
117-119 E. Mifflin St. 43°04′36″N 89°23′00″W / 43.076667°N 89.383333°W | Madison | ||
148 | Washburn Observatory and Observatory Director's Residence | March 14, 1985 (#85000575) |
1401 and 1225 Observatory Dr., University of Wisconsin campus 43°04′34″N 89°24′31″W / 43.076111°N 89.408611°W | Madison | 1878-1881, David R. Jones, Italianate style | |
149 | West Lawn Heights Historic District | March 5, 1998 (#98000223) |
Roughly bounded by Virginia Ter., Regent St., S. Spooner Ave., and Illinois Central Railroad 43°03′56″N 89°25′26″W / 43.065556°N 89.423889°W | Madison | ||
150 | West Madison Depot, Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railway | May 9, 1985 (#85000990) |
640 W. Washington Ave. 43°04′05″N 89°23′40″W / 43.068056°N 89.394444°W | Madison | 1903 | |
151 | Wiedenbeck-Dobelin Warehouse | December 23, 1986 (#86003473) |
619 W. Mifflin St. 43°04′07″N 89°23′40″W / 43.068611°N 89.394444°W | Madison | 1907, Claude and Starck, utilitarian-industrial design | |
152 | Wingra Park Historic District | October 14, 1999 (#99001257) |
Roughly bounded by Monroe St., Garfield St., Chandler St., S. Randall Ave., Drake St., Vilas Ave., and Edgewood Ave. 43°03′45″N 89°24′55″W / 43.0625°N 89.415278°W | Madison | ||
153 | Wisconsin Memorial Hospital Historic District | November 3, 1988 (#88002183) |
816 Troy Dr. 43°07′52″N 89°24′18″W / 43.131111°N 89.405°W | Madison | ||
154 | Wisconsin State Capitol | October 15, 1970 (#70000031) |
Capitol Sq. 43°04′29″N 89°23′03″W / 43.074722°N 89.384167°W | Madison | 1917, Beaux-Arts style | |
155 | Wisconsin Wagon Company Factory | November 15, 2002 (#02001343) |
602 Railroad St. 43°04′39″N 89°22′35″W / 43.0775°N 89.376389°W | Madison | ca. 1906, early 20th-century utilitarian-industrial design |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved November 1, 2024.
- ^ 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.
- ^ Birmingham, Robert A. (2010). Spirits of Earth: The Effigy Mound Landscape of Madison and the Four Lakes. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-299-23264-1.
- ^ Khitsun, Andrew. "Blackhawk Country Club Mounds". Wisconsin Mounds. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
- ^ Khitsun, Andrew. "Arboretum Mounds". Wisconsin Mounds. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
- ^ "Coolidge Street-Myrtle Street Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2022-04-17.
- ^ Khitsun, Andrew. "Edgewood College Mounds". Wisconsin Mounds. Retrieved 2022-03-20.
- ^ Birmingham, Robert A. (August 1, 1989). "Landmarks and Landmark Sites Nomination Form: Elmside Mounds" (PDF). City of Madison Landmarks Commission. Retrieved November 23, 2020.
- ^ "Philip H & Margaret Gray Jr House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2022-06-07.
- ^ a b "Native American Mounds in Madison and Dane County" (PDF). City of Madison and the Native American Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 12, 2018. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
- ^ Birmingham, Robert A. (2010). Spirits of Earth: The Effigy Mound Landscape of Madison and the Four Lakes. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 118-120. ISBN 978-0-299-23264-1.
- ^ Khitsun, Andrew. "Yahara Heights County Park". Wisconsin Mounds. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
- ^ "Italian Workmen's Club". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-08-01.
- ^ "King Street Arcade". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2022-08-14.
- ^ Heggland, Timothy F. (2001-09-07). "Landmarks and Landmark Sites Nomination Form: King Street Arcade" (PDF). City of Madison. Retrieved 2022-08-14.
- ^ "Klueter & Company Wholesale Grocery Warehouse". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2022-08-14.
- ^ "Klueter Wholesale Grocery Warehouse". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2022-08-14.
- ^ "Madison Saddlery Company". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2023-03-07.
- ^ Stiles-Hanson, Cynthia; Rankin, Katherine H. (February 10, 1993). "Landmarks and Landmark Sites Nomination Form: Merrill Springs Mound Group" (PDF). Madison Landmarks Commission. Retrieved March 31, 2023.
- ^ Birmingham, Robert A.; Rankin, Katherine H. (August 1, 1989). "Landmarks and Landmark Sites Nomination Form: Hudson Park Mound" (PDF). City of Madison Landmarks Commission. Retrieved November 23, 2020.
- ^ "Observatory Hill". University of Wisconsin-Madison. Retrieved March 31, 2023.
- ^ Birmingham, Robert A. (2010). Spirits of Earth: The Effigy Mound Landscape of Madison and the Four Lakes. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 132–134. ISBN 978-0-299-23264-1.
- ^ Khitsun, Andrew. "Observatory Hill Mounds". Wisconsin Mounds. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
- ^ Birmingham, Robert A. (2010). Spirits of Earth: The Effigy Mound Landscape of Madison and the Four Lakes. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-299-23264-1.
- ^ Khitsun, Andrew. "Spring Harbor School Mounds". Wisconsin Mounds. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
- ^ "Photos: A look inside the relocated, renovated Steensland House".
- ^ Holly Smith-Middleton (1997-06-30). "NRHP Nomination: University of Wisconsin Field House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-02-15.