National Register of Historic Places listings in Northeast Portland, Oregon

This list presents the full set of buildings, structures, objects, sites, or districts designated on the National Register of Historic Places in Northeast Portland, Oregon, and offers brief descriptive information about each of them. The National Register recognizes places of national, state, or local historic significance across the United States.[1] Out of over 90,000 National Register sites nationwide,[2] Oregon is home to over 2,000,[3] and over one-fourth of those are found partially or wholly in Portland. While these sites are widely spread across all six of Portland's quadrants, heavy concentrations are found in the Downtown and Southwest Hills neighborhoods of the Southwest quadrant, and the Northwest District neighborhood of the Northwest quadrant.

Locator map showing five of Portland's six quadrants. Click a quadrant to go to its National Register list. (South Portland listings are included on the Southwest Portland list.)

Only historic places within the municipal boundaries of Portland are shown in this list and its four companion lists for the other quadrants. Some sites beyond city limits will appear in other lists showing "Portland" as a general locality, but are excluded here. Although Portland's legal boundaries extend into Clackamas and Washington counties, all of the city's National Register sites lie within Multnomah County.

This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted January 29, 2021.[4]

Current listings

[5] Name on the Register Image Date listed[6] Location Description
1 Simon Abraham Duplex
Simon Abraham Duplex
August 5, 1999
(#99000945)
522–530 NE San Rafael Street
45°32′13″N 122°39′36″W
This 1890 Queen Anne house is one of extremely few duplexes in the Eliot neighborhood remaining from the late 19th/early 20th centuries. Its early ownership by German Americans and Scandinavian Americans testifies to the settlement by ethnic immigrants in this part of the former city of Albina.[7]
2 Alco Apartments
Alco Apartments
January 17, 2017
(#100000499)
100–110 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard
45°31′26″N 122°39′41″W
Built in 1912, this commercial/apartment building typifies the mixed-use development that occurred along Portland's eastside streetcar lines during the early 20th century. Its origins are strongly echoed in the 21st-century renaissance of mixed-use construction and streetcars in Portland, with a new-generation streetcar line immediately opposite the west elevation.[8]
3 Frederick Armbruster Cottage
Frederick Armbruster Cottage
February 16, 2001
(#01000130)
502 NE Tillamook Street
45°32′16″N 122°39′38″W
This 1898 house is a locally-important example of the application of the Queen Anne style to simple housing for the European immigrant and working class families that flowed into the Eliot neighborhood during the 1880s to early 1900s. The German American Armbruster family operated a pretzel baking business from the back yard for nearly 30 years.[9]
4 Alfred J. and Georgia A. Armstrong House
Alfred J. and Georgia A. Armstrong House
September 14, 2002
(#02001017)
509 NE Prescott Street
45°33′21″N 122°39′37″W
Built in 1894, this elaborate Queen Anne house is one of very few intact examples of its type remaining from the early years of development in the King neighborhood. It exhibits more defining Queen Anne characteristics than other nearby houses of the same period, including a tower and the large quantity of jigsawed ornamentation.[10]
5 Thomas J. Autzen House
Thomas J. Autzen House
March 9, 1992
(#92000088)
2425 NE Alameda Street
45°33′06″N 122°38′26″W
