National Register of Historic Places listings in Rock County, Wisconsin
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Rock County, Wisconsin. It is intended to provide a comprehensive listing of entries in the National Register of Historic Places that are located in Rock County, Wisconsin. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below may be seen in a map.[1]
There are 139 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county. Another seven properties were once listed but have been removed.
- This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted January 29, 2021.[2]
Current listings
[3] | Name on the Register[4] | Image | Date listed[5] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | John Alexander Wheat Warehouse | September 13, 1978 (#78003383) |
304 S. Janesville St. 42°46′29″N 88°56′11″W |
Milton | Italianate-styled warehouse with poured grout walls a foot thick, built about 1850 when wheat was king. Later a blacksmith shop, a filling station, and an apple warehouse.[6][7] | |
2 | Abram Allen House | September 13, 1978 (#78003386) |
205 E. Madison Ave. 42°46′45″N 88°56′54″W |
Milton | 1853 house with grout walls and Greek Revival styling, built by Allen, an early settler. | |
3 | The Armory | November 21, 1978 (#78000130) |
10 S. High St. 42°40′49″N 89°01′40″W |
Janesville | 1930 armory designed by Lt. Colonel Henry C. Hengles in Spanish Revival style, with walls of colored brick and tile roof. Originally housed the 32nd Tank Company of the Wisconsin National Guard, which helped defend Bataan in 1941-42 and endured the Bataan Death March. Nearly two thirds did not return.[8][9] | |
4 | Bartlett Memorial Historical Museum | April 11, 1977 (#77000048) |
2149 St. Lawrence Ave. 42°30′15″N 89°04′10″W |
Beloit | Greek Revival/Italianate-styled limestone house built around 1857,[10] with barn[11] and smokehouse.[12] Builder James Hanchett built dams, including several on the Rock River. John and Lillie Herrick bought it in 1901, and three of John's sisters became MDs - early for women. Now a museum.[13] | |
5 | Beloit Power Plant | July 31, 2017 (#100001404) |
850 Pleasant St. 42°30′23″N 89°01′56″W |
Beloit | Coal-fired, steam turbine power plant, built on the Rock River in 1907 and expanded many times after. Consists of the powerhouse and the crusher house.[14] | |
6 | Beloit Water Tower | January 7, 1983 (#83003410) |
1005 Pleasant St. 42°30′33″N 89°01′49″W |
Beloit | 36-foot octagonal, stepped limestone tower which supported a 20-foot tall cypress water tank, completed in 1889. Built by a private consortium, largely for fire protection. | |
7 | Benton Avenue Historic District | March 7, 1996 (#96000251) |
Roughly bounded by Benton Ave., Milton Ave., Sherman Ave., Richardson St., Blaine Ave. and Prairie Ave. 42°41′48″N 89°00′48″W |
Janesville | Neighborhood of modest homes (mostly bungalows) built on small lots in 1919 and 1920 by developer Matteson and Landstrom of Chicago, probably aiming to sell them to workers from Samson Tractor. Good examples are the 1-story front-gabled bungalow at 821 Blaine St.[15] the 1-story side-gabled Sullivan bungalow at 808 Benton,[16] the 1.5-story bungalow at 875 Sherman,[17] and the American Foursquare Ocheltree house at 938 Benton.[18][19] | |
8 | Selvy Blodgett House | May 23, 1980 (#80000183) |
417 Bluff St. 42°29′59″N 89°02′29″W |
Beloit | 1.5-story house built 1847-1850, with thick limestone walls and Greek Revival styling. New Yorker Selvy was a son of Caleb Blodget, first permanent settler of Beloit, and he and his son later owned the Blodgett (flour) Milling Co.[20][21] | |
9 | Bluff Street Historic District | January 7, 1983 (#83003411) |
Roughly both sides of Bluff St. from Shirland Ave. to Merrill St. 42°30′04″N 89°02′30″W |
Beloit | Neighborhood of houses and churches near the industrial area along the Rock River, including the 1848 Lathrop-Munn cobblestone house,[22] the late-1840s Selvy-Blodgett house,[20] the 1858 Italianate-style Parker house,[23] the 1877 Gothic Revival-styled Norwegian Lutheran Church,[24] the 1889 Queen Anne/Stick-style Anderson house (pictured),[25] the 1890 Queen Anne-styled Aldrich house,[26] and the 1909 Queen Anne/Tudor Revival Evans house.[27][28] | |
10 | Bostwick Avenue Historic District | April 24, 2006 (#06000321) |
404-436 Bostwick Ave. and 1118 and 1128 Grace St. 42°40′56″N 89°00′37″W |
Janesville | Small group of period revival houses built after WWI as Janesville industrialized, including the 1922 Dutch Colonial Revival Slawson house,[29] the 1928 Tudor Revival Pember house,[30] the 1929 Colonial Revival Grubb house,[31] the 1933 Colonial Revival Conrad house (pictured),[32] the 1937 Cape Cod-style Bogardus house,[33] and the 1940 Tudor Revival Tait house.[34][35] | |
11 | Brasstown Cottage | March 4, 1983 (#83003412) |
1701 Colley Rd. 42°30′26″N 89°00′53″W |
Beloit | Worker's cottage, but with Stick style bargeboards, bay, porch and lattice typical of a larger, more expensive home. This is the best-preserved survivor of many such cottages that were built here in the late 1800s near the Union Brass factory.[36][37] | |
12 | Church of St. Thomas the Apostle | January 7, 1983 (#83003413) |
822 E. Grand Ave. 42°29′58″N 89°01′41″W |
Beloit | 1885 brick church with Gothic-style details and Stick style porches. Home of Beloit's oldest Catholic parish, with roots back to 1846. | |
13 | Citizens Bank | August 1, 1985 (#85001661) |
Front & Allen Sts. 42°33′12″N 88°51′46″W |
Clinton | 1882 red brick Italianate-styled building with chamfered corner, segmental-arched windows, and bracketed cornice. With street-level corner bays clad in Neoclassical-style grey stone.[38][39] | |
14 | City of Beloit Waterworks and Pump Station | September 13, 1990 (#90001460) |
1005 Pleasant St. 42°30′32″N 89°01′51″W |
Beloit | 1885 building constructed by a private company to pump water into the old tower up the hill and into the mains to supply high pressure at the fire hydrants. Also a concrete reservoir and a 1927 metal water tower and pump shed. | |
15 | Clark-Brown House | September 13, 1985 (#85002126) |
3457 Riverside Dr. 42°33′45″N 89°02′06″W |
Beloit | Greek Revival-style house built in 1847, with corner quoins, cornice returns, and most notably, a veneer of fine cobblestone.[40][41] | |
