National Register of Historic Places listings in Brown County, Wisconsin

This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Brown County, Wisconsin. It is intended to provide a comprehensive listing of entries in the National Register of Historic Places that are located in Brown 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]

Location of Brown County in Wisconsin

There are 64 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county. Another 3 properties were once listed but have been removed.


          This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted October 25, 2024.[2]

Current listings

edit
[3] Name on the Register[4] Image Date listed[5] Location City or town Description
1 Allouez Pump House
 
Allouez Pump House
March 15, 2016
(#16000091)
535 Greene Ave.
44°28′10″N 88°01′11″W / 44.4695°N 88.0196°W / 44.4695; -88.0196 (Allouez Pump House)
Allouez The new water department had this building designed by McMahon and Clark Engineering Co. in Mediterranean Revival style and built in 1925.[6][7]
2 Allouez Water Department and Town Hall
 
Allouez Water Department and Town Hall
March 15, 2016
(#16000092)
2143 S. Webster Ave.
44°28′54″N 88°01′25″W / 44.4816°N 88.0236°W / 44.4816; -88.0236 (Allouez Water Department and Town Hall)
Allouez Water department offices, designed in Colonial Revival style by Foeller, Schober, Bernes, Safford and Jahn and built in 1947.[7][8]
3 Astor Historic District
 
Astor Historic District
February 27, 1980
(#80000107)
Roughly bordered by Mason Street (north), Webster Avenue (east), Grignon Street (south), and the Fox River (west)
44°30′12″N 88°01′05″W / 44.5033°N 88.0181°W / 44.5033; -88.0181 (Astor Historic District)
Green Bay Residential neighborhood with many Victorian and early 20th century houses associated with Green Bay leaders;[9] Named for John Jacob Astor, who founded the town of Astor at this location in 1835[10]
4 John Baeten Store
 
John Baeten Store
August 8, 2014
(#14000483)
620 George St.
44°26′56″N 88°03′26″W / 44.4488°N 88.0571°W / 44.4488; -88.0571 (John Baeten Store)
De Pere Brick store built in 1903, with cast-iron columns and pressed-metal ceiling and cornice, with commercial space on the first floor and apartments on second. The Baeten family owned the store into the 1970s.[11]
5 Baird Law Office
 
Baird Law Office
October 15, 1970
(#70000025)
Heritage Hill State Park,
2640 S. Webster Avenue

44°28′32″N 88°02′04″W / 44.4756°N 88.0345°W / 44.4756; -88.0345 (Baird Law Office)
Green Bay Greek Revival structure built by Samuel Wooten Beall;
Housed law office of Henry Samuel Baird from 1841 to 1865;
Now sited at Heritage Hill State Historical Park[12]
6 Broadway-Dousman
Historic District
 
Broadway-Dousman
Historic District
March 12, 1999
(#99000330)
300–400 blocks Dousman St.,
part of 300 block N. Chestnut St., part of 200–300 blocks N. Broadway

44°31′17″N 88°01′16″W / 44.5214°N 88.0211°W / 44.5214; -88.0211 (Broadway-Dousman
Historic District
)
Green Bay Commercial district of 12 structures built 1873–1947;[13] Original businesses include retail, warehouses, hotels, and a wholesale and canning company[14][15]
7 Broadway-Walnut
Historic District
 
Broadway-Walnut
Historic District
July 8, 1999
(#99000817)
400 block W. Walnut St.
100 N. block Pearl St.
100 N. and part of 100 S. block Broadway

44°31′08″N 88°01′18″W / 44.5189°N 88.0217°W / 44.5189; -88.0217 (Broadway-Walnut
Historic District
)
Green Bay Commercial district of 20 structures built 1879–1947;[16] Original businesses include dry-goods retail, warehouses, saloons, a news depot, a bank, a dance hall, and an auto dealership which was renovated to become the West Theater (later The Tarlton Theatre)[14][15][17][18]
8 Brown County Courthouse
 
Brown County Courthouse
January 1, 1976
(#76000053)
100 S. Jefferson St.
44°30′46″N 88°00′52″W / 44.5128°N 88.0144°W / 44.5128; -88.0144 (Brown County Courthouse)
Green Bay Three-story Beaux-Arts courthouse with copper-clad dome, designed by Charles E. Bell and built 1908 to 1911. Contains historic murals inside and a sculpture out front of Perrot, Allouez and a Native American.[19]
9 Chicago and North Western Railway Passenger Depot
 
Chicago and North Western Railway Passenger Depot
December 30, 1999
(#99001633)
202 Dousman St.
44°31′17″N 88°01′06″W / 44.5214°N 88.0183°W / 44.5214; -88.0183 (Chicago and North Western Railway Passenger Depot)
Green Bay Built in 1898 in Italian Renaissance Revival style, with 5-story clock tower.[15] Today houses Titletown Brewing Company.[20]
10 Christ Episcopal Church Complex
 
