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After filtering for United States of America, 166 entries match your criteria. Entries 101 through 166 are listed. ⊲ Previous 100                                              

 
 

Historical Markers in Madison WI 53703

 
Harvey Hospital Marker image, Touch for more information
By William J. Toman, July 12, 2010
Harvey Hospital Marker
101 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — Harvey Hospital
On this city block stood, during the Civil War, Harvey Hospital, and later the Wisconsin Soldiers' Orphans' Home, both established through the influence of Mrs. Cordelia P. Harvey, whose honored husband, Governor Louis R. Harvey, had, April 19, . . . Map (db m36391) HM
102 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 40 — Hyer - Jaquish Hotel — 1854
Built in a vernacular that borrows both from Greek revival and Italianate sources, this brick structure was the front section of a larger Farmers’ and Railway hotel. Such hotels offered lodging to boarders and travelers in the nineteenth century. . . . Map (db m32454) HM
103 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — Johann and Elsbeth Reiner Tree
This evergreen commemorates the first Christmas tree in Madison and perhaps one of the first in the country. It was erected at 616 Williamson Street in the log cabin of Johann Jacob Reiner, the 2nd German to arrive in Madison, and his Swiss bride, . . . Map (db m41867) HM
104 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — John A. Johnson made Madison's Factory District Flourish — The Madison Heritage Series
John A. Johnson made a bold move when he co-founded an agricultural implement company in Madison in 1880. Many civic leaders opposed manufacturing, fearing the workers would lower the city's moral and intellectual tone. But Johnson proved his . . . Map (db m32919) HM
105 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 59 — John George Ott House — 1873
The Ott house is one of the finest High Victorian houses in Madison and the grandest remaining 19th century mansion in the Third Lake Ridge Historic District. German craftsmen probably executed the intricate woodwork on porches and bays, detailed . . . Map (db m32699) HM
106 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 52 — Kircher House — 1877
An example of a High Victorian Italianate style pattern book house design, this cream brick dwelling was built by John Kircher, a German carpenter and contractor, in 1892. After a decade of absentee ownership, the house was bought by Adolph Klose . . . Map (db m32730) HM
107 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 53 — Klose Cottage — 1870
Typical of the frame L-plan cottages which dotted the isthmus in the last half of the Nineteenth Century, the Klose cottage is a vestige of immigrant housing in that period. Adolph Klose, a Prussian immigrant, was a self-employed tailor when he had . . . Map (db m40989) HM
108 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 54 — Lougee House — 1907 — Claude & Starck —
A significant example of the Prairie School style of architecture, this dwelling bears similarities to Frank Lloyd Wright's Harley Bradley house of 1900, in Kankakee, Illinois. Louis W. Claude worked for Louis H. Sullivan with Frank Lloyd Wright and . . . Map (db m41868) HM
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109 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 62 — Machinery Row — 1898-1914
This block long group of brick buildings was originally known the Brown Brothers' Business Block. It earned the nickname "Machinery Row" when several agricultural implement branch houses located here, part of the lively railroad shipping business . . . Map (db m40519) HM
110 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 142 — Madison Candy Company — John Nader, Architect — 1903 —
The Madison Candy Company building is significant for its association with the development of local manufacturing. An industrial type building designed by John Nader, it is constructed of red brick, with a limestone foundation, belt courses and . . . Map (db m40604) HM
111 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 147 — Madison Gas & Electric Company Powerhouse — Claude & Starck; Mead & Seastone, Architects — 1902; 1915 Addition —
The Madison Gas & Electric Powerhouse has been in continuous operation providing electrical power since its construction in 1902. The building is significant for its association with the development of Madison's utility industry and as the location . . . Map (db m40250) HM
112 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — Mills Brothers Commercial Building
Built in 1904, this Neo-Classical Revival building was constructed for local grocers Albert and Elmer Mills. The wall ad around the corner for Gardner's "Purity Bread" with its butter yellow wrapper dates to the early 50s when the building . . . Map (db m50551) HM
113 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — Orton Park
In 1887 this spot high over Lake Monona became the first Madison park. It is named in honor of Harlow S. Orton (1817-1895), Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice, Madison Mayor, Assemblyman, Circuit Court Judge, and University of Wisconsin Law School . . . Map (db m32646) HM
114 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 39 — Orton Park — 1887
Originally chosen as the site for the Village of Madison Cemetery in 1846, the fathers of the growing city decided to disinter the bodies buried here a decade later upon acquisition of the Forest Hill site. Named for Supreme Court Justice Harlow S. . . . Map (db m32616) HM
115 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — Sauthoff House — 1857
At the center of the Third Lake Ridge Germanic enclave were the Hannoverian merchant tailor Friedrich Sauthoff and his family. Sauthoff and his neighbor, Michael Zwank, a mason, built this house of molded red brick. Its sturdy vernacular style . . . Map (db m32701) HM
116 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 46 — Shipley-Shuttleworth House — 1855