This 1927 house is an outstanding example of the Tudor Revival style in both its exterior and interior, and is one of only two houses in Portland by architect Kirtland Cutter. Thomas J. Autzen (1888–1958) was a prominent businessman in the wood products industry, and a pioneer in the manufacture and marketing of plywood.[11][12]
6 Frank C. Barnes House
Frank C. Barnes House
September 1, 1983
(#83002166)
3533 NE Klickitat Street
45°32′49″N 122°37′39″W
Businessman Frank C. Barnes (1854–1931), prominent in Portland's grocery and fish processing industries, had this 1914 mansion built as part of a grouping of houses for himself and his wife and children. The house clearly demonstrates the architectural eclecticism of the era, with major elements in the Jacobethan, Colonial Revival, and Neoclassical styles.[13]
7 Barnhart–Wright House
Barnhart–Wright House
June 13, 1997
(#97000582)
1828 NE Knott Street
45°32′31″N 122°38′48″W
This 1914 house was built in Irvington by general contractor Frederic E. Bowman, who shaped several neighborhoods in the city. It stands as one of the best-preserved and most expensive single-family homes in his body of work, and is an outstanding example of the use of Arts and Crafts architecture with Prairie School influences in an upper-class Portland home.[14]
8 Bay E, West Ankeny Car Barns
Bay E, West Ankeny Car Barns
October 10, 1978
(#78002307)
2706 NE Couch Street
45°31′24″N 122°38′17″W
This brick building is the last remnant of the complex of maintenance facilities that supported several major streetcar lines in northeast Portland in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[lower-alpha 1] The complex was opened in 1901 and Bay E was built in 1911, continuing in operation until 1950. It is one of only two structures remaining in Portland from that era's streetcar network.[15]
9 Boschke–Boyd House
Boschke–Boyd House
February 25, 2005
(#05000094)
2211 NE Thompson Street
45°32′21″N 122°38′34″W
This c.1910 house is most noted for its association with William E. Boyd (1880–1965), the co-owner and manager of the Benson Hotel for 36 years, during which time it flourished as one of Portland's premier hotels. Boyd lived in the house for 28 years from 1922 to 1950. It has a fine design in the Tudor and Jacobethan styles by Joseph Jacobberger.[16]
10 George W. and Hetty A. Bowers House
George W. and Hetty A. Bowers House
September 23, 2011
(#11000702)
114 NE 22nd Avenue
45°31′26″N 122°38′36″W
The finest of only three poured-concrete houses in Portland, this 1910 residence was built at the height of the short-lived national trend of experimentation with this building method. Although the method largely died out soon after and especially never gained popularity in Portland, this house was at the cutting edge in its time.[17]
11 F. E. Bowman Apartments
F. E. Bowman Apartments
June 16, 1989
(#89000511)
1624–1636 NE Tillamook Street
45°32′14″N 122°38′55″W
Constructed in 1913, this is one of the oldest apartment buildings in the Irvington neighborhood, and the best preserved from its era. Through its Craftsman styling, builder Frederic E. Bowman gave attention to blending the building into the neighborhood of pre-existing single-family homes.[18]
12 John and Ellen Bowman House
John and Ellen Bowman House
January 9, 2008
(#07001377)
1719 NE Knott Street
45°32′33″N 122°38′53″W
This 1916 Colonial Revival house is a prime example of the work of Ellis F. Lawrence (1879–1946), one of Portland's and Oregon's most influential architects. Sited on one of the largest lots in the Irvington neighborhood, it is perhaps Lawrence's grandest residential design. It stands out for fine craftsmanship and materials.[19][20]
13 Jennie Bramhall House
Jennie Bramhall House
May 27, 1999
(#99000643)
5125 NE Garfield Avenue
45°33′37″N 122°39′47″W
This house is significant for its highly unusual combination of Queen Anne styling with cast concrete block construction. Built in 1908–1909, it is one of the finest remaining Queen Anne houses in the Albina District, and one of only a few cast concrete houses in that area.[21]