16 | Clinton Village Hall | August 1, 1985 (#85001660) |
301 Cross St. 42°33′18″N 88°51′42″W |
Clinton | 2-story dark brick Gothic Revival-style municipal building with square central tower, built in 1913 to house Clinton's city offices, fire department, and library.[42][43] | |
17 | Clinton Water Tower | March 7, 1985 (#85000493) |
High St. 42°33′39″N 88°51′48″W |
Clinton | 59-foot standpipe on the highest point in Clinton, built of limestone by mason Jacob Miller in 1895. Originally supported a large wooden water tank, which was replaced in 1929 by a metal tank.[44][45] | |
18 | Columbus Circle Historic District | May 19, 2005 (#05000453) |
Columbus Circle generally bounded by N. Adams and E. Milwaukee Sts. and N. Garfield Ave. 42°41′24″N 89°00′38″W |
Janesville | Modest residential neighborhood developed from the mid-1920s to 1943, including the 1927 Dutch Colonial Revival Taylor house,[46] the 1927 Spanish Colonial Revival-influenced Haugan house,[47] the 1927 Mediterranean Revival Smiley house,[48] the 1928 Colonial Revival-style Curler house,[49] the 1928 Tudor Revival McWilliams House,[50] the 1930 French Provincial style Carpenter house,[51] and the 1942 Contemporary-style Jensen house.[52][53] | |
19 | Conrad Cottages Historic District | March 11, 1993 (#93000157) |
235-330 Milton Ave. 42°41′12″N 89°01′03″W |
Janesville | Small group of intact homes, consisting of the 1845 Greek Revival-style Taylor house,[54] the 1855 Gothic Revival-influenced Meyher house,[55] the 1870 Second Empire-style Jenkins house,[56] and the four Conrad cottages. These cottages are similar, cream brick Italianate-style houses built by local grocer Charles B. Conrad in 1882 as early tract housing.[57][58] | |
20 | Cooksville Cheese Factory | September 17, 1980 (#80000395) |
SR 1 42°50′06″N 89°14′36″W |
Evansville | Cheese factory built in 1875 by a farmers' co-op. Served as a social center too until closed in 1884. | |
21 | Cooksville Historic District | October 25, 1973 (#73000254) |
Both sides of streets bordering the Public Sq. and Rock St. 42°50′08″N 89°14′19″W |
Cooksville | Village built around a public square, resembling the New England villages where many of the settlers had roots. Includes the 1842 frame John Cook house,[59] 1846-48 Greek Revival style Lovejoy-Duncan house,[60] the 1840s Cooksville General Store,[61] the ca. 1847 Gothic Revival Backenstoe-Howard house,[62] the 1851 frame Cure-Van Vleck house,[63] the 1852 Gothic Revival Hoxie house,[64] the 1879 Congregational Church,[65] the 1886 Cooksville school,[66] and the 1896 Norwegian Lutheran Church.[67] The village largely stopped changing in 1857 when the railroad bypassed it.[68] | |
22 | Cooksville Mill and Mill Pond Site | September 17, 1980 (#80000394) |
SR 1 42°50′19″N 89°14′32″W |
Evansville | Site on Badfish Creek where John Cook built his sawmill in 1842 and followers built a gristmill in 1847. Derelict by the 1890s. Foundations and an earth embankment remain.[69] | |
23 | Cooper-Gillies House | September 17, 1980 (#80000397) |
SR 1 42°50′03″N 89°15′17″W |
Evansville | 4-bay brick Greek Revival-styled house built in the early 1850s by Mathew Cooper on a ridge overlooking Cooksville. Bought by David Gillies in 1862.[70][71] | |
24 | Courier Building | August 24, 2015 (#15000552) |
513 Vernal Ave. 42°46′50″N 88°57′47″W |
Milton | 2-story Italianate-styled paint store built in 1887, then taken over in 1907 by The Weekly Telephone, a predecessor of the Milton Courier, which remains in the building.[72] | |
25 | Court Street Methodist Church | November 17, 1977 (#77000045) |
36 S. Main St. 42°40′55″N 89°01′17″W |
Janesville | A Methodist congregation built this dignified, but un-churchy-looking Second Empire-styled building in 1868, with store space at street-level and the sanctuary above. Bought by a Masonic Order in 1905 and converted for use as their temple, which lasted until 1965. | |
26 | Courthouse Hill Historic District | January 17, 1986 (#86000205) |
Roughly bounded by E. Milwaukee St., Garfield and Oakland Aves., S. Main St., and E. Court St. and Milton Ave. 42°41′00″N 89°00′58″W |
Janesville | A 30-block area on the east side containing many upscale homes of Janesville's influential leaders, ranging from the mid-1850s Greek Revival-style Abel Jones house to the 1929 Georgian Revival-style Wheeler house. | |
27 | J. W. Crist House | January 7, 1983 (#83003414) |
2601 Afton Rd. 42°32′26″N 89°03′04″W |
Beloit | Brick-clad Queen Anne-style house with octagonal corner tower, built in 1904 as a farmhouse at what was then the edge of Beloit by J.W. Crist, who had succeeded in the Klondike gold rush.[73][74] | |
28 | Crosby Block | August 1, 1985 (#85001658) |
102 Allen St. 42°33′12″N 88°51′46″W |
Clinton | Simple Italianate-styled commercial building with cream brick exterior and brick hood moulds over the windows, built in 1870.[75][76] | |
29 | James B. Crosby House | December 14, 1995 (#95001454) |
1005 Sutherland Ave. 42°41′41″N 89°01′27″W |
Janesville | Italianate-styled house with belvedere, built in 1854 for the cashier of the Rock County National Bank. In 1878 the house became Janesville's first hospital. | |
30 | Charles L. Culton House | August 22, 1977 (#77000046) |
708 Washington St. 42°50′19″N 89°04′34″W |
Edgerton | Large home designed by Frank H. Kemp and built in 1902 with the asymmetry and corner towers of Queen Anne style and stucco, bargeboards, and flared eaves perhaps drawn from Chateauesque style. Built for tobacco-magnate Culton.[77][78] | |
31 | De Jean House | September 13, 1978 (#78003388) |
27 Third St. 42°46′54″N 88°57′33″W |
Milton | Gabled ell house built of grout blocks in the 1860s.[79][80] | |
32 | Erastus Dean Farmstead | December 4, 1978 (#78000131) |
E of Janesville on U.S. 14 42°39′20″N 88°52′50″W |
Janesville | Probably the oldest complex of farm buildings in Rock County, begun in 1840 by the first settler in Bradford township on land he bought from the government for $1.25 per acre. | |
33 | Homer B. DeLong House | August 1, 1985 (#85001659) |
500 Milwaukee Rd. 42°33′29″N 88°51′51″W |
Clinton | Intact Italianate-style house built in 1869 with brick walls, Roman-arched openings, bracketed cornice and a hip roof, with the original veranda.[81][82] | |