Christ Episcopal Church Complex
October 9, 2012
(#12000852)
425 Cherry St.
44°30′50″N 88°00′41″W / 44.5139°N 88.0115°W / 44.5139; -88.0115 (Christ Episcopal Church Complex)
Green Bay Gothic Revival church with cruciform floor-plan, built in 1899.[21]
11 Cotton House
 
Cotton House
April 28, 1970
(#70000026)
Heritage Hill State Park, 2640 South Webster Ave.
44°28′25″N 88°01′49″W / 44.4737°N 88.0303°W / 44.4737; -88.0303 (Cotton House)
Green Bay Greek Revival home built in 1840s by John & Mary Cotton, originally at Beaupre and Webster Sts.[22]
12 Daviswood Ranch Homes Historic District October 4, 2021
(#100007032)
800-868 East St. Francis Rd., 802-879 West St. Francis Rd.
44°27′14″N 88°02′53″W / 44.4540°N 88.0481°W / 44.4540; -88.0481 (Daviswood Ranch Homes Historic District)
De Pere Neighborhood of 35 quality ranch homes in a U-shaped plat built from 1953 to 1957 on the north edge of De Pere.[23]
13 De Pere Lock and Dam Historic District
 
De Pere Lock and Dam Historic District
December 7, 1993
(#93001331)
Fox R. at James St.
44°26′58″N 88°03′47″W / 44.4494°N 88.0631°W / 44.4494; -88.0631 (De Pere Lock and Dam Historic District)
De Pere The last of 24 locks on the Fox between Portage and De Pere, operated since the 1850s. Includes a Dutch Colonial Revival lock-keeper's house. One of two hand-operated locks left in the U.S.[24]
14 De Pere Public Library
 
De Pere Public Library
October 4, 2002
(#02001106)
380 Main Ave.
44°26′59″N 88°04′13″W / 44.4497°N 88.0703°W / 44.4497; -88.0703 (De Pere Public Library)
De Pere Library built in 1937 during the Great Depression with support of the PWA. The design is Cotswold style with some Classical Revival elements.[25]
15 Joel S. Fisk House
 
Joel S. Fisk House
August 11, 1978
(#78000420)
123 N. Oakland Ave.
44°31′08″N 88°01′36″W / 44.5189°N 88.0267°W / 44.5189; -88.0267 (Joel S. Fisk House)
Green Bay Italianate house with a cupola, built from 1862 to 1867. Fisk was a lawyer, postmaster, and Register of the local land office, ran a fishing operation, and platted the city of Fort Howard.[15]
16 Fort Howard Hospital
 
Fort Howard Hospital
July 22, 1979
(#71001075)
Heritage Hill State Park, 2640 S. Webster Ave.
44°28′27″N 88°02′04″W / 44.4742°N 88.0344°W / 44.4742; -88.0344 (Fort Howard Hospital)
Green Bay Federal-style building constructed 1834 to 1835 at old Fort Howard.[26]
17 Fort Howard Officers' Quarters
 
Fort Howard Officers' Quarters
July 22, 1979
(#72001548)
Heritage Hill State Park, 2640 S. Webster Ave.
44°28′27″N 88°02′01″W / 44.4743°N 88.0337°W / 44.4743; -88.0337 (Fort Howard Officers' Quarters)
Green Bay 1830 Federal-style building,[27] in which Fort Howard's officers lived with their families. This building is currently interpreted at the park as the Company Kitchen/Orderly Room. The structure at the park named Fort Howard Officers' Quarters is a reproduction built in 1982.[28][29]
18 Fort Howard Ward Building
 
Fort Howard Ward Building
July 22, 1979
(#72001547)
Heritage Hill State Park, 2640 S. Webster Ave.
44°28′27″N 88°02′03″W / 44.4742°N 88.0342°W / 44.4742; -88.0342 (Fort Howard Ward Building)
Green Bay Fort Howard's army hospital built in 1816, originally at location of 402 N. Chestnut Ave.[30]
19 Fox Theatre
 
Fox Theatre
March 24, 2000
(#00000256)
117 S. Washington St.
44°30′49″N 88°00′59″W / 44.5136°N 88.0164°W / 44.5136; -88.0164 (Fox Theatre)
Green Bay Atmospheric theatre built in 1929, with Art Deco exterior and Spanish Colonial Revival interiors.[31]
20 Franciscan Publishers Building December 14, 2020
(#100005900)
165 East Pulaski St.
44°40′21″N 88°14′25″W / 44.6724°N 88.2404°W / 44.6724; -88.2404 (Franciscan Publishers Building)
Pulaski The Franciscan Friars of Pulaski opened a printery in 1907 to publish Miesiecznik Franciszkanski, a Polish-language religious magazine. In 1941 they built the 3-story block, designed by Levi A Geniesse, with religious images around the door. The one-story wing was added in 1961-62. Printing operated until 2001. Now the building houses the friars' archives.[32]
21 Grassy Island Range Lights
 