14 Brick House Beautiful
Brick House Beautiful
January 27, 2012
(#11001063)
4005 NE Davis Street
45°31′31″N 122°37′18″W
This model house was built in 1922–1923 to showcase the product line of the Standard Brick & Tile Company, based in Portland. It was also a demonstration project for the brick hollow-wall method of construction, newly introduced in the Portland market to reduce cost and improve affordability of brick houses.[22]
15 Burnside Bridge
Burnside Bridge
November 14, 2012
(#12000931)
Willamette River at RM 12.7
45°31′23″N 122°40′03″W
Part of the Willamette River Highway Bridges of Portland, Oregon MPS
16 George Earle Chamberlain House
George Earle Chamberlain House
June 19, 1991
(#91000815)
1927 NE Tillamook Street
45°32′16″N 122°38′46″W
17 Clovelly Garden Apartments
Clovelly Garden Apartments
May 19, 1983
(#83002169)
6307–6319 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard
45°34′05″N 122°39′42″W
18 Coleman–Scott House
Coleman–Scott House
November 8, 1985
(#85003504)
2110 NE 16th Avenue
45°32′16″N 122°38′57″W
19 James C. and Mary A. Costello House
James C. and Mary A. Costello House
September 28, 2001
(#01001068)
2043 NE Tillamook Street
45°32′16″N 122°38′41″W
20 Virgil and Beulah Crum House
Virgil and Beulah Crum House
August 5, 1999
(#99000944)
4438 NE Alameda Street
45°32′35″N 122°37′05″W
21 Del Rey Apartments
Del Rey Apartments
February 20, 1991
(#91000040)
2555 NE Glisan Street
45°31′37″N 122°38′22″W
22 Henry B. Dickson House
Henry B. Dickson House
August 1, 1997
(#97000849)
2123 NE 21st Avenue
45°32′16″N 122°38′41″W
23 Frank Silas Doernbecher House
Frank Silas Doernbecher House
March 14, 1978
(#78002311)
2323 NE Tillamook Street
45°32′16″N 122°38′30″W
24 Emerson Apartments
Emerson Apartments
January 27, 2000
(#99001714)
5310 N Williams Avenue
45°33′43″N 122°40′00″W
25 Raymond and Catherine Fisher House
Raymond and Catherine Fisher House
March 2, 2006
(#06000096)
1625 NE Marine Drive
45°36′02″N 122°38′54″W
26 Gustav Freiwald House
Gustav Freiwald House
May 27, 1993
(#93000454)
1810 NE 15th Avenue
45°32′09″N 122°39′00″W
27 German Baptist Old People’s Home October 23, 2020
(#100005724)
850 NE 81st Ave.
45°31′43″N 122°34′45″W
28 Lewis T. Gilliland House
Lewis T. Gilliland House
February 23, 1989
(#89000063)
2229 NE Brazee Street
45°32′27″N 122°38′33″W
29 Groat–Gates House
Groat–Gates House
February 23, 1989
(#89000062)
35 NE 22nd Avenue
45°31′24″N 122°38′38″W
30 Hancock Street Fourplex
Hancock Street Fourplex
February 11, 1993
(#93000023)
1414 NE Hancock Street
45°32′10″N 122°39′04″W
31 William A. Haseltine House
William A. Haseltine House
October 17, 1991
(#91001551)
3231 NE U.S. Grant Place
45°32′17″N 122°37′56″W
32 Hibernian Hall
Hibernian Hall
August 4, 2005
(#05000826)
128 NE Russell Street
45°32′26″N 122°39′48″W
33 Hollywood Theatre
Hollywood Theatre
September 1, 1983
(#83002172)
4122 NE Sandy Boulevard
45°32′08″N 122°37′14″W
34 Irvington Bowman Apartments
Irvington Bowman Apartments
September 14, 2002
(#02000968)
1825–1835 NE 16th Avenue
45°32′10″N 122°38′59″W
35 Irvington Historic District
Irvington Historic District
October 22, 2010
(#10000850)
Roughly bounded by NE Fremont Street, NE Broadway, and NE 7th and 27th Avenues
45°32′31″N 122°38′54″W
Historic Residential Suburbs in the United States, 1830–1960 MPS[23]
36 Irvington Tennis Club
Irvington Tennis Club
October 17, 1990
(#90001513)
2131 NE Thompson Street
45°32′21″N 122°38′37″W
37 Jantzen Knitting Mills Company Building
Jantzen Knitting Mills Company Building
June 24, 1991
(#91000812)
1935 NE Glisan Street
45°31′38″N 122°38′46″W
38 Oliver and Margaret Jeffrey House
Oliver and Margaret Jeffrey House
September 21, 2005
(#05001059)
3033 NE Bryce Street