34 | John T. Dow House | September 17, 1980 (#80000396) |
SR 1 42°50′05″N 89°14′49″W |
Evansville | Brick Greek Revival-styled house built in early 1850s, probably by Chambers and Lovejoy, with elliptical attic fanlight. Dow was a farmer and state legislator.[83][84] | |
35 | Eager Free Public Library | August 16, 1977 (#77000047) |
39 W. Main St. 42°46′48″N 89°18′03″W |
Evansville | Prairie Style library designed by Claude and Starck and built in 1908, with a brick body, a terra cotta frieze, and a broad hip roof clad in red tile. Named for Almeron Eager, the merchant and tobacco dealer who willed $10,000 for the public library building.[85][86] | |
36 | Almeron Eager Funerary Monument and Plot | July 20, 2011 (#11000477) |
8012 N. Cemetery Rd. 42°46′59″N 89°17′21″W |
Evansville | Eager was a businessman and philanthropist who died in 1902, leaving funds designated to build this monument at his family plot. It was built in 1904, with its primary feature the 20-foot granite pedestal holding a sculpted woman with her hand resting on an anchor - a symbol of hope.[87][88] | |
37 | East Milwaukee Street Historic District | February 8, 1980 (#80000184) |
N. Parker Dr. and E. Milwaukee St. 42°41′01″N 89°01′18″W |
Janesville | Remnants of a historic commercial district east of the Rock River, including the 1885 Italianate-styled Hodge and Bucholz Carriage Works,[89] the 1893 Queen Anne-style London hotel,[90] the Merchants Hotel which was built in the 1850s and remodeled in the 1890s,[91] the Peters Block which was begun in 1849 and remodeled to Prairie Style in 1913,[92] and the 1915 Kronitz Meat Market.[93][94] | |
38 | Edgerton Depot | April 13, 1998 (#98000283) |
20 S. Main St. 42°50′00″N 89°04′13″W |
Edgerton | Small-town depot of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad built 1906-07 at the height of the area's tobacco trade from a design by C.F. Loweth, joining a Prairie School roof with Neoclassical columns and quoins. | |
39 | Edgerton Post Office | October 24, 2000 (#00001239) |
104 N. Swift St. 42°50′08″N 89°04′16″W |
Edgerton | Georgian Revival-styled post office with cupola, built in 1939 with support from the PWA. Inside is the original terrazzo floor, marble wainscot, and a mural Tobacco Harvest painted by Vladimir Rousseff in 1941.[95][96] | |
40 | Edgerton Public Grade Schools | January 14, 1987 (#86003568) |
116 N. Swift St. 42°50′09″N 89°04′11″W |
Edgerton | Two 2-story buildings, with walls of cream brick, flared hip roofs and cupolas. The first was designed by G.S. Schureman and built in 1892 for grades 1-12, originally flat-roofed. In 1903 Frank Kemp designed the second, and a matching hip roof was added to the 1892 building. Served students until 1979; now apartments.[97][98] | |
41 | Emerson Hall | September 20, 1979 (#79000109) |
Beloit College campus 42°30′26″N 89°01′43″W |
Beloit | 3.5-story women's dormitory designed by Patton & Fisher of Chicago in Jacobethan style and built 1897-1898, with shaped parapets and a 3-story bay that suggests a castle tower.[99][100] | |
42 | Evansville Historic District | November 16, 1978 (#78000132) |
roughly bounded by Allens Creek, Liberty, 4th and Garfield Sts. 42°46′46″N 89°18′10″W |
Evansville | Group of relatively intact historic buildings, including the 1856 Greek Revival-style Winston & Sons store,[101] the 1858 Greek Revival Quivey house,[102] the 1874 Second Empire style Beebe house,[103] the 1876 Boomtown-style Old Grange store,[104] the 1881 Queen Anne-style Campbell house,[105] the 1884 High Victorian Italianate Evans house,[106] the 1886 Stick style Pullen house, [107] and the 1903 Romanesque Revival-style First Baptist Church,[108] and the 1904 Neoclassical new Grange store.[109][110] | |
43 | Evansville Standpipe | February 27, 2008 (#08000120) |
288 N. 4th St. 42°47′05″N 89°18′47″W |
Evansville | 80-foot steel water tower built in 1901 by the Chicago Bridge & Iron Company, mainly for fire-fighting, but also to supply water to houses and businesses. | |
44 | Fairbanks Flats | January 7, 1983 (#83003416) |
205, 215 Birch Ave. and 206, 216 Carpenter Ave. 42°31′19″N 89°02′24″W |
Beloit | Apartment complex built in 1917 by Fairbanks Morse, the engine manufacturer and largest employer in Beloit, as segregated housing for black workers who were moving up from the South. The Flats became "the nucleus of Beloit's twentieth century black community."[111] | |
45 | First Congregational Church | January 23, 1975 (#75000078) |
801 Bushnell St. 42°30′06″N 89°01′40″W |
Beloit | Congregational church built in 1859 to a design by Lucas Bradley, blending Greek Revival and Romanesque Revival styles. Destroyed by fire in 1998. | |
46 | Footville Condensery | May 7, 1982 (#82000704) |
Beloit St. 42°40′00″N 89°12′27″W |
Footville | Processing plant where milk was condensed, built in 1912. Before Footville had public water or electricity, this plant provided water for local events, and electricity in 1919.[112][113] | |
47 | Footville State Bank | May 7, 1982 (#82000705) |
158 Depot St. 42°40′11″N 89°12′40″W |
Footville | Small Neoclassical-styled red brick building with a flat tin roof, designed by Meggot and Law and built in 1909. The bank played an important part in financing farms and stores in the village.[114][115] | |
48 | Fredendall Block | March 25, 1982 (#82000706) |
33-39 S. Main St. 42°40′56″N 89°01′17″W |
Janesville | 3-story Italianate-styled commercial block designed by George F. Schulze and built 1868-69, with the original storefronts intact on the south half. The block originally had stores at street level and apartments above.[116][117] | |
49 | Fulton Congregational Church | June 7, 1976 (#76000077) |
Fulton St. 42°48′21″N 89°07′44″W |
Fulton | Early brick church built in 1858, in Greek Revival style. | |
50 | Fulton Street Historic District | July 1, 1999 (#99000788) |
Along Fulton St., roughly bounded by Main and Albion Sts.; 11-21 Swift St. 42°50′03″N 89°04′13″W |
Edgerton | Remnants of the old downtown of Edgerton, including the ca. 1860 Bentley Dry Goods store,[118] the 1885 Commercial Hotel,[119] the mid-1880s Red Front Grocery Store,[120] the late-1880s Strucker and Mays Grocery store,[121] the 1890 Tobacco Exchange Bank,[122] the 1916 Spike Brothers Livery, and the ca. 1916 Joe Leary Cigar Store-Badger Lunch-Atwell and Dallman Drugs building.[123][124] | |