Grassy Island Range Lights
January 12, 2005
(#04001484)
100 Bay Beach Rd.
44°32′11″N 88°00′18″W / 44.5364°N 88.005°W / 44.5364; -88.005 (Grassy Island Range Lights)
Green Bay Range lights built in 1872 to guide ships through the channel through Grassy Island and into Green Bay's harbor.[33]
22 Green Bay Downtown Historic District
 
Green Bay Downtown Historic District
May 13, 2019
(#100003920)
Portions of Pine, Cherry, E. Walnut & Doty Sts. bounded by S. Washington, N. Madison & N. Jefferson Sts.
44°30′55″N 88°00′43″W / 44.5153°N 88.0120°W / 44.5153; -88.0120 (Green Bay Downtown Historic District)
Green Bay Cluster of 38 historic buildings in the old downtown, including the 1902 Schauer & Schumacher Furniture store,[34] the 1908–1911 Beaux Arts Brown County Courthouse,[19] the 1915 Chicago-style Bellin building,[35] the 1924 Tudor Revival Hotel Northland,[36] the 1926 Schauer & Schumacher Funeral Chapel,[37] and the 1930 Art Deco Meyer Theatre.[31][38]
23 Green Bay YMCA
 
Green Bay YMCA
February 16, 2016
(#16000022)
235 N. Jefferson St.
44°30′55″N 88°00′45″W / 44.515150°N 88.012380°W / 44.515150; -88.012380 (Green Bay YMCA)
Green Bay Large stone-clad YMCA building designed by Foeller, Schober & Stephenson/Berners-Schober. The original 1924 building is in Tudor Revival style and the 1968 addition in a more Contemporary style.[39][40]
24 Herman and Lillian Greiling House November 17, 2021
(#100002761)
2568 S Webster Ave.
44°28′31″N 88°01′42″W / 44.4754°N 88.0283°W / 44.4754; -88.0283 (Herman and Lillian Greiling House)
Allouez Large Mediterranean Revival-style home designed by Foeller & Schober and built in 1920. Herman and his brother started Marine Construction Company in 1896, building bridges, docks and ship machinery around the Midwest. He also co-founded Hartmann-Greiling Machine and Boiler Works in 1911, and was involved in civic, financial and social institutions.[41][42]
25 Otto and Hilda Gretzinger House
 
Otto and Hilda Gretzinger House
October 13, 2011
(#11000747)
922 N. Broadway
44°27′28″N 88°03′22″W / 44.457778°N 88.056111°W / 44.457778; -88.056111 (Otto and Hilda Gretzinger House)
De Pere Bungalow/Craftsman-style house built in 1915. Otto managed the Central Lumber Company and Hilda was a teacher.[43]
26 Edwin and Jennie Gutknecht House
 
Edwin and Jennie Gutknecht House
January 27, 2015
(#14001229)
603 S. Michigan St.
44°26′40″N 88°03′29″W / 44.444340°N 88.058009°W / 44.444340; -88.058009 (Edwin and Jennie Gutknecht House)
De Pere Stucco-clad American Foursquare house designed by William Reynolds of Green Bay and built in 1913.[44]
27 Hazelwood
 
Hazelwood
April 28, 1970
(#70000027)
1008 S. Monroe Ave.
44°30′03″N 88°01′08″W / 44.500833°N 88.018889°W / 44.500833; -88.018889 (Hazelwood)
Green Bay Morgan Martin built this Greek Revival home in 1837 for his bride Elizabeth.[45] Morgan was an attorney, civic leader, Indian agent, and president of the convention that drafted Wisconsin's constitution.[46]
28 Henry House
 
Henry House
January 31, 1980
(#80000108)
1749 Riverside Dr.
44°37′52″N 88°03′11″W / 44.631111°N 88.053056°W / 44.631111; -88.053056 (Henry House)
Suamico Simple side-gabled boarding house built by the Weed Brothers around 1869, during the lumber era. A.k.a. Weed Mill Inn. Now the Shoppes at Vickery Village.[47][48]
29 Henry and Mary Heyrman House
 
Henry and Mary Heyrman House
January 27, 2015
(#14001230)
403 S. Michigan St.
44°26′43″N 88°03′28″W / 44.445146°N 88.057905°W / 44.445146; -88.057905 (Henry and Mary Heyrman House)
De Pere Queen Anne house built in 1903.[49]
30 Holy Cross Church and Convent
 
