National Register of Historic Places listings in Winona County, Minnesota

This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Winona County, Minnesota. It is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Winona County, Minnesota, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.

Location of Winona County in Minnesota

There are 48 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county. A supplementary list includes four additional sites that were formerly listed on the National Register.


          This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted October 25, 2024.[1]

Current listings

edit
[2] Name on the Register Image Date listed[3] Location City or town Description
1 Anger's Block
 
Anger's Block
January 31, 1978
(#78001571)
116–120 Walnut St.
44°03′07″N 91°38′01″W / 44.0519°N 91.6335°W / 44.0519; -91.6335 (Anger's Block)
Winona 1872 commercial building, one of the oldest still standing in Winona's central business district.[4] Also a contributing property to the Winona Commercial Historic District.[5]
2 Willard Bunnell House
 
Willard Bunnell House
April 23, 1973
(#73000998)
36106 Old Homer Rd.
44°01′20″N 91°33′35″W / 44.0223°N 91.5596°W / 44.0223; -91.5596 (Willard Bunnell House)
Homer Minnesota's first permanent house south of Saint Paul, built in 1849. Also noted for its Gothic Revival architecture with regional river valley features and its association with pioneer brothers Willard (1814–1861) and Lafayette Bunnell (1824–1903).[6] Now a house museum.[7]
3 Central Grade School
 
Central Grade School
March 6, 2012
(#12000071)
317 Market St.
44°02′53″N 91°38′05″W / 44.0480°N 91.6347°W / 44.0480; -91.6347 (Central Grade School)
Winona 1930 elementary school, one of five new facilities built by Winona Public Schools to implement progressive educational reforms such as separated grades, kindergartens, gymnasiums, art and music classrooms, and improved hygiene and fire safety features.[8]
4 Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Station
 
Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Station
May 28, 2013
(#13000327)
65 East Mark St.
44°02′39″N 91°38′24″W / 44.0443°N 91.6401°W / 44.0443; -91.6401 (Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Station)
Winona Long-serving 1888 railway station representing the development of train transportation in Minnesota with Winona as a major rail hub. Now the Winona Amtrak station.[9]
5 Choate Department Store
 
Choate Department Store
June 3, 1976
(#76001079)
51 East 3rd St.
44°03′07″N 91°38′11″W / 44.0520°N 91.6365°W / 44.0520; -91.6365 (Choate Department Store)
Winona 1881 commercial building of Hannibal Choate (1835–1923), prominent and influential early merchant of southeast Minnesota.[10] Also a contributing property to the Winona Commercial Historic District.[5]
6 Church of Saint Stanislaus-Catholic
 
Church of Saint Stanislaus-Catholic
November 8, 1984
(#84000251)
624 East 4th St.
44°02′49″N 91°37′20″W / 44.0470°N 91.6223°W / 44.0470; -91.6223 (Church of Saint Stanislaus-Catholic)
Winona 1895 Romanesque Revival church built by Minnesota's largest Polish American community; one of Winona's most prominent architectural landmarks.[11] Now termed the Basilica of Saint Stanislaus Kostka.
7 Church of the Holy Trinity-Catholic
 
Church of the Holy Trinity-Catholic
August 9, 1984
(#84001721)
83 Main St.
44°05′52″N 91°49′08″W / 44.0978°N 91.8189°W / 44.0978; -91.8189 (Church of the Holy Trinity-Catholic)
Rollingstone 1869 church expanded in 1893, noted for its Gothic Revival architecture and central role in the religious, social, and—through its associated parochial school—academic life in a Luxembourg American community.[12]
8 East Second Street Commercial Historic District
 
East Second Street Commercial Historic District
January 25, 1991
(#90002198)
66–78 Center, 54–78 East 2nd, and 67–71 Lafayette Sts.
44°03′12″N 91°38′07″W / 44.0533°N 91.6352°W / 44.0533; -91.6352 (East Second Street Commercial Historic District)
Winona One of Minnesota's few surviving remnants of a river town's original business district—with 14 contributing properties on one block mostly built in the late 1860s—and a symbol of Winona's swift growth as a lumber and grain center.[13]
9 Benjamin Ellsworth House
 