51 | Gempeler Round Barn | June 4, 1979 (#79000110) |
SW of Orfordville 42°39′50″N 89°19′50″W |
Orfordville | Round dairy barn built in 1912 for Chris Gempeler, using a massive oak trunk as the central support for the haymow floor. | |
52 | Gifford House | September 13, 1978 (#78003387) |
308 Vernal 42°46′51″N 88°57′36″W |
Milton | Dignified home built with walls of grout block in the 1860s, probably by masons A. Sowles and/or Frank Smalley.[125][126] | |
53 | Gilley-Tofsland Octagonal Barn | June 4, 1979 (#79000111) |
NW of Edgerton 42°50′40″N 89°10′30″W |
Edgerton | Octagonal dairy barn built into a hillside, with concrete block basement walls, wooden upper walls, and a concrete-block silo on the middle. Built in 1913 by John Almond for Will and Flora Gilley and their herd of Guernseys.[127] | |
54 | Goodrich Blacksmith Shop | September 13, 1978 (#78003382) |
28 S. Janesville St. 42°46′34″N 88°56′10″W |
Milton | Simple 1-story blacksmith shop with grout walls and a pyramidal roof, just south of the Milton House, built in 1844 by Joseph Goodrich, probably right before he built the Milton House.[128][129] | |
55 | Goodrich-Buten House | September 13, 1978 (#78003385) |
528 E. Madison St. 42°46′38″N 88°56′22″W |
Milton | 1.5-story grout house with frieze windows under the eaves and a hip-roofed front porch supported by columns. Built 1850, probably by Joseph Goodrich.[130][131] | |
56 | Ezra and Elizabeth Goodrich House | July 14, 2015 (#15000425) |
742 E. Madison Ave. 42°46′38″N 88°56′17″W |
Milton | 3-story cream brick Italianate-styled house designed by Ezra himself, placing oculus windows right below the eaves, built in 1867. Ezra was the son of Joseph.[132][133] | |
57 | William H. and Edith Gray Farmstead | June 30, 2015 (#15000377) |
313 E. High St. 42°46′23″N 88°56′46″W |
Milton | Then-progressive farm built by an experienced farmer during the industrial dairy era,[134] including the 1911 Queen Anne/Colonial Revival-style house,[135] a 1911 Wisconsin Dairy Barn,[136] a 1911 poured concrete silo,[137] and miscellaneous outbuildings. | |
58 | Reynolds and Lois Greenman House | August 23, 2016 (#16000567) |
12 Merchant Row 42°46′59″N 88°57′44″W |
Milton | Italianate-style house with bracketed eaves and cupola, built in 1866 to showcase the products of Greenman's lumber yard. Greenman later co-owned the Milton Junction News and served on various local boards.[138] | |
59 | Grove Street Historic District | August 10, 2011 (#11000531) |
103, 111, 112, 116, 119, 125, 126, 133 & 134 Grove St. 42°47′00″N 89°18′08″W |
Evansville | Concentration of nine quality historic homes in various architectural styles, built from 1910 to 1946 near Leonard/Lake Leota Park.[139] | |
60 | Hanchett Block | March 20, 1980 (#80000185) |
307 State St. 42°29′56″N 89°02′08″W |
Beloit | 4-story Victorian structure built in 1856 by James Hanchett, with stores below and an auditorium in the top two stories. Lincoln spoke in the auditorium during his Presidential campaign in 1859. It was also a Republican meeting place and the site where the Beloit Guards enlisted in the Civil War, in 1861. The facade was extensively remodeled between 1893 and 1904.[140][141] | |
61 | Haven-Crandall House | August 29, 2016 (#16000575) |
220 S. Janesville St. 42°46′29″N 88°56′12″W |
Milton | Elegant brick Italianate-styled house built in 1872 by H.M. Haven. Later home to Albert Crandall, professor of natural history at Milton College. His daughter Alberta was a music prof at Milton and gave piano lessons in the house until 1970.[142] | |
62 | Hilton House Hotel | November 7, 2003 (#03001128) |
434 E. Grand Ave. 42°29′58″N 89°02′02″W |
Beloit | 3-story hotel with U-shaped footprint designed in Neoclassical style by Frost and Granger and built in 1904. It featured fireproof construction, some rooms with private baths, a dining room, and saloon. Hosted William Jennings Bryan and JFK.[143][144] No longer standing. | |
63 | How-Beckman Mill | September 7, 1977 (#77000049) |
11600 County Highway H 42°30′38″N 89°10′12″W |
Beloit | 3-story timber-framed mill built in 1858 by Charles Goodhue. Later run as a flouring mill by William How and Catherine Beckman until 1954.[145] | |
64 | John and Martha Hugunin House | June 1, 2005 (#05000534) |
2739 Beloit Ave. 42°38′23″N 89°00′40″W |
Janesville | High style cream brick Italianate farmhouse built in 1875, with a simpler 1868 frame farmhouse attached behind. The Hugunins were farmers who came from New York around 1850 and succeeded at growing wheat on the Rock Prairie.[146][147] | |
65 | Janesville Cotton Mill | July 16, 1980 (#80000186) |
220 N. Franklin St. 42°41′02″N 89°01′39″W |
Janesville | Cream brick factory complex begun in 1874, with 3-story main block and 5-story central tower which held a freight elevator. Housed 400 looms powered by water from the Rock River on which German and Irish women and girls wove cotton shipped up from the South.[148][149] | |
66 | Janesville High School | June 25, 1999 (#99000760) |
408 S. Main St. 42°40′40″N 89°01′02″W |
Janesville | 3-story brown brick school designed in Collegiate Gothic style by Van Ryn & DeGelleke and built 1921-23 - modern for its day, with an auditorium and swimming pool. Later served as Marshall Junior High School.[150][151] | |
67 | Janesville Public Library | July 1, 1981 (#81000057) |
64 S. Main St. 42°40′53″N 89°01′15″W |
Janesville | Carnegie library designed in Neoclassical style by J.T.W. Jennings and built in 1902-03, with its children's room funded by local businessman F.S. Eldred in memory of his daughter. | |
68 | Janesville Pumping Station | March 7, 1985 (#85000494) |
500 Blk. River St. 42°40′48″N 89°01′22″W |
Janesville | Red brick Queen Anne-styled structure, with its oldest section designed by Ernest Boynton and built in 1887 as part of Janesville's early waterworks. Additions followed in 1915, 1918, 1921 & 1930.[152] | |
69 | Jefferson Avenue Historic District | April 19, 2006 (#06000300) |
Bounded by Oakland, Garfield and Ruger Aves. and Forest Park Blvd. 42°41′10″N 89°00′40″W |
Janesville | Neighborhood of middle-class and upper-middle-class homes built from 1891 to the 1930s in most of the styles of that period. | |