Holy Cross Church and Convent
June 28, 2001
(#01000685)
3001 Bay Settlement Rd.
44°33′20″N 87°53′27″W / 44.555556°N 87.890833°W / 44.555556; -87.890833 (Holy Cross Church and Convent)
Green Bay Roman Catholic church built in 1932 in Romanesque style.[50]
31 Hotel Northland
 
Hotel Northland
October 30, 2013
(#13000860)
304 N. Adams St.
44°30′57″N 88°00′46″W / 44.515825°N 88.012785°W / 44.515825; -88.012785 (Hotel Northland)
Green Bay Designed in Tudor Revival style by Herbert Tullgren and built in 1924, at the time the largest hotel in Wisconsin.[36] Hosted Lombardi's first press conference and some of the Packers' opposing teams.[51]
32 Kellogg Public Library and Neville Public Museum
 
Kellogg Public Library and Neville Public Museum
June 9, 1981
(#81000035)
125 S. Jefferson St.
44°30′44″N 88°00′49″W / 44.512222°N 88.013611°W / 44.512222; -88.013611 (Kellogg Public Library and Neville Public Museum)
Green Bay The Classical Revival library was built in 1903 and the matching museum was added in 1926. Kellog was a banker[52] and Neville was mayor of Green Bay.[53] This was the first Carnegie library in Wisconsin.[54]
33 Edward F. and Jean Kohl House December 27, 2023
(#100009654)
815 Nicolet Avenue
44°27′20″N 88°03′03″W / 44.4556°N 88.0507°W / 44.4556; -88.0507 (Edward F. and Jean Kohl House)
De Pere Prominent Neoclassical-style house built in 1940, designed by Harry W. Williams for the Kohls. Edward managed the Green Bay H. C. Prange Co. store at the time.[55]
34 C. A. Lawton Company
 
C. A. Lawton Company
January 30, 1992
(#91001985)
233 N. Broadway
44°27′02″N 88°03′39″W / 44.450556°N 88.060833°W / 44.450556; -88.060833 (C. A. Lawton Company)
De Pere General machine shop built in 1879. Charles Lawton invented a bran dresser, which separated bran from flour.[56] Functioned until 1971. Now redeveloped as apartments.[57]
35 Agnes Lenfestey and Ruth Lenfestey Mark House September 11, 2023
(#100009375)
1336 Ridgeway Blvd.
44°27′06″N 88°02′43″W / 44.4517°N 88.0453°W / 44.4517; -88.0453 (Agnes Lenfestey and Ruth Lenfestey Mark House)
De Pere Modern Movement-style home designed by John C. Tilleman and built in 1963 for 88-year-old Agnes and her daughter Ruth. They were socially prominent, widows by this time, who needed to downsize from an old multi-story house. Built with brick from a family business.[58][59]
36 Little Kaukauna Lock and Dam Historic District
 
Little Kaukauna Lock and Dam Historic District
December 7, 1993
(#93001332)
Fox R. at Mill Rd.
44°22′42″N 88°07′23″W / 44.378333°N 88.123056°W / 44.378333; -88.123056 (Little Kaukauna Lock and Dam Historic District)
De Pere Next-to-the-last lock in the Lower Fox River lock system, operated continuously since the 1850s. Includes a Dutch Colonial Revival lock-keeper's house.[60]
37 Main Avenue Historic District
 
Main Avenue Historic District
February 3, 2010
(#09001314)
301–377 (odd only) Main Ave.
44°26′51″N 88°04′10″W / 44.447461°N 88.069469°W / 44.447461; -88.069469 (Main Avenue Historic District)
De Pere 18 commercial buildings built from 1883 to 1950 in various styles: Commercial Vernacular, Queen Anne, 20th Century Commercial, and Neoclassical Revival.[61]
38 Main Hall
 
Main Hall
October 28, 1988
(#88002001)
Third St. and College Ave.
44°26′39″N 88°03′59″W / 44.444167°N 88.066389°W / 44.444167; -88.066389 (Main Hall)
De Pere On completion in 1903, Main Hall was St. Norbert College, containing classrooms, dormitory and commons. The style is Richardsonian Romanesque, and today it is the architectural center of the campus.[62]
39 Mansion Street WWII Defense Housing Historic District July 2, 2021
(#100006697)
902-942 Mansion St.
44°26′31″N 88°03′13″W / 44.4420°N 88.0537°W / 44.4420; -88.0537 (Mansion Street WWII Defense Housing Historic District)
De Pere String of modest 1-story Cape Cod-style homes built by Ralph Belanger and Standard Lumber Yards, Inc. 1941-42 to house families working on defense jobs. No other suburbs were built in De Pere during WWII because of rationing of materials.[63]
40 Mason Manor January 23, 2023
(#100008555)
1424 Admiral Ct.
44°31′20″N 88°03′26″W / 44.5222°N 88.0572°W / 44.5222; -88.0572 (Mason Manor)
Green Bay Large contemporary-style apartment designed by Nichols and Barone, Inc. and built in 1972 by the Green Bay Housing Authority to address a shortage of modestly priced housing for seniors.[64][65]
41 Milwaukee Road Passenger Depot
 