Benjamin Ellsworth House
August 9, 1984
(#84001718)
100 U.S. Highway 14
43°58′43″N 91°57′23″W / 43.9786°N 91.9564°W / 43.9786; -91.9564 (Benjamin Ellsworth House)
Utica 1873 Italianate house of Utica's founder Benjamin Ellsworth (1826–1890).[14]
10 First Congregational Church
 
First Congregational Church
April 29, 2021
(#100006440)
161 West Broadway St.
44°03′00″N 91°38′29″W / 44.05°N 91.6413°W / 44.05; -91.6413 (First Congregational Church)
Winona 1882 church noted for its transitional High Victorian Gothic/Richardsonian Romanesque architecture. Listing also includes an 1891 Victorian parsonage and 1934 Colonial Revival sextonage.[15]
11 Dr. J. W. S. Gallagher House
 
Dr. J. W. S. Gallagher House
November 8, 1984
(#84000245)
451 West Broadway St.
44°03′08″N 91°38′56″W / 44.0523°N 91.6490°W / 44.0523; -91.6490 (Dr. J. W. S. Gallagher House)
Winona Well-preserved example—built in 1913—of the modest residential commissions designed by the noted Prairie School architectural firm of Purcell & Elmslie.[16]
12 Grain and Lumber Exchange Building
 
Grain and Lumber Exchange Building
December 2, 1977
(#77000774)
51 East 4th St.
44°03′04″N 91°38′13″W / 44.0511°N 91.6370°W / 44.0511; -91.6370 (Grain and Lumber Exchange Building)
Winona Exemplary Renaissance Revival office building constructed in 1900.[17]
13 William Hemmelberg House
 
William Hemmelberg House
October 23, 1986
(#86002916)
County Highways 26 and 37
44°05′20″N 91°59′30″W / 44.0888°N 91.9916°W / 44.0888; -91.9916 (William Hemmelberg House)
Elba vicinity Stone farmhouse built circa 1858 and expanded circa 1870, a rare surviving vestige of the Whitewater Valley's early pioneers.[18]
14 Abner F. Hodgins House
 
Abner F. Hodgins House
November 8, 1984
(#84000248)
275 Harriet St.
44°03′08″N 91°38′46″W / 44.0521°N 91.6462°W / 44.0521; -91.6462 (Abner F. Hodgins House)
Winona Exemplary 1890 Queen Anne house of lumberman Abner F. Hodgins (1826–1896), a notable leader in the key industry behind Winona's early prominence.[19] Also a contributing property to the Windom Park Residential Historic District.[20]
15 Huff-Lamberton House
 
Huff-Lamberton House
December 12, 1976
(#76001080)
207 Huff St.
44°03′11″N 91°38′39″W / 44.0531°N 91.6443°W / 44.0531; -91.6443 (Huff-Lamberton House)
Winona One of Minnesota's oldest and best preserved Italian Villa style houses, built in 1857 and given a Moorish Revival porch in 1873.[21] Also a contributing property to the Windom Park Residential Historic District.[20]
16 Jefferson School
 
Jefferson School
March 6, 2012
(#12000072)
1268 West 5th St.
44°03′16″N 91°40′16″W / 44.0545°N 91.6711°W / 44.0545; -91.6711 (Jefferson School)
Winona 1938 elementary school, one of five new facilities built by Winona Public Schools to implement progressive educational reforms. Also noted for its Public Works Administration funding and Art Moderne architecture.[22]
17 Kirch/Latch Building
 
Kirch/Latch Building
May 21, 1975
(#75001036)
114–122 East 2nd St.
44°03′10″N 91°38′02″W / 44.0529°N 91.6338°W / 44.0529; -91.6338 (Kirch/Latch Building)
Winona Circa-1868 commercial building noted for its transitional Gothic Revival/Italianate architecture and occupation by the largest of several produce wholesalers based in Winona to take advantage of its river and rail connections.[23]
18 Laird, Norton Company Building
 
Laird, Norton Company Building
July 11, 2014
(#14000392)
125 W. 5th St.
44°03′03″N 91°38′24″W / 44.0509°N 91.6399°W / 44.0509; -91.6399 (Laird, Norton Company Building)
Winona Headquarters 1918–1958 of a major lumber company established in the 1850s, which milled logs from northern pineries and distributed them via railside lumber yards in southern Minnesota and South Dakota.[24]
19 Lake Park Bandshell
 