45°33′06″N 122°38′04″W
39 Jensen Investment Company Building
Jensen Investment Company Building
August 5, 1999
(#99000941)
2500–2522 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard
45°32′26″N 122°39′41″W
40 Charles E. Johnson Building
Charles E. Johnson Building
August 5, 1999
(#99000949)
442 NE Russell Street
45°32′28″N 122°39′38″W
41 H. C. Keck House – Mount Olivet Parsonage
H. C. Keck House – Mount Olivet Parsonage
October 10, 2002
(#02001124)
53 NE Thompson Street
45°32′21″N 122°39′55″W
Built in 1899 by German American carpenter Henry C. Keck, this house illustrates the settlement of Albina by ethnic Europeans. As the presence of African Americans in Albina increased, it was purchased by Mount Olivet Baptist Church in 1929 to be its parsonage. In that role, the house was home to locally prominent civil rights leaders Rev. Jonathan L. Caston and Rev. J. James Clow.[24]
42 Edward H. and Bertha R. Keller House
Edward H. and Bertha R. Keller House
November 20, 2009
(#09000943)
3028 NE Alameda Street
45°32′59″N 122°38′06″W
This excellent example of an English cottage revival house was one of the few single-family homes designed by Portland architect Elmer E. Feig. Many of the themes and features of the Keller house foreshadowed his later work with large apartment buildings.[25]
43 John D. Kennedy Elementary School
John D. Kennedy Elementary School
November 22, 1995
(#88003472)
5736 NE 33rd Avenue
45°33′52″N 122°37′49″W
44 Albertina Kerr Nursery
Albertina Kerr Nursery
August 29, 1979
(#79002135)
424 NE 22nd Avenue
45°31′34″N 122°38′35″W
45 Laurelhurst Historic District
Laurelhurst Historic District
March 18, 2019
(#100003462)
Roughly bounded by SE Stark Street, NE Senate Street, and 44th and 32nd Avenues
45°31′32″N 122°37′27″W
Historic Residential Suburbs in the United States, 1830-1960 MPS
(Also in SE Portland.)
46 Henry C. Leutgert Building
Henry C. Leutgert Building
May 27, 1999
(#99000642)
2323–2329 NE Rodney Avenue
45°32′23″N 122°39′52″W
47 Lindquist Apartment House
Lindquist Apartment House
February 19, 1993
(#93000022)
711 NE Randall Street
45°31′41″N 122°38′18″W
48 Robert F. Lytle House
Robert F. Lytle House
May 19, 1983
(#83002173)
1914 NE 22nd Avenue
45°32′12″N 122°38′34″W
49 Anna Lewis Mann Old People's Home
Anna Lewis Mann Old People's Home
October 15, 1992
(#92001380)
1021–1025 NE 33rd Avenue
45°31′50″N 122°37′53″W
50 George W. and Hannah Martin – John B. and Minnie Hosford House
George W. and Hannah Martin – John B. and Minnie Hosford House
February 27, 2003
(#03000073)
2004 NE 9th Avenue
45°32′13″N 122°39′22″W
51 McAvinney Fourplex
McAvinney Fourplex
February 6, 2006
(#05001147)
2004 NE 17th Avenue
45°32′13″N 122°38′53″W
52 Daniel C. and Katie A. McDonald House
Daniel C. and Katie A. McDonald House
March 6, 2019
(#100003459)
2944 NE Couch Street
45°31′24″N 122°38′06″W
53 Elmer and Linnie Miller House
Elmer and Linnie Miller House
February 28, 2020
(#100005017)
89 NE Thompson Street
45°32′21″N 122°39′52″W
54 Fred O. Miller House
Fred O. Miller House
January 18, 2006
(#05001540)
2329 NE Thompson Street
45°32′21″N 122°38′29″W
55 Henry B. Miller House
Henry B. Miller House
October 30, 1989
(#89001865)
2439 NE 21st Avenue
45°32′25″N 122°38′41″W
56 Nicolai–Cake–Olson House
Nicolai–Cake–Olson House
August 8, 2001
(#01000828)
1903 NE Hancock Street
45°32′12″N 122°38′47″W
57 Northwest Fence and Wire Works
Northwest Fence and Wire Works
August 4, 2005
(#05000828)
400–418 NE 11th Avenue
45°31′34″N 122°39′15″W
58 Northwestern Electric Company – Alberta Substation
Northwestern Electric Company – Alberta Substation
March 5, 1998
(#98000207)
2701–2717 NE Alberta Street
45°33′33″N 122°38′16″W
59 Olsen and Weygandt Building
Olsen and Weygandt Building
February 11, 1993
(#93000024)
1421–1441 NE Broadway
45°32′07″N 122°39′03″W
60 August Olson House