Milwaukee Road Passenger Depot
August 16, 1996
(#96000906)
400 S. Washington St.
44°30′38″N 88°01′08″W / 44.510556°N 88.018889°W / 44.510556; -88.018889 (Milwaukee Road Passenger Depot)
Green Bay Designed by Charles Sumner Frost in Flemish Renaissance Revival style and built in 1898 for the Milwaukee Road, the depot served the east side of Green Bay until 1957.
42 Miramar Drive Residential Historic District
 
Miramar Drive Residential Historic District
April 16, 2018
(#100002312)
Generally bounded by N & S sides of Miramar Dr. between Riverside Dr. & Nelson Ct.
44°28′50″N 88°01′45″W / 44.480594°N 88.029223°W / 44.480594; -88.029223 (Miramar Drive Residential Historic District)
Allouez Neighborhood of 26 homes, many of them Tudor Revival in style,[66] including the 1920 Sumner/Larsen house,[67] the 1927 Hutson house,[68] and the 1930 Earl "Curly" Lambeau house.[69]
43 Mueller-Wright House
 
Mueller-Wright House
March 29, 1978
(#78000078)
Washington and Mueller Sts.
44°19′35″N 88°09′43″W / 44.326389°N 88.161944°W / 44.326389; -88.161944 (Mueller-Wright House)
Wrightstown Greek Revival-styled[70] home built in the 1840s. Hoel and Orilla Wright founded the settlement in 1833, running a trading post, a ferry and an inn. Carl Mueller later ran a general store, a sawmill and a brewery.[71]
44 Albert C. and Ellen H. Neufeld House
 
Albert C. and Ellen H. Neufeld House
June 15, 2018
(#100002611)
204 West Whitney Street[72]
44°28′41″N 88°01′45″W / 44.4781°N 88.0291°W / 44.4781; -88.0291 (Albert C. and Ellen H. Neufeld House)
Allouez The Albert C. & Ellen H. Neufeld House was built by Mr. & Mrs. Albert C. Neufeld in 1940–1941. It was designed by Clarence O. Jahn of Foeller, Schober, Berners, Safford, & Jahn of Green Bay in the Georgian Revival style. Albert Ebner was responsible for the original interior decorating. Lowell Hansen designed the grounds with Jens Jensen being an active consultant on the landscaping on the original property, making it one of the few Jens Jensen properties in Wisconsin. The house is distinguished by its lack of hallways, all rooms are connected by galleries, and by a sweeping 260 foot view through the center of the house, ending in the arbor in the center of the rose garden.[73][74][75]
45 John T. and Margaret Nichols House
 
John T. and Margaret Nichols House
September 1, 2005
(#05000954)
128 Taft Ave.
44°28′00″N 88°02′06″W / 44.466776°N 88.035076°W / 44.466776; -88.035076 (John T. and Margaret Nichols House)
Allouez Modernist-styled house built in 1951.[76]
46 Nicolet High School
 
Nicolet High School
October 5, 2015
(#15000703)
111 3rd St.
44°26′48″N 88°04′05″W / 44.4466°N 88.068°W / 44.4466; -88.068 (Nicolet High School)
De Pere School building designed in Neoclassical style by Foeller, Schober, and Stephenson of Green Bay and built in 1923. Served as a public high school until 1958, when it was bought by Abbott Pennings High School, which used it as a Catholic school until 1990, when it was bought by St. Norbert College, which uses it as classrooms and administrative office space.[77]
47 North Broadway Street Historic District
 
North Broadway Street Historic District
September 8, 1983
(#83003368)
Broadway, Ridgeway Blvd., Morris, Fulton, Franklin, Cass, Front, and Wisconsin Sts.
44°27′14″N 88°03′37″W / 44.4539°N 88.0603°W / 44.4539; -88.0603 (North Broadway Street Historic District)
De Pere Homes built in a wide variety of styles, with contributing structures built between 1836 and 1923.[78]
48 North Michigan Street-North Superior Street Historic District
 
North Michigan Street-North Superior Street Historic District
July 19, 2007
(#07000707)
Roughly bounded by Ridgeview Blvd., North Wisconsin, North Huron & George Sts.
44°27′08″N 88°03′25″W / 44.4523°N 88.0569°W / 44.4523; -88.0569 (North Michigan Street-North Superior Street Historic District)
De Pere One of the oldest residential neighborhoods in Wisconsin, with houses built as early as 1867 in Colonial Revival, Queen Anne, American Foursquare and Bungalow styles.[79]
49 Oakland-Dousman Historic District
 