Lake Park Bandshell
July 18, 2023
(#100009129)
Lake Park Dr., east of intersection with Main St.
44°02′26″N 91°38′29″W / 44.0406°N 91.6415°W / 44.0406; -91.6415 (Lake Park Bandshell)
Winona 1924 municipal bandshell noted for its singular Neoclassical architecture and long service as Winona's primary outdoor music venue.[25]
20 Madison School
 
Madison School
March 6, 2012
(#12000073)
515 West Wabasha St.
44°03′06″N 91°39′05″W / 44.0517°N 91.6513°W / 44.0517; -91.6513 (Madison School)
Winona 1932 elementary school, one of five new facilities built by Winona Public Schools to implement progressive educational reforms such as separated grades, kindergartens, gymnasiums, art and music classrooms, and improved hygiene and fire safety.[26]
21 Nicholas Marnach House
 
Nicholas Marnach House
January 30, 1978
(#78003406)
Off County Highway 26 in Whitewater Wildlife Management Area
44°07′11″N 92°01′57″W / 44.1198°N 92.0324°W / 44.1198; -92.0324 (Nicholas Marnach House)
Elba vicinity Circa-1857 stuccoed stone house, oldest surviving example of the traditional European construction occasionally produced by Germanic immigrants to Southeast Minnesota.[27]
22 Merchants National Bank
 
Merchants National Bank
October 16, 1974
(#74001045)
102 East 3rd St.
44°03′08″N 91°38′06″W / 44.0521°N 91.6349°W / 44.0521; -91.6349 (Merchants National Bank)
Winona Leading example of the Prairie School banks designed by Purcell, Feick & Elmslie, constructed in 1912; a significant influence on early-20th-century American architecture.[28] Also a contributing property to the Winona Commercial Historic District.[5]
23 Model School Building and College Hall of the Winona Normal School
 
Model School Building and College Hall of the Winona Normal School
December 3, 2013
(#13000884)
416 Washington & 151 W. Sanborn Sts.
44°02′52″N 91°38′34″W / 44.0479°N 91.6429°W / 44.0479; -91.6429 (Model School Building and College Hall of the Winona Normal School)
Winona 1915 and 1924 laboratory school buildings of Minnesota's first normal school, active 1860–1971. Now Winona State University's Phelps Hall and Somsen Hall.[29]
24 Pickwick Mill
 
Pickwick Mill
September 22, 1970
(#70000314)
24813 County Rd. 7
43°58′49″N 91°29′48″W / 43.9804°N 91.4967°W / 43.9804; -91.4967 (Pickwick Mill)
Pickwick One of southeast Minnesota's oldest surviving water-powered gristmills, built in 1854.[30] Now a non-profit historic attraction.[31]
25 Rollingstone Village Hall
 
Rollingstone Village Hall
April 5, 2021
(#100006357)
98 Main St.
44°05′51″N 91°49′04″W / 44.0976°N 91.8178°W / 44.0976; -91.8178 (Rollingstone Village Hall)
Rollingstone Municipal hall housing all local government services 1900–1962, and a meeting venue critical to the area's land management and Luxembourg American identity.[32] Now a museum.[33]
26 Saint Charles City Bakery
 
Saint Charles City Bakery
August 9, 1984
(#84001723)
501 Whitewater Ave.
43°58′22″N 92°03′53″W / 43.9729°N 92.0647°W / 43.9729; -92.0647 (Saint Charles City Bakery)
St. Charles 1876 commercial building, last remnant of St. Charles' original business district, which was lost to an 1891 fire and relocation to a more central, trackside location.[34]
27 Schlitz Hotel
 
Schlitz Hotel
August 26, 1982
(#82003087)
129 West 3rd St.
44°03′10″N 91°38′21″W / 44.0528°N 91.6392°W / 44.0528; -91.6392 (Schlitz Hotel)
Winona 1892 hotel and café established by the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company, a well-preserved example of a once-common business venture by breweries.[35] Also a contributing property to the Winona Commercial Historic District.[5]
28 Sugar Loaf
 
Sugar Loaf
August 3, 1990
(#90001164)
Southwest of U.S. Highway 61 and Minnesota State Highway 43
44°01′42″N 91°37′36″W / 44.0284°N 91.6266°W / 44.0284; -91.6266 (Sugar Loaf)
Winona 500-foot-high (150 m) river bluff with a distinctive pinnacle created by 19th-century quarrying; one of Minnesota's most famous landmarks to travelers and tourists since the 1870s.[36]
29 Sugar Loaf Brewery
 