70 | John H. Jones House | March 14, 2008 (#08000186) |
538 S. Main St. 42°40′36″N 89°00′56″W |
Janesville | Exuberant Queen-Anne-style house built in 1890 for merchant Jones, with carriage house behind. | |
71 | Samuel S. Jones Cobblestone House | February 23, 1978 (#78000133) |
E of Clinton on Milwaukee Rd. 42°33′57″N 88°49′02″W |
Clinton | Large Greek Revival-style farmhouse clad in cobblestone, built in the late 1840s. | |
72 | Kinney Farmstead-Tay-e-he-Dah Site | February 17, 1978 (#78000134) |
1612 E. Hotel Dr. 42°50′32″N 89°00′17″W |
Edgerton | Group of fourteen mounds on the shore of Lake Koshkonong.[153] | |
73 | Lappin-Hayes Block | November 7, 1976 (#76000224) |
20 E. Milwaukee St. 42°40′58″N 89°01′21″W |
Janesville | ||
74 | LaPrairie Grange Hall No. 79 | April 11, 1977 (#77000050) |
SE of Janesville on Town Hall Rd. 42°37′37″N 88°57′12″W |
Janesville | ||
75 | Lathrop-Munn Cobblestone House | August 22, 1977 (#77000051) |
524 Bluff St. 42°30′03″N 89°02′31″W |
Beloit | ||
76 | Leonard—Leota Park | September 4, 2012 (#12000610) |
20, 30, 40, 50, ca 60, 120, 121 Antes Dr., 321, 340, 359, 360, 363, 365, 395 Burr W. Jones Cir., Leonard Park Dr. 42°47′07″N 89°18′06″W |
Evansville | ||
77 | Look West Historic District | March 26, 1987 (#87000506) |
Roughly bounded by Mineral Point Ave., N. Franklin and Race Sts., Laurel Ave., and N. Chatham St. 42°41′03″N 89°02′00″W |
Janesville | Boundary increase (listed December 10, 1993): Roughly bounded by Laurel Ave. and N. Madison, W. Court and N. Palm Sts. | |
78 | Lovejoy and Merrill-Nowlan Houses | January 21, 1980 (#80000187) |
220 and 202 St. Lawrence Ave. 42°40′55″N 89°01′07″W |
Janesville | ||
79 | Masonic Temple | July 21, 2015 (#15000458) |
508 Vernal Ave. 42°46′51″N 88°57′47″W |
Milton | ||
80 | Peter McEwan Warehouse | September 13, 1978 (#78003384) |
711 E. High St. 42°46′22″N 88°56′19″W |
Milton | ||
81 | Merchant Row Historic District | August 3, 2015 (#15000504) |
212, 216, 218-220, 228-230 Merchant Row & 553, 537, 541 Vernal Ave. 42°46′54″N 88°57′48″W |
Milton | ||
82 | Merrill Avenue Historic District | February 19, 1993 (#93000028) |
103, 107, 111, 115 Merrill Ave. 42°30′34″N 89°02′13″W |
Beloit | ||
83 | Miller House | September 17, 1980 (#80000399) |
SR 1 42°49′40″N 89°14′25″W |
Evansville | ||
84 | Milton College Historic District | May 27, 1980 (#80000188) |
College St. 42°46′27″N 88°56′32″W |
Milton | ||
85 | Milton House | February 1, 1972 (#72000065) |
18 S. Janesville St. 42°46′37″N 88°56′11″W |
Milton | ||
86 | Moran's Saloon | January 7, 1983 (#83003417) |
312 State St. 42°29′57″N 89°02′09″W |
Beloit | ||
87 | Mouth of the Yahara Archeological District | April 28, 1975 (#75000079) |
Address Restricted |
Fulton | ||
88 | Murray-George House | September 13, 1985 (#85002125) |
SR P 42°30′33″N 88°56′18″W |
Beloit | ||
89 | Peter Myers Pork Packing Plant and Willard Coleman Building | July 7, 1983 (#83003418) |
117-123 N. Main St. 42°41′03″N 89°01′26″W |
Janesville | ||
90 | Myers-Newhoff House | May 18, 1979 (#79000277) |
121 N. Parker Dr. 42°41′05″N 89°01′22″W |
Janesville | ||
91 | Near East Side Historic District | January 7, 1983 (#83003419) |
Roughly bounded by Pleasant, Clary Sts., Wisconsin and E. Grand Aves. 42°30′10″N 89°01′40″W |
Beloit | ||
92 | Elbert Neese House | January 7, 1983 (#83003420) |
1302 Bushnell St 42°30′04″N 89°01′15″W |
Beloit | ||
93 | North Main Street Historic District | February 8, 1980 (#80000189) |
N. Main St. and N. Parker Dr. 42°41′02″N 89°01′23″W |
Janesville | ||
94 | Sterling North House | January 9, 1997 (#96001579) |
409 W. Rollin St. 42°50′14″N 89°04′04″W |
Edgerton | ||
95 | Clark Nye House | January 7, 1983 (#83003422) |
2501 Spring Creek Rd. 42°31′34″N 89°04′45″W |
Beloit | ||
96 | Old Fourth Ward Historic District | May 30, 1990 (#90000789) |
Roughly bounded by Washington St., Center Ave., Court St., Franklin St., and Monterey Park 42°40′24″N 89°01′45″W |
Janesville | ||
97 | Orfordville Depot | October 13, 1988 (#88002004) |
Beloit St. 42°37′41″N 89°15′22″W |
Orfordville | ||
98 | John and Margaret Owen House | August 23, 2016 (#16000568) |
33 2nd St. 42°46′54″N 88°57′38″W |
Milton | ||
99 | William J. Owen Store | May 7, 1982 (#82000707) |
220 Depot St. 42°40′11″N 89°12′40″W |
Footville | ||
100 | J. L. Pangborn House | August 1, 1985 (#85001664) |
300 Allen St. 42°33′20″N 88°51′47″W |
Clinton | ||
101 | Parkview Historic District | August 3, 2015 (#15000505) |
644-655 College St. & 247-319 Parkview Dr. 42°46′27″N 88°56′22″W |
Milton | ||
102 | Payne-Craig House | July 2, 1987 (#87000990) |
2200 W. Memorial Dr. 42°41′44″N 89°02′52″W |
Janesville | ||
103 | Pearsons Hall of Science | June 30, 1980 (#80000190) |
Beloit College campus 42°30′13″N 89°01′53″W |
Beloit | ||
104 | Pomeroy and Pelton Tobacco Warehouse | July 9, 1998 (#98000848) |
1 W. Fulton St. 42°50′00″N 89°04′10″W |
Edgerton | Also known as Dickinson Tobacco Warehouse | |
105 | J. K. Porter Farmstead | September 17, 1980 (#80000400) |
SR 1 42°50′09″N 89°13′35″W |
Evansville | ||
106 | Prospect Hill Historic District | November 5, 1992 (#92001558) |
Roughly bounded by Eisenhower, Prospect and Atwood Aves., Milwaukee St., Parker Dr. and Centerway 42°41′10″N 89°01′16″W |
Janesville | ||
107 | Brewster Randall House | March 1, 1984 (#84003782) |
1412 Ruger Ave. 42°41′10″N 89°00′19″W |
Janesville | ||
108 | Rasey House | December 27, 1974 (#74000123) |
517 Prospect St. 42°30′05″N 89°01′50″W |
Beloit | ||
109 | Charles Rau House | January 7, 1983 (#83003423) |
757 Euclid Ave. 42°30′01″N 89°02′56″W |
Beloit | ||
110 | Richardson Grout House | September 17, 1980 (#80000402) |
SR 1 42°49′06″N 89°12′41″W |
Evansville | ||
111 | Hamilton Richardson House | July 17, 1978 (#78000135) |
429 Prospect Ave. 42°41′14″N 89°01′13″W |
Janesville | ||
112 | Richardson-Brinkman Cobblestone House | July 28, 1977 (#77000052) |
607 W. Milwaukee Rd. 42°33′27″N 88°51′58″W |
Clinton | ||
113 | Rindfleisch Building | January 7, 1983 (#83003424) |
512 E. Grand Ave. 42°29′58″N 89°02′00″W |
Beloit | ||
114 | Risum Round Barn | June 4, 1979 (#79000112) |
Southwest of Orfordville 42°35′55″N 89°17′35″W |
Orfordville | ||
115 | John C. and Mary Robinson Farmstead | January 7, 2010 (#09001221) |