Oakland-Dousman Historic District
April 27, 1988
(#88000455)
Roughly bounded by Dousman St., Oakland Ave., Shawano Ave., Antoinette and Francis Sts.
44°31′12″N 88°01′30″W / 44.52°N 88.025°W / 44.52; -88.025 (Oakland-Dousman Historic District)
Green Bay Residential district with homes built as early as 1888 in a variety of styles.[15]
50 Randall Avenue Historic District
 
Randall Avenue Historic District
April 24, 2007
(#07000370)
Generally bounded by Ridgeway Blvd., Oakdale Ave., and Glenwood Ave.
44°27′23″N 88°03′15″W / 44.4563°N 88.0543°W / 44.4563; -88.0543 (Randall Avenue Historic District)
De Pere Residential neighborhood largely built during the Great Depression, including Colonial Revival and other styles.[80]
51 Angeline Champeau Rioux House
 
Angeline Champeau Rioux House
October 28, 1994
(#94001251)
2183 Glendale Ave.
44°33′42″N 88°04′07″W / 44.5617°N 88.0686°W / 44.5617; -88.0686 (Angeline Champeau Rioux House)
Howard Lucas Rioux built the house in 1828. It later quartered Fort Howard soldiers and may have been a stop on the Underground Railroad.[81]
52 Robinson Hill Historic District March 19, 2021
(#100006285)
South Jackson and South Van Buren Sts., generally bounded by Catherine St. and Allouiez Terr.
44°29′39″N 88°01′06″W / 44.4941°N 88.0182°W / 44.4941; -88.0182 (Robinson Hill Historic District)
Allouez Tree-lined neighborhood of middle-class homes built from 1910 to 1953,[82] including the 1910 Dutch Colonial Revival Parizak house,[83] the 1921 American Foursquare Rockstroh house,[84] the 1935 Colonial Revival Kleinheinz house,[85] the 1935 Craftsman-style Stannard house,[86] the unusual 1935 Ware bungalow,[87] the 1938 Modernist/Spanish Colonial Revival Shunk house,[88] and the 1939 Tudor Revival Westphal house.[89]
53 Rockwood Lodge Barn and Pigsty
 
Rockwood Lodge Barn and Pigsty
May 5, 2004
(#04000412)
5632 Sturgeon Bay Rd.
44°37′57″N 87°48′11″W / 44.6325°N 87.8031°W / 44.6325; -87.8031 (Rockwood Lodge Barn and Pigsty)
Green Bay Large wooden barn and brick sty, built 1938. A.k.a. Kenneth Rabas farm.[90]
54 St. Mary of the Angels Church and Monastery March 28, 2019
(#100003578)
645 S. Irwin Ave.
44°30′01″N 88°00′10″W / 44.5004°N 88.0029°W / 44.5004; -88.0029 (St. Mary of the Angels Church and Monastery)
Green Bay High Victorian Gothic Revival-styled complex designed by William E. Reynolds and built in 1903. Originally rooted in a heavily Polish community.[91]
55 St. Norbert College Historic District
 
St. Norbert College Historic District
April 19, 2018
(#100001658)
Bounded by Grant & Marsh Sts., Lee J. Roemer Mall & W. shore of Fox R.
44°26′37″N 88°03′58″W / 44.4436°N 88.0662°W / 44.4436; -88.0662 (St. Norbert College Historic District)
De Pere Ten historic buildings of St. Norbert, a Roman Catholic college,[92] including the 1890 High Victorian Gothic St. Joseph Church,[93] the 1903 Richardsonian Romanesque Main Hall,[94] and the 1942 Neoclassical Burke Hall.[95]
56 J.B. Smith House and Granary
 
J.B. Smith House and Granary
May 12, 2004
(#04000446)
5121 Gravel Pit Rd.
44°37′48″N 87°48′16″W / 44.63°N 87.8044°W / 44.63; -87.8044 (J.B. Smith House and Granary)
Green Bay Gabled ell house and granary built 1885. A.k.a. Kenneth Rabas house.[96][97]
57 South Broadway Historic District
 
South Broadway Historic District
January 21, 2010
(#09001272)
101–129 (odd only) S. Broadway
44°26′54″N 88°03′36″W / 44.4484°N 88.0601°W / 44.4484; -88.0601 (South Broadway Historic District)
De Pere After the 1882 fire destroyed entire blocks of wooden businesses east of the river, they rebuilt with brick, almost blending the buildings' facades because they used similar cream-colored brick.[98]
58 Steckart and Falck Double Block
 