Sugar Loaf Brewery
March 31, 1978
(#78001572)
1023 Sugar Loaf Rd.
44°01′44″N 91°37′27″W / 44.0289°N 91.6242°W / 44.0289; -91.6242 (Sugar Loaf Brewery)
Winona Brewery complex with storage caves dug into Sugar Loaf, associated with prominent local brewer Peter Bub and his successors, who produced beer on the site 1872–1969.[37]
30 Trinity Episcopal Church
 
Trinity Episcopal Church
August 9, 1984
(#84001726)
805 Saint Charles Ave.
43°58′11″N 92°03′58″W / 43.9698°N 92.0661°W / 43.9698; -92.0661 (Trinity Episcopal Church)
St. Charles 1874 Carpenter Gothic church significant for its well-preserved interior and exterior.[38]
31 Trinity Episcopal Church
 
Trinity Episcopal Church
August 9, 1984
(#84001727)
8110 West Main St.
44°01′39″N 91°45′56″W / 44.0276°N 91.7656°W / 44.0276; -91.7656 (Trinity Episcopal Church)
Stockton 1859 church noted for its well-preserved Carpenter Gothic architecture and shared importance to a community established by American-born settlers but later dominated by German immigrants.[39]
32 Washington-Kosciusko School
 
Washington-Kosciusko School
March 6, 2012
(#12000074)
365 Mankato Ave.
44°02′33″N 91°37′10″W / 44.0426°N 91.6195°W / 44.0426; -91.6195 (Washington-Kosciusko School)
Winona 1934 elementary school, one of five new facilities built by Winona Public Schools to implement progressive educational reforms. Also noted for its funding by the Public Works Administration, the New Deal's largest relief program.[40]
33 J.R. Watkins Medical Company Complex
 
J.R. Watkins Medical Company Complex
December 4, 2004
(#84003940)
150 Liberty St.
44°02′58″N 91°37′42″W / 44.0495°N 91.6282°W / 44.0495; -91.6282 (J.R. Watkins Medical Company Complex)
Winona Longtime headquarters of the nation's largest direct sales company in the early 20th century, with seven contributing properties built 1900–1914, including a 1911 Prairie School building designed by George W. Maher.[41]
34 Paul Watkins House
 
Paul Watkins House
November 8, 1984
(#84000255)
175 East Wabasha St.
44°02′49″N 91°38′07″W / 44.0470°N 91.6354°W / 44.0470; -91.6354 (Paul Watkins House)
Winona Jacobethan house built 1924–27, designed by architect Ralph Adams Cram for Paul Watkins (1865–1931), second-generation leader of the J.R. Watkins Company and progenitor of its famous door-to-door sales strategy.[42]
35 Whitewater Avenue Commercial Historic District
 
Whitewater Avenue Commercial Historic District
August 9, 1984
(#84001736)
900–1012 Whitewater Ave.
43°58′08″N 92°03′54″W / 43.9688°N 92.0651°W / 43.9688; -92.0651 (Whitewater Avenue Commercial Historic District)
St. Charles Architecturally cohesive row of seven commercial buildings constructed 1890–1901.[43]
36 Whitewater State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style Historic Resources
 
Whitewater State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style Historic Resources
October 25, 1989
(#89001661)
Off Minnesota State Highway 74
44°03′15″N 92°02′45″W / 44.0541°N 92.0458°W / 44.0541; -92.0458 (Whitewater State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style Historic Resources)
Elba vicinity Park facilities with 29 contributing properties built 1934–41, significant as examples of New Deal federal work relief, diverse National Park Service rustic design, and landscape architecture on a challenging site.[44]
37 Windom Park Residential Historic District
 
Windom Park Residential Historic District
October 13, 2021
(#100007069)
Roughly bounded by West 5th, Huff, West Broadway, Harriet, and Wilson Sts.
44°03′06″N 91°38′46″W / 44.0517°N 91.6461°W / 44.0517; -91.6461 (Windom Park Residential Historic District)
Winona Late-19th and early-20th-century mansions surrounding a park, the preferred neighborhood for multiple generations of Winona's upper class, exhibiting high architectural styles on 25 contributing properties built 1857–1912.[20]
38 Winona and St. Peter Engine House
 