First occupied by railroad contractor D. B. Shipley, this brick house draws stylistically from both the Greek Revival and the Italianate. In the 1880's the dwelling was owned and occupied by the family of Territorial Secretary William B. Slaughter. . . . Map (db m32969) HM
117 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 131 — Sixth Ward Public Library — Claude and Starck, Architects — 1912 —
The Sixth Ward Public Library was funded by a grant from Andrew Carnegie and is the oldest existing Carnegie library building in Madison. It is significant as the work of architects Claude and Starck, and is designed in the Collegiate Gothic style . . . Map (db m50054) HM
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118 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — Steensland Bridge
The Steensland Bridge was named after Norwegian Consul Halle Steensland who donated $10,000 in 1904 for construction of a stone bridge over the Yahara River. The bridge was widened in 1950 reusing the original stone facing. The bridge was replaced . . . Map (db m39087) HM
119 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 161 — Timothy and Katherine McCarthy House — Conover and Porter, Architects — 1897 —
This home is an exceptional example of the Free-Classic subtype of the Queen Anne style which was at the height of local popularity between 1880 and 1910. The Queen Anne style was derived from England and architects' interpretation of early English . . . Map (db m54232) HM
120 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — Toward Revolution / 1970's Vision
Toward Revolution In the 70s Williamson Street Was primarily a working class industrial area. Artists, activists, poets, musicians, and theater folks found cheap rent here and minimal restriction on out artistic and political . . . Map (db m105520) HM
121 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 146 — Wisconsin Wagon Company Factory — 1903; Addition 1911
This building is significant for its association with Madison's cultural history, particularly transportation manufacturing, and as an excellent example of a textile mill industrial loft type building. This type of building was long and narrow with . . . Map (db m40231) HM
122 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 126 — Yahara River Parkway — O.C. Simonds, Landscape Architect — 1903-1906 —
The Yahara River Parkway was the first parkway built in Madison. Designed by O.C. Simonds in the Prairie style, it features native plantings arranged in an irregular, naturalistic manner along the banks of the river. The parkway was designed with . . . Map (db m50415) HM
123 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Marquette — 340 — Yahara River Parkway
In January 1903, the leader of Madison's park development and President of the Madison Park and Pleasure Drive Association, John M. Olin, presented a grand development plan for the Yahara River to city leaders. The plan called for deepening, . . . Map (db m32644) HM
124 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — 150 — Emily Thompson House — Circa 1872
Emily Torstensenseim immigrated to the United States from Norway with her parents at the age of four. When she grew up she married a fellow Norwegian immigrant, Ole Thompson, who became a successful hotelier and grocer. Shortly after his death, his . . . Map (db m73067) HM
125 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — 23 — Gates of Heaven Synagogue — 1863
Gates of Heaven was designed for Madison's first Jewish congregation by local architect August Kutzbock in the German Romanesque style. Kutzbock also used this distinctive style for the Pierce and Keenan houses at Pinckney and Gilman. The building . . . Map (db m32381) HM
126 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — 148 — Gloria Dei Evangelical Lutheran Church — Balch and Lippert, Architects — 1922 —
The Gloria Dei Church is a striking example of the Gothic Revival style, which was locally popular between 1915 and 1945 for the design of religious buildings. The faηade is of brick and limestone. Decorative elements include Gothic-arched door and . . . Map (db m53469) HM
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127 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — 152 — Mattermore - Malaney House — 1875
This vernacular house is significant as a surviving example from Madison's earliest residential era and as an increasingly rare, intact, gable-front type house with wood clapboard siding. The elements which define this folk form are evident on the . . . Map (db m54227) HM
128 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — 160 — Nelson House — 1881
The Nelson house is a beautiful example of a vernacular gabled-front type from the era of Madison's earliest residential development. The house features a simple faηade of brick, a street-facing gable and regular placement of windows. Ornament is . . . Map (db m60638) HM
129 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — 110 — Nichols Station — Balch and Lippert, Architects — 1917 —
Nichols Station is significant for its role in the advancement of water works technology and the public works history of Madison. The design introduced a steam operated pumping system, a turning point in water works technology which replaced the . . . Map (db m49220) HM
130 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — 42 — Robert Lamp House — 1903
This unusual midblock residence was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for his boyhood friend, "Robie" Lamp, a realtor and insurance salesman. The simple, boxy shape of the house, with its open floor plan, was very modern for the time. Wright called it . . . Map (db m32412) HM
131 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — 14 — St. Patrick's Church — 1888 - 1889 — Nader —
Designed in a late Nineteenth Century eclectic style by Madison civil engineer and architect, John Nader, this church is the third oldest Catholic parish in the City. It was dedicated on St. Patrick's Day in 1889, Archbishop Heiss of Milwaukee in . . . Map (db m40207) HM