Steckart and Falck Double Block
October 20, 2011
(#11000758)
112–118 N. Broadway
44°26′58″N 88°03′38″W / 44.4494°N 88.0606°W / 44.4494; -88.0606 (Steckart and Falck Double Block)
De Pere Large commercial building built in 1888 in an ornate Italianate style. Street level housed a meat market, saloon and liquor store, and the second floor apartments.[99]
59 Sunset Circle Residential Historic District February 13, 2024
(#100009865)
600-680 Sunset Circle; 3325 Vista Road
44°27′59″N 88°03′00″W / 44.4665°N 88.0501°W / 44.4665; -88.0501 (Sunset Circle Residential Historic District)
Allouez Neighborhood of homes built from 1940 to 1989 around Sunset Park,[100] including the 1940 Colonial Revival-style Van Oss house,[101] the 1956 Contemporary-style George & Helen Vukelich house,[102] the 1959 Ranch-style Vince Lombardi house,[103] and the 1971 mansard-roofed Schuster house.[104]
60 Tank Cottage
 
Tank Cottage
April 28, 1970
(#70000028)
Heritage Hill State Historical Park, 2640 South Webster Avenue
44°28′32″N 88°02′09″W / 44.4755°N 88.0359°W / 44.4755; -88.0359 (Tank Cottage)
Allouez In 1776, French-Canadian voyageur Joseph Roi built the first part of the cottage using the pièce-sur-pièce à coulisse technique. The building served as a local headquarters for British operations during the War of 1812. In 1850, Moravian missionary Nils Otto Tank bought it, added the wings, and covered the building in clapboard. Originally located on 8th Street in Green Bay, the building was moved to Heritage Hill State Historical Park in 1976. It is the oldest extant building from Wisconsin's early history.[105][106]
61 Union House Hotel
 
Union House Hotel
November 26, 2003
(#03001216)
200 North Broadway
44°27′01″N 88°03′37″W / 44.4503°N 88.0602°W / 44.4503; -88.0602 (Union House Hotel)
De Pere Late Victorian hotel begun in 1883, after a fire destroyed three earlier hotels. Now the oldest continually-operated hotel in the area.[107]
62 Whitney School
 
Whitney School
August 28, 2017
(#100001519)
215 N. Webster Ave.
44°30′42″N 88°00′15″W / 44.5118°N 88.0042°W / 44.5118; -88.0042 (Whitney School)
Green Bay 3-story Neoclassical brick building designed by Foeller and Schober of Green Bay and built in 1918.[108]
63 Wisconsin State Reformatory
 
Wisconsin State Reformatory
May 3, 1990
(#90000641)
SE corner of Riverside Dr. and WI 172
44°28′14″N 88°02′12″W / 44.4706°N 88.0367°W / 44.4706; -88.0367 (Wisconsin State Reformatory)
Allouez Chartered by the state legislature in 1897 as a reformatory for young male offenders. North Cell Hall was started in 1898, South in 1915. In 1972 it became a maximum security prison for adult males.[109]
64 Zippin Pippin
 
Zippin Pippin
November 8, 2007
(#07001166)
Bay Beach Amusement Park
44°31′51″N 87°58′51″W / 44.5309°N 87.9808°W / 44.5309; -87.9808 (Zippin Pippin)
Green Bay One of the oldest wooden roller coasters designs in the United States, originally built in 1912 at East End Park in Memphis;

Formerly listed

edit
[3] Name on the Register Image Date listedDate removed Location City or town Description
1 East Moravian Church
 
East Moravian Church
February 1, 1972[110]
(#72001588)
November 3, 1983 518 Moravian St., Green Bay, moved to Heritage Hill State Park
44°28′29″N 88°01′56″W / 44.4747°N 88.0322°W / 44.4747; -88.0322 (East Moravian Church)
De Pere In 1851–52, a Moravian congregation built their church in Greek Revival style on Moravian Street in downtown Green Bay. Later moved to Heritage Hill.[111]
2 Kaap's Restaurant June 2, 1980[110][112]
(#80004595)
March 29, 1984 212 – 214 N. Washington St
44°28′29″N 88°01′56″W / 44.4747°N 88.0322°W / 44.4747; -88.0322 (Kaap's Restaurant)
Green Bay Candy shop, bakery, tea room and restaurant which began operating on Washington Street in 1914. Now razed.[113][114]
3 Julius Krause Store Building
 