Winona and St. Peter Engine House
January 12, 1984
(#84001730)
75 Gould St.
44°03′26″N 91°40′07″W / 44.0573°N 91.6685°W / 44.0573; -91.6685 (Winona and St. Peter Engine House)
Winona Circa-1890 engine house, sole surviving structure of a railroad shop complex that was a major local employer and a component of the rail network that fueled Winona's economy.[45]
39 Winona and St. Peter Railroad Freight House
 
Winona and St. Peter Railroad Freight House
January 26, 1984
(#84001733)
58 Center St.
44°03′14″N 91°38′06″W / 44.0538°N 91.6350°W / 44.0538; -91.6350 (Winona and St. Peter Railroad Freight House)
Winona Freight warehouse built 1882–3 by the Winona and St. Peter Railroad, which was instrumental in spurring Winona's industry and growth by developing markets along its rail lines across Minnesota and into Dakota Territory.[46]
40 Winona Athletic Club
 
Winona Athletic Club
July 24, 2020
(#100005359)
773 East 5th St.
44°02′41″N 91°37′05″W / 44.0448°N 91.6181°W / 44.0448; -91.6181 (Winona Athletic Club)
Winona 1931 athletic center of a fraternal organization formed in 1898, the secondmost important social center for Winona's East End Polish American community after the Basilica of Saint Stanislaus Kostka.[47]
41 Winona City Hall
 
Winona City Hall
July 8, 1999
(#99000806)
207 Lafayette St.
44°03′03″N 91°38′10″W / 44.0508°N 91.6361°W / 44.0508; -91.6361 (Winona City Hall)
Winona Exceptional 1939 Classical Moderne city hall funded by the Public Works Administration, a local example of the massive federal relief efforts of the New Deal.[48]
42 Winona Commercial Historic District
 
Winona Commercial Historic District
October 1, 1998
(#98001220)
3rd St. between Franklin and Johnson Streets; also 102 Walnut St. and 159 East Second St., and alley behind buildings to the south
44°03′07″N 91°38′07″W / 44.0520°N 91.6352°W / 44.0520; -91.6352 (Winona Commercial Historic District)
Winona Six-block downtown reflecting the prosperity of a river and rail town that grew into southeast Minnesota's leading commercial center of the late 19th century, with 65 contributing properties built 1868–1920.[5] A boundary increase was approved June 4, 2020.
43 Winona County Courthouse
 
Winona County Courthouse
December 2, 1970
(#70000313)
171 West 3rd St.
44°03′10″N 91°38′25″W / 44.0529°N 91.6404°W / 44.0529; -91.6404 (Winona County Courthouse)
Winona 1889 Romanesque Revival county courthouse, an artistic manifestation of Winona's prosperous riverboat and logging era.[49]
44 Winona Free Public Library
 
Winona Free Public Library
July 29, 1977
(#77000775)
151 West 5th St.
44°03′04″N 91°38′27″W / 44.0511°N 91.6407°W / 44.0511; -91.6407 (Winona Free Public Library)
Winona 1899 Neoclassical public library noted for its architectural and cultural significance; specifically designed to house public art along with library services.[50]
45 Winona High School and Winona Junior High School
 
Winona High School and Winona Junior High School
January 2, 2004
(#03001350)
166 and 218 West Broadway
44°03′03″N 91°38′31″W / 44.0509°N 91.6419°W / 44.0509; -91.6419 (Winona High School and Winona Junior High School)
Winona Adjacent schools completed in 1917 and 1926, representative of local efforts to implement progressive educational trends in updated facilities, while a 1928 auditorium hosted local and national touring performances.[51]
46 Winona Hotel
 
Winona Hotel
March 31, 1983
(#83000947)
157 West 3rd St.
44°03′11″N 91°38′23″W / 44.0530°N 91.6397°W / 44.0530; -91.6397 (Winona Hotel)
Winona 1889 Romanesque Revival hotel built to accommodate visitors during Winona's heyday as a fine theatre destination.[52] Also a contributing property to the Winona Commercial Historic District.[5]
47 Winona Masonic Temple
 
Winona Masonic Temple
February 26, 1998
(#98000152)
255 Main St.
44°03′03″N 91°38′21″W / 44.0507°N 91.6393°W / 44.0507; -91.6393 (Winona Masonic Temple)
Winona Masonic Temple built 1908–9, the headquarters of a fraternal organization important to Winona's civic and social development. Also noted for its large, intact collection of theatrical backdrops and stage equipment.[53]
48 Winona Savings Bank Building
 