18002 W. County Trunk Highway C 42°47′14″N 89°21′26″W |
Union | ||
116 | St. John's Lutheran Church | August 14, 2012 (#12000521) |
312 S. 3rd St. 42°46′34″N 89°18′21″W |
Evansville | ||
117 | Seventh Day Baptist Church | August 22, 2016 (#16000569) |
720 E. Madison Ave. 42°46′37″N 88°56′15″W |
Milton | ||
118 | Shopiere Congregational Church | August 13, 1976 (#76000078) |
Buss Rd., near Shopiere Rd. 42°34′14″N 88°56′17″W |
Shopiere | Congregational church built starting in 1850, with its limestone main block in Greek Revival style and the New England-styled tower and steeple added later. | |
119 | Stephen Slaymaker House | January 7, 1983 (#83003425) |
348 Euclid Ave. 42°29′59″N 89°02′32″W |
Beloit | ||
120 | Samuel Smiley House | October 21, 1982 (#82001849) |
SE of Orfordville on WI 213 42°35′59″N 89°12′25″W |
Orfordville | ||
121 | John Smith House | August 1, 1985 (#85001663) |
312 Pleasant St. 42°33′24″N 88°52′04″W |
Clinton | ||
122 | South First Street Residential Historic District | August 10, 2011 (#11000532) |
341, 348, 349, 402, 408, 409, 412, 419, 433, 439 & 443, S. 1st St. 42°46′29″N 89°18′03″W |
Evansville | NRHP # 11000532 | |
123 | South Main Street Historic District | June 1, 1990 (#90000820) |
Roughly S. Main St. from Milwaukee St. to Rock Co. Courthouse grounds and E. Court St. from Parker Dr. to Rock R. 42°40′55″N 89°01′17″W |
Janesville | ||
124 | St. Paul's Episcopal Church | April 4, 1978 (#78000136) |
212 W. Grand Ave. 42°30′05″N 89°02′22″W |
Beloit | ||
125 | Stark-Clint House | September 13, 1985 (#85002124) |
Creek Rd. 42°35′04″N 88°55′32″W |
Tiffany | ||
126 | Harrison Stebbins House | September 17, 1980 (#80000401) |
SR 1 42°49′36″N 89°12′55″W |
Evansville | Demolished in 2013[154] | |
127 | Soloman J. Strang House | May 7, 1982 (#82000708) |
231 North Gilbert 42°40′25″N 89°12′32″W |
Footville | ||
128 | Strong Building | January 7, 1983 (#83003426) |
400-408 E. Grand Ave. 42°29′58″N 89°02′07″W |
Beloit | ||
129 | Strong Partridge Mound Group | March 1, 1994 (#94000057) |
1750 Arrowhead Dr. 42°31′09″N 89°00′37″W |
Beloit | ||
130 | John and Eleanor Strunk House | March 11, 2008 (#08000184) |
2306 N. Parker Dr. 42°42′38″N 89°01′59″W |
Janesville | ||
131 | Tallman House | October 15, 1970 (#70000085) |
440 N. Jackson St. 42°41′10″N 89°01′53″W |
Janesville | ||
132 | A. E. Taylor House | August 1, 1985 (#85001662) |
318 Durand St. 42°33′25″N 88°51′51″W |
Clinton | ||
133 | Turtleville Iron Bridge | September 15, 1977 (#77000053) |
N of Beloit on Lathers Rd. 42°33′56″N 88°57′52″W |
Beloit | ||
134 | West Luther Valley Lutheran Church | May 27, 1980 (#80000191) |
SW of Orfordville on W. Church Rd. 42°36′26″N 89°19′35″W |
Orfordville | ||
135 | West Milwaukee Street Historic District | May 17, 1990 (#90000790) |
Roughly bounded by Wall, River, Court, and Academy Sts. 42°40′52″N 89°01′33″W |
Janesville | ||
136 | Whiton-Parker House | February 8, 2016 (#15001056) |
1000 E. Milwaukee St. 42°41′17″N 89°00′45″W |
Janesville | ||
137 | Frances Willard Schoolhouse | October 5, 1977 (#77000054) |
Craig Ave. 42°41′29″N 89°00′19″W |
Janesville | ||
138 | Wyman-Rye Farmstead | November 7, 1977 (#77000055) |
N of Clinton on Wyman-Rye Dr. 42°35′28″N 88°52′18″W |
Clinton | ||
139 | Florence Yates House | January 7, 1983 (#83003427) |
1614 Emerson St. 42°30′16″N 89°00′59″W |
Beloit |
Formerly listed
[3] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | City or town | Summary |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Belle Cottage | May 8, 1979 (#79000107) | May 18, 1987 | 1837 Center Ave. |
Janesville | Gothic revival-styled house clad in local cobblestones, built by George Josiah Kellog in 1854. A.k.a. Damrow House. Demolished February 27, 1987.[155] | |
2 | Carlton Hotel | October 3, 1988 (#88002173) | March 6, 1992 | 14 N. Henry St. |
Edgerton | 3-story German Renaissance Revival hotel designed by Frank H. Kemp and built in 1898. Destroyed by fire in 1991.[156] | |
3 | Dean-Armstrong-Englund Octagonal Barn | June 4, 1979 (#79003769) | March 30, 1984 | Milton | Built in 1893.[157]:3 | ||
4 | Dougan Round Barn | June 4, 1979 (#79000108) | January 30, 2014 | 444 West Colley Rd. |
Beloit | Demolished in 2012.[158] | |
5 | J.B. Dow House and Carpenter Douglas Barn | January 7, 1983 (#83003415) | May 12, 2009 | 910 Board St. |
Beloit | The Dow house was a mix of Colonial Revival and Queen Anne styles, built in 1905. Dow was a realtor, lawyer and insurance salesman. Damaged by fire September 1996, demolished.[159] The 1847 barn is clad in cobblestone with limestone quoins.[160] | |
6 | Elijah Goodrich Wheat Warehouse | 1978 (#78003389) | June 15, 1984 | 602 E. Madison St. |
Milton | ||
7 | Leedle Mill Truss Bridge | September 17, 1980 (#80000398) | January 9, 2013 | SR 1 42°50′37″N 89°15′09″W |
Evansville | ||
8 | Myers Opera House | 1977 (#77001583) | 1978 | 118 E. Milwaukee St. |
Janesville | Demolished in 1978. | |
9 | Wisconsin School for the Blind-Music Building | March 13, 1987 (#87000440) | February 17, 1989 | 1700 W. State St. |
Janesville | ||
10 | Wright-Amato House | Unknown (#71001095) | 1972 | 923 Mineral Point Ave. |
Janesville |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Rock County, Wisconsin. |
References
- The latitude and longitude information provided is primarily from the National Register Information System, and has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. For 1%, the location info may be way off. We seek to correct the coordinate information wherever it is found to be erroneous. Please leave a note in the Discussion page for this article if you believe any specific location is incorrect.
- "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on January 29, 2021.
- 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.
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 24, 2008.
- 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.
- "John Alexander Wheat Warehouse". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
- "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: John Alexander Wheat Warehouse". National Park Service. 1978-09-13. Retrieved 2017-11-18. With one photo.
- "The Armory (Janesville)". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1977-12-01). "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: The Armory". National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-11-18. With two photos.