August Olson House
June 3, 1996
(#96000624)
2509 NE 18th Avenue
45°32′27″N 122°38′51″W
61 Oregon State Bank Building
Oregon State Bank Building
July 12, 2000
(#00000801)
4200 NE Sandy Boulevard
45°32′10″N 122°37′11″W
62 Page and Son Apartments
Page and Son Apartments
March 8, 1989
(#89000113)
723–737 E Burnside Street
45°31′23″N 122°39′28″W
63 Parkview Apartments
Parkview Apartments
March 6, 1992
(#92000085)
1760 NE Irving Street
45°31′38″N 122°38′55″W
64 Pearson Mortuary
Pearson Mortuary
December 13, 2007
(#07001261)
301 NE Knott Street
45°32′32″N 122°39′47″W
65 Pipes Family House
Pipes Family House
December 23, 2005
(#05001150)
3045 NE 9th Avenue
45°32′42″N 122°39′25″W
66 John E. G. Povey House
John E. G. Povey House
August 28, 1998
(#98001121)
1312 NE Tillamook Street
45°32′14″N 122°39′07″W
67 Ira F. Powers Warehouse and Factory
Ira F. Powers Warehouse and Factory
August 31, 2011
(#11000625)
123 NE 3rd Avenue
45°31′26″N 122°39′47″W
This 1925 building is one of the last remnants of two important phases in Portland's economic history: the city's once-prominent furniture manufacturing and distribution industry, and worker housing for the war industries of the World War II era.[26]
68 Thomas Prince House
Thomas Prince House
October 23, 1986
(#86002911)
2903 NE Alameda Street
45°33′02″N 122°38′08″W
69 Reed–Wells House
Reed–Wells House
August 20, 2004
(#04000878)
2168 NE Multnomah Street
45°31′53″N 122°38′36″W
70 Rocky Butte Scenic Drive Historic District
Rocky Butte Scenic Drive Historic District
October 17, 1991
(#91001550)
Along NE Rocky Butte Road with parts of NE Fremont Street and NE 92nd Avenue
45°32′48″N 122°33′57″W
71 Roome–Stearns House
Roome–Stearns House
March 9, 1992
(#92000087)
2146 NE 12th Avenue
45°32′17″N 122°39′11″W
72 Rose City Golf Clubhouse
Rose City Golf Clubhouse
October 31, 2012
(#12000900)
2200 NE 71st Avenue
45°32′17″N 122°35′24″W
73 Alfred C. and Nettie Ruby House
Alfred C. and Nettie Ruby House
January 26, 2006
(#05001559)
211 NE César E. Chávez Boulevard
45°31′31″N 122°37′24″W
74 Rutherford House
Rutherford House
August 5, 2015
(#14001076)
833 NE Shaver Street
45°33′08″N 122°39′25″W
75 Salerno Apartments
Salerno Apartments
January 28, 1994
(#93001563)
2325 NE Flanders Street
45°31′33″N 122°38′31″W
76 Senate Court Apartments
Senate Court Apartments
February 21, 1997
(#97000129)
203–223 NE 22nd Avenue
45°31′28″N 122°38′38″W
77 Seufert House
Seufert House
October 10, 2006
(#06000944)
1511 NE Knott Street
45°32′32″N 122°39′00″W
Also known as the Mautz–Seufert House.
78 Fred A., May, and Ann Shogren House
Fred A., May, and Ann Shogren House
July 3, 1989
(#89000517)
400 NE 62nd Avenue
45°31′33″N 122°35′57″W
79 Spies–Robinson House
Spies–Robinson House
June 13, 1997
(#97000583)
2424 NE 17th Avenue
45°32′24″N 122°38′53″W
80 Tannler–Armstrong House
Tannler–Armstrong House
September 6, 2002
(#02000948)
4420 NE Alameda Street
45°32′36″N 122°37′05″W
81 Thompson Court Apartments
Thompson Court Apartments
February 21, 1997
(#97000121)
2304–2314 NE 11th Avenue
45°32′21″N 122°39′15″W
82 Fred Tunturi House
Fred Tunturi House
October 3, 1996
(#96001072)
5115 NE Garfield Avenue
45°33′36″N 122°39′47″W
83 Frederick Turner Fourplex
Frederick Turner Fourplex
March 5, 1992
(#92000135)
1430 NE 22nd Avenue
45°32′00″N 122°38′34″W
84 Lewis and Elizabeth Van Vleet House
Lewis and Elizabeth Van Vleet House
September 3, 2001
(#01000937)
202 NE Graham Street
45°32′33″N 122°39′48″W
85 Louis and Elizabeth Woerner House
Louis and Elizabeth Woerner House
June 1, 2005
(#05000516)
2815 NE Alameda Street
45°33′02″N 122°38′16″W
Arts and Crafts. Woerner House (1922)[27]
86 Zimmerman–Rudeen House
Zimmerman–Rudeen House
June 19, 1991
(#91000811)
3425 NE Beakey Street
45°32′51″N 122°37′42″W
Prairie School house (1913) designed by George A. Eastman.[28]