Winona Savings Bank Building
September 15, 1977
(#77000776)
204 Main St.
44°03′05″N 91°38′18″W / 44.0514°N 91.6382°W / 44.0514; -91.6382 (Winona Savings Bank Building)
Winona Bank constructed 1914–16, the state's largest and best preserved Egyptian Revival building of the early 20th century and one of architect George W. Maher's master works in Minnesota.[54]

Former listings

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[2] Name on the Register Image Date listedDate removed Location City or town Description
1 Bridge No. L1409
 
Bridge No. L1409
July 5, 1990
(#90000978)
November 7, 2016 Hillsdale Township Road 62 over Garvin Brook
Winona vicinity 1895 stone arch bridge, called the state's "most impressive" rural specimen for its fine ashlar masonry and 45-foot (14 m) span.[55] Destroyed in the 2007 Midwest flooding.[56]
2 E. L. King House (Rockledge) September 26, 1982
(#82003086)
May 7, 1990 U.S. Route 61
Winona vicinity 1911 Prairie School house.[57] Demolished in 1988.[58][59]
3 James P. Pearson Steamboat/Julius C. Wilkie Steamboat
 
James P. Pearson Steamboat/Julius C. Wilkie Steamboat
June 11, 1975
(#75001035)
June 25, 1986 Foot of Main St. at Mississippi River (Levee Park)
Winona Destroyed by arson on March 12, 1981.[58][60]
4 Stockton Mill May 12, 1975
(#75001034)
May 7, 1990 8th St.
Stockton 1890 mill.[61] Destroyed by arson on November 25, 1988.[58][62]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved October 25, 2024.
  2. ^ 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.
  3. ^ 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.
  4. ^ Gernes, William D. (1977-02-18). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Anger's Block". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-19.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Curran, Christine A.; Charlene K. Roise (May 1998). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Winona Commercial Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-06-27.
  6. ^ Lutz, Thomas (1973-03-26). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Bunnell House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-19.
  7. ^ "Our Museums". Winona County Historical Society. 2015. Retrieved 2015-07-19.
  8. ^ Lucas, Amy M.; Carole S. Zellie (2011-06-30). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Central Grade School" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  9. ^ Gaut, Greg (2012-12-17). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Station" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2013-08-02.
  10. ^ Lund, Marjorie; Charles W. Nelson (1976-03-02). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Choate Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-19.
  11. ^ Frame III, Robert M. (August 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: St. Stanislaus Polish Catholic Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-17.
  12. ^ Kudzia, Camille (February 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Holy Trinity Catholic Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-17.
  13. ^ Koop, Michael (February 1989). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: East Second Street Commercial Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-16.
  14. ^ Kudzia, Camille (February 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Ellsworth, Benjamin, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-16.
  15. ^ Rethlefsen, Ann; Terri Karsten (2020-01-29). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: First Congregational Church (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-12-20.
  16. ^ Frame III, Robert M. (August 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Gallagher, Dr. J.W.S., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  17. ^ Gernes, William D.; Charles W. Nelson (1976-12-03). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Grain and Lumber Exchange Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  18. ^ Kudzia, Camille (March 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Hemmelberg, William, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  19. ^ Frame III, Robert M. (August 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Hodgins, Abner F., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  20. ^ a b c Que, Erin Sr.; Saleh Miller (2021-03-03). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Windom Park Residential Historic District (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2021-12-20.
  21. ^ Nelson, Charles W. (1976-07-30). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Huff, Henry/Lamberton, H.W., House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  22. ^ Lucas, Amy M.; Carole S. Zellie (2011-06-29). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Jefferson School" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  23. ^ Lutz, Thomas (1975-03-26). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Kirch/Latch Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-12.
  24. ^ Gaut, Greg (2014-02-10). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Laird, Norton Company Building" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
  25. ^ Gaut, Greg (2022-11-29). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lake Park Bandshell (PDF). Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2023-11-19.
  26. ^ Lucas, Amy M.; Carole S. Zellie (2011-06-30). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Madison School" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  27. ^ Nelson, Charles W.; William D. Gernes (1977-07-01). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Marnach, Nicholas, House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
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