Julius Krause Store Building
August 18, 2014
(#14000502)
August 30, 2023 106 S. Broadway
44°26′55″N 88°03′38″W / 44.4486°N 88.0606°W / 44.4486; -88.0606 (Julius Krause Store Building)
De Pere Brick shoe store built in 1882 in Commercial Vernacular style.[115]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ 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.
  2. ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved October 25, 2024.
  3. ^ a b 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.
  4. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 24, 2008.
  5. ^ 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.
  6. ^ "Allouez Pump House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  7. ^ a b Lehrke, Jenniver L.; Short, Robert; Scharrer, Angela. "Village of Allouez, Wisconsin; Architectural and Historical Intensive Survey Report" (PDF). pp. 20–21. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  8. ^ "Allouez Water Department and Town Hall". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  9. ^ "Astor Neighborhood Up for National Register" (PDF). Clipping from unknown paper. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-01-30. Retrieved 2012-08-28.
  10. ^ "Astor Neighborhood History". Astor Neighborhood Association. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
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  13. ^ "Part of 200 and 300 block N. Broadway, 300 and 400 block Dousman St, part of 300 block N. Chestnut St". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  14. ^ a b Ives, Gail (2003). Green Bay's West Side: The Fort Howard Neighborhood. ISBN 9780738531687. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  15. ^ a b c d e "Green Bay, WI Oakland-Dousman Historic District and the Broadway Area". Green Bay Historic Preservation Commission. Archived from the original on 2018-02-15. Retrieved 2018-02-14.
  16. ^ "100 N and part of 100 S Block Broadway;100 N Block Pearl St.;400 Block W. Walnut St". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  17. ^ Delia G. Rucker (January 30, 1998). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Broadway-Walnut Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved March 31, 2023. With accompanying 13 photos
  18. ^ "New plaque honors Tarlton Theatre's designation as historic place". Fox 11 News. March 29, 2023. Retrieved March 29, 2023.
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  31. ^ a b "Fox Theater". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
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  41. ^ "Greiling, Herman and Lillian, House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2021-11-26.
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  43. ^ "Gretzinger, Otto and Hilda, House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
  44. ^ "Edwin O. & Jennie Gutknecht House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2015-02-13.
  45. ^ "Historic Hazelwood". Brown County Historical Society. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
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  58. ^ "Agnes and Ruth Lenfestey Mark House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2023-09-16.
  59. ^ "Agnes and Ruth Lenfestey Mark House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2023-09-16.
  60. ^ "Little Kaukauna Lock". The Fox-Wisconsin Heritage Parkway. Retrieved 2012-10-21.
  61. ^ "Main Avenue Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  62. ^ Gerds, Warren (2009-08-06). "Main Hall's impact endures at SNC". Green Bay Press Gazette. Archived from the original on 2013-01-25. Retrieved 2012-10-24.
  63. ^ "Mansion Street WWII Defense Housing Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2021-07-18.
  64. ^ "Mason Manor". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
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  76. ^ "John T. and Margaret Nichols House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-08.
  77. ^ "Nicolet High School". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2015-10-18.
  78. ^ RDg Planning & Design (September 2010). "De Pere Neighborhood Preservation Plan" (PDF). City of De Pere.
  79. ^ "North Michigan Street-North Superior Street Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
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  82. ^ "Robinson Hill Historic District Listed in the State Register of Historic Places". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
  83. ^ "Matthew and Annie Parizak House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  84. ^ "Karl A. and Mary Rockstroh House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  85. ^ "Anthony J. and Ruth Kleinheinz House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  86. ^ "George H. and Evelyn Stannard House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  87. ^ "Gordon L. and Irene Ware House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  88. ^ "Bentley B. and Grace Shunk House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  89. ^ "Erwin J. and Lydia Westphal House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  90. ^ "Rockwood Lodge Barn and Pigsty". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-08.
  91. ^ "St. Mary of the Angels Church and Monastery". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
  92. ^ "St. Norbert College Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
  93. ^ "St. Joseph Church". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
  94. ^ "Main Hall". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
  95. ^ "Dennis M. Burke Hall". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
  96. ^ "J. B. Smith Farmstead". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-08.
  97. ^ "J. B. Smith Granary". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-07-27.
  98. ^ "South Broadway Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-10-27.
  99. ^ "Steckart and Falck Double Block". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-10-27.
  100. ^ "Sunset Circle Residential Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  101. ^ "Elroy F. and Bernice I. Van Oss House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  102. ^ "George A. & Helen Vukelich House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  103. ^ "Vincent and Marie Lombardi House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  104. ^ "Donald G. and Jeanette R. Schuster House". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-02-25.
  105. ^ "Tank Cottage". Heritage Hill State Historic Park. Retrieved 2012-10-27.
  106. ^ Anderson, D. N. (March 23, 1970). "Tank Cottage". NRHP Inventory-Nomination Form. National Park Service. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
  107. ^ "Union House Hotel". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
  108. ^ "Whitney School". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-04-23.
  109. ^ "Green Bay Correctional Institution". Adult Institutions. Wisconsin Department of Corrections. Archived from the original on 2012-10-29. Retrieved 2012-10-27.
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  111. ^ "Moravian Church". Heritage Hill State Historic Park. Retrieved 2012-10-27.
  112. ^ "Kaap's Restaurant". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-07-27.
  113. ^ "Kaap's History". Kaap's Old World Chocolates. Retrieved 2012-10-27.
  114. ^ "Farewell". Green Bay Press-Gazette. April 2, 1981. p. 1. Retrieved September 4, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  115. ^ "Julius Krause Store Building". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-08-31.