Former listings

[5] Name on the Register Image Date listedDate removed Location Summary
1 Charles Looff 20-Sweep Menagerie Carousel 1987
(#87001379)
May 27, 1998 NE Holladay Street at NE 8th Avenue
45°31′47″N 122°39′27″W
Now located in San Diego, California
2 Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children
Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children
October 30, 1989
(#89001869)
June 8, 2011 8200 NE Sandy Boulevard
45°33′09″N 122°34′43″W
Building deconstructed in 2004, site redeveloped as Columbia Knoll housing complex.[29]
3 Trinity Lutheran Church and School
Trinity Lutheran Church and School
May 7, 1980
(#80003377)
January 4, 2008 106 NE Ivy Street
45°32′50″N 122°39′50″W
Destroyed by fire.

See also

Notes

  1. The Ankeny Car Barns occupied several lots around the intersection of Burnside Street and 28th Avenue. Bay E was part of the western portion of the complex. Seven other barn complexes were located in different parts of Portland.

References

  1. Andrus, Patrick W.; Shrimpton, Rebecca H.; et al. (2002), How to Apply the National Register Criteria for Evaluation, National Register Bulletin, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, OCLC 39493977, archived from the original on April 6, 2014, retrieved June 20, 2014.
  2. National Park Service, National Register of Historic Places Program: Research, archived from the original on February 1, 2015, retrieved January 28, 2015.
  3. Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, Oregon Historic Sites Database, retrieved August 6, 2015. Note that a simple count of National Register records in this database returns a slightly higher total than actual listings, due to duplicate records. A close reading of detailed query results is necessary to arrive at the precise count.
  4. "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on January 29, 2021.
  5. 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.
  6. 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.
  7. Roos, Roy E. (February 1999), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Abraham, Simon, Duplex (PDF), retrieved October 6, 2013.
  8. Carlson, Carin (August 15, 2016), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Alco Apartments.
  9. Roos, Roy E. (June 7, 1999), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Armbruster, Frederick, Cottage (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on February 28, 2017, retrieved July 23, 2019.
  10. McFeeters-Krone, Amy; Roos, Roy E. (February 26, 2002), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Armstrong, Alfred J. and Georgia A., House (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on February 7, 2017, retrieved July 23, 2019.
  11. McMath, George A. (August 1, 1991), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Autzen, Thomas J., House (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on February 8, 2017, retrieved April 5, 2020.
  12. Willingham, William F. (July 19, 2018). "Autzen House". The Oregon Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on December 9, 2019. Retrieved April 6, 2020.
  13. Tess, John M. (March 31, 1983), National Register of Historic Places Inventory — Nomination Form: Barnes, Frank C., House (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on February 25, 2017, retrieved April 7, 2020.
  14. Roos, Roy E. (November 17, 1996), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Barnhart - Wright House (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on February 25, 2017, retrieved April 9, 2020.
  15. Staehli, Alfred M. (March 2, 1978), National Register of Historic Places Inventory — Nomination Form: Bay E, West Ankeny Car Barns (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on February 18, 2017, retrieved April 14, 2020.
  16. McFeeters-Krone, Amy (July 20, 2003), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Boschke-Boyd House (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on February 17, 2017, retrieved April 15, 2020.
  17. Provost, Elizabeth; Line, William (February 2011), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Bowers, George W. and Hetty A., House (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on July 28, 2019, retrieved July 27, 2019.
  18. Morrison, Jane (December 15, 1988), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Bowman, F. E., Apartments (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on March 2, 2017, retrieved August 9, 2019.
  19. McFeeters-Krone, Amy (July 1, 2007), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Bowman, John and Ellen, House (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on April 18, 2020, retrieved April 17, 2020.
  20. Demuth, Kimberly; Lakin, Kimberly; Sackett, Patricia (March 14, 1990), National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form: Architecture of Ellis F. Lawrence Multiple Property Submission (PDF), archived from the original on April 20, 2020, retrieved April 18, 2020.
  21. Gomez-Burgess, Louise (June 1998), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Bramhall, Jennie, House (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on March 1, 2017, retrieved April 20, 2020.
  22. Young, Morgen (June 28, 2011), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Brick House Beautiful (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on April 21, 2020, retrieved April 21, 2020.
  23. National Park Service (October 29, 2010). "Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 10/18/10 through 10/22/10". Retrieved October 29, 2010.
  24. Roos, Roy E. (February 20, 2002), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: H. C. Keck House/Mt. Olivet Parsonage (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on October 12, 2019, retrieved October 12, 2019.
  25. Roos, Roy E. (January 30, 2009), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Keller, Edward H. and Bertha R., House (PDF), retrieved December 6, 2014.
  26. Tess, John M. (July 1, 2011), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Powers, Ira F., Warehouse and Factory (PDF), retrieved January 6, 2015.
  27. Archived 2016-10-06 at the Wayback Machine National Register Nomination Form, Woerner House. Matthew J. Hayes
  28. "Zimmerman-Rudeen House". Building Oregon: Architecture of Oregon and the Pacific Northwest. University of Oregon. Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved May 27, 2008.
  29. Riegel, Rich (June 2, 2004). "DeConstruction Services goes to work". Daily Journal of Commerce. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
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