- "James Hanchett-Bartlett-Farmstead". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-11-28.
- "Bartlett memorial Historical Museum - Limestone Barn". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-11-28.
- "Bartlett memorial Historical Museum - Limestone Smokehouse". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-11-28.
- Nancy Belle Douglas; Donald N. Anderson (1976-09-02). "Intensive Survey Form: Hanchett-Bartlett Farmstead". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2019-11-28. With three photos.
- "Beloit Power Plant". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-11-28.
- "Matteson and Lindstrom House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-02.
- "Matteson and Lindstrom House; William J. Sullivan". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-02.
- "Matteson and Lindstrom House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-02.
- "Matteson and Lindstrom House; Charles R. Ocheltree". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-02.
- Carol Lohry Cartwright (1993-05-15). "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Benton Avenue Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2019-12-02. With twelve photos.
- "Selvy Blodgett House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1979-11-29). "NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Blodgett, Selvy, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2019-12-02. With one photo.
- "Lathrop-Munn Cobblestone House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
- "Charles H. Parker House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
- "Norwegian Lutheran Church". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
- "259-261 St Lawrence Ave". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
- "A.A. Aldrich House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
- "E.J. Evans House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
- Richard P. Hartung (July 1981). District Survey Form: Bluff Street Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2019-12-07. With 95 photos.
- "Frank and Erna Slawson House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
- "Aubrey Pember House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
- "Paul and Ethel Grubb House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
- "Bradley Conrad House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
- "Henry Bogardus House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
- "Henry Bogardus House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
- Carol Lohry Cartwright (2005-08-29). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Bostwick Avenue Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-03-24. With five photos.
- "Brasstown Cottage". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
- Richard P. Hartung (July 1981). Intensive Survey Form: Brasstown Cottage. State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-03-24. With two photos.
- "Citizens Bank of Clinton". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
- Richard P. Hartung (1981-06-01). Intensive Survey Form: Citizens Bank. State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-03-27. With four photos.
- "Clark Brown House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
- Ruth Ann Willis (1981-02-20). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Cobblestone Buildings of Rock County. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-03-27. With three photos.
- "Clinton Village Hall". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
- Richard P. Hartung (1981-06-01). Intensive Survey Form: Clinton Village Hall and Post Office. State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-03-27. With six photos.
- "Clinton Water Tower". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
- Ruth Ann Willis (1980-02-19). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Water Works Structures of Rock County. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-03-27. With four photos.
- "Paul & Agnes Taylor House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
- "Addison & Ruth Haugan House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
- "George and Isabel Smiley House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
- "Albert T. and Jennie Curler House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
- "J. Glenn & Nellie McWilliams House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
- "Lloyd and Winnifred Carpenter House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
- "Ellis Jensen House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
- Carol Lohry Cartwright (2003-09-29). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Columbus Circle Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-06-08. With nine photos.
- "Hiram Taylor House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- "Old Meyher House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- "John C. Jenkins House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- "318 Milton Ave". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
- Carol Lohry Cartwright (1991-05-24). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Conrad Cottages Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-06-10. With six photos.
- "John Cook House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- "Lovejoy-Duncan House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- "Cooksville General Store". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- "Backenstoe-Howard House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- "Van Vleck House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- "Benjamin Hoxie House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- "Cooksville Congregational Church". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- "Cooksville School". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- "Norwegian Lutheran Church". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
- Donald N. Anderson (1972-06-30). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Coooksville Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-06-13. With 17 photos.
- NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Thematic Resources of Coooksville. National Park Service. 1980. Retrieved 2020-06-19. With two photos.
- "Cooper-Gillies House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-19.
- NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Thematic Resources of the Coooksville Area. National Park Service. 1980. Retrieved 2020-06-19. With one photo.
- "Cooper-Gillies House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-19.
- "J.W. Crist House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-03.
- Richard P. Hartung (July 1981). Intensive Survey Form: J.W. Crist House. State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-07-03. With two photos.
- "Crosby Block". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-03.
- Richard P. Hartung (1981-06-01). Intensive Survey Form: Crosby Block. State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-07-03. With three photos.
- "Charles L. Culton House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-03.
- Nancy Belle Douglas; Donald N. Anderson (1976-12-03). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Culton, Charles L. House. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-07-03. With one photo.
- "De Jean House (Julian)". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1976-12-03). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Grout Houses in Milton. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-07-17. With one photo.
- "Homer B. DeLong House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
- Richard P. Hartung (1981-06-01). Intensive Survey Form: Homer B. DeLong House. State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-07-17. With six photos.
- "John T. Dow House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
- NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Thematic Resources of the Coooksville Area. National Park Service. 1980. Retrieved 2020-07-17. With two photos.
- "Eager Free Public Library". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
- Nancy Belle Douglas; Donald N. Anderson; Katherine E. Hundt (1976-08-24). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Eager Free Public Library. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-07-17. With one photo.
- "Eager, Almeron, Funerary Monument and Plot". National or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- "Eager, Almeron, Funerary Monument and Plot". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- "Hodge and Bucholz Carriages". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- "London Hotel; Fred Jones Building". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- "Merchants Hote". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- "Peters Block". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- "Kronitz Meat Market". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1979-02-16). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: East Milwaukee Street Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-07-21. With six photos.
- "Edgerton Post Office". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-25.
- Charles W. Causier; Robert J. Gosse (1993-12-29). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Edgerton Post Office. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-07-25. With eight photos.
- "Edgerton Public School". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-25.
- Eileen Propp (1986-03-28). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Edgerton Public Grade Schools. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-07-25. With 52 photos.
- "Emerson Hall". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1979-02-16). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Emerson Hall. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-07-29. With two photos.
- "J. Winston & Sons Store Building". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- "Mary A. and Dr. William Quivey House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- "Dr. E.W. Beebe House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- "The Grange Store Building". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- "Byron Campbell House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- "Dr. John M. Evans House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- "Lillian D. and George L. Pullen House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- "First Baptist Church". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- "The Grange Store". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1977-03-04). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Evansville Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-07-29. With 29 photos.
- Richard P. Hartung (July 1981). "Intensive Survey Form: Fairbanks Flats (Beloit MRA)". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
- "Footville Condensery". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
- Ruth Ann Willis; Richard P. Hartung (August 1980). "Intensive Survey Form: Footville Condensery". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-10-01. With one photo.
- "Footville State Bank". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
- Ruth Ann Willis; Richard P. Hartung (August 1980). "Intensive Survey Form: Footville State Bank". State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Retrieved 2020-10-01. With one photo.
- "Frendendall Block (John C. Frendendall)". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
- Maurice J. Montgomery; Ruth Ann Willis; Nancy Belle Douglas (1980-12-05). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Fredendall Block. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-10-03. With two photos.
- "Bentley Dry Goods". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
- "Commercial Hotel". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
- "Red Front Grocery Store". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
- "Strucker and Mays Grocery Store". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
- "Tobacco Exchange Bank Building". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
- "Joe Leary Cigar Store-Badger Lunch-Atwell and Dallman". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
- Jane Eiseley (1997-11-30). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Fulton Street Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-10-03. With nine photos.
- "Gifford House (Carl Gifford)". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1976-12-03). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Grout Houses in Milton. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-10-24. With one photo.
- "Gilley-Tofsland Octagonal Barn". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
- "Goodrich Blacksmith Shop". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1976-12-03). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Grout Houses in Milton. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-10-24. With one photo.
- "Goodrich-Buten House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1976-12-03). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Grout Houses in Milton. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-10-25. With one photo.
- "Goodrich, Ezra and Elizabeth, House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
- "Ezra and Elizabeth Goodrich House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
- "Gray, William H. and Edith, Farmstead". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
- "W.H. Gray Farmstead, House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
- "W.H. Gray Farmstead, barn". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
- "W.H. Gray Farmstead, silo". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
- "Greenman, Reynolds and Lois, House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
- "Grove Street Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
- "Hanchett Block". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-11-04.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (1979-05-01). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Hanchett Block. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-11-04. With one photo.
- "Haven-Crandall House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-11-04.
- "Hilton House Hotel". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-11-06.
- Elizabeth L. Miller (2002-07-02). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Hilton House Hotel. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-11-06. With ten photos.
- "How-Beckman Mill". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-11-06.
- "Hugunin, John and Martha, House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-11-09.
- Carol Lohry Cartwright (2004-10-15). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Hugunin, John and Martha, House. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-11-09. With 14 photos.
- "Rock River Cotton Mill; Janesville Cotton Mill". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-11-09.
- Nancy Douglas (1979-08-08). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Janesville Cotton Mill. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-11-09. With five photos.
- "Janesville High School". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
- Elizabeth L. Miller (1997-10-21). NRHP Inventory/Nomination: Janesville High School. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-12-11. With 13 photos.
- "Janesville Pumping Station". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
- Stout, A.B. (April–June 1908). "The Mounds. Rock County, Milton Township". Wisconsin Archeologist. 7 (2): 51.
- Reed, Larry (December 7, 2013). "The Historic Stebbins House: R.I.P." Retrieved October 16, 2016.
- "George Josiah Kellogg House (Belle Cottage)". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-09-02.
- "Carlton Hotel". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-09-02.
- Nancy Belle Douglas (November 10, 1978). "National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation: Centric Barns in Rock County TR". National Park Service.
- http://www.beloitdailynews.com/news/historic-dougan-round-barn-demolished/article_92a45bf4-8a33-11e1-854c-001a4bcf887a.html
- "J. B. Dow House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-09-02.
- "Carpenter-Douglas Barn". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-09-02.
External links
- Janesville's Benton Avenue Historic District: A Guide
- Janesville's Columbus Circle Historic District : A Guide
- Janesville's Court House Hill Historic District: A Guide
- Janesville's Look West Historic District: A Guide
- Main & Milwaukee, Janesville's Downtown Historic Districts: A Guide
- Janesville's Old Fourth Ward Historic District: A Guide
- Janesville's Prospect Hill & Conrad Cottages Historic Districts: A Guide
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.