132 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Old Market Place — Voluntarios Internacionales de la Libertad
This memorial is dedicated to the 45,000 international volunteers who fought in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. Among them were 2,800 United States veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, many of whom came from Wisconsin. Their memorable struggle . . . Map (db m38715) HM
133 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 6 — Beecroft House — Claude and Starck, Architects — 1911 —
This house is attributed to Madison master architects Claude and Starck and is an excellent example of the Prairie style of architecture. Louis Claude was influenced by the work of architectural masters Louis Sullivan, Frank Lloyd Wright and George . . . Map (db m58121) HM
134 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 43 — Braley House — 1875-76
The house of Judge Arthur B. Braley was a social and cultural center of the Mansion Hill area in the Nineteenth Century. The house was built of cream brick with incised stone lintels in the Late Gothic Revival style. Braley, a patron of the literary . . . Map (db m33723) HM
135 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 118 — Chi Phi Fraternity — Law, Law and Potter, Architects — 1928 —
The Chi Phi fraternity house is an outstanding example of the Tudor Revival style and is constructed of Madison sandstone. The striking design featuring steeply pitched and parapeted gables is one of the most accomplished works of premier Madison . . . Map (db m78506) HM
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136 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 84 — Chi Psi Lodge — 1911-1913
This imposing fraternity house was designed by noted Milwaukee architect Alexander C. Eschweiler and was built using Madison's native sandstone. Its Tudor Revival style is one of the best examples of that architecture in Madison. The Iota chapter of . . . Map (db m40963) HM
137 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 85 — Delta Upsilon Fraternity House — 1906-1907
Founded in the spring of 1885, the Wisconsin Chapter of Delta Upsilon Fraternity has occupied this stately structure since 1907. Delta Upsilon Fraternity is unique among local fraternities as a non-secret Greek letter society since it has no secret . . . Map (db m40961) HM
138 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 73 — Frank G. Brown House — 1905 — Reported missing
This handsome house was built by Frank G. Brown (1852-1920), scion of a prominent real estate and banking family. Brown, who was first vice-president of the First National Bank, was a founder of the French Battery Company (now Rayovac). The Brown . . . Map (db m40749) HM
139 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 87 — Grimm Book Bindery — Alvan Small, Architect
This building is significant as the work of architect Alvan Small and as an example of a small commercial building executed in the Neoclassical style. The primary facade is of red brick with a side-gabled roof bracketed with a stepped parapet end . . . Map (db m57732) HM
140 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 15 — James Mears House — 1871
This square house designed in a modified Federal style with Italianate detailing was built for Major James Mears, realtor and merchant from New York state. The cream brick residence was originally built at a cost of $5,000. Its significant . . . Map (db m40857) HM
141 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 28 — Suhr House — 1886 — Nader —
This house was built in a late Second French Empire style with ornate detailing in the manner of the Aesthetic style. Its owner, John J. Suhr, was the founder of the German American Bank. The architect, John Nader, was primarily employed as a civil . . . Map (db m40761) HM
142 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 9 — Van Slyke House — 1859
This Italianate sandstone house, originally built for local hardware dealer Samuel Fox, exemplifies a regionally distinctive alternating pattern in its masonry. In 1860, transplanted New Yorker, Napoleon Bonaparte Van Slyke, the cashier of the Dane . . . Map (db m32665) HM
143 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — Vietnam War protesters and police clashed here — The Madison Heritage Series
During the 1960s and early 1970s, many American college campuses smoldered over political issues, especially the draft and the Vietnam War. The University of Wisconsin, however, burst into a full blaze. Groups demonstrated regularly on campus and . . . Map (db m37318) HM
144 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — 164 — Woman's Building — Jeremiah Kiersted Cady, Architect — 1906 —
This building, built for the Woman's Club of Madison, is significant for its association with the national Woman's Club movement and to the cultural and social history of Madison. Participation in Woman's Clubs was a catalyst for influencing civic . . . Map (db m53230) HM
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145 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, State-Langdon — World-famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright called Madison his hometown — The Madison Heritage Series
In 1879, the family of young Frank Lloyd Wright bought a house at 802 East Gorham Street, a house that was later demolished. Wright's years in Madison were formative. As a teenager, he witnessed the tragic collapse of an addition under construction . . . Map (db m32917) HM
146 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 64 — Adolf H. Kayser House — Claude and Starck — 1902 —
The Adolph H. Kayser house was designed by Claude and Starck, a local architectural firm that would later become the foremost practitioner of the Prairie School style in Madison. The design of the Kayser house is a distinctive blend of classical . . . Map (db m40968) HM
147 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 100 — Anna and Cornelius Collins Residence — Claude and Starck, Architects — 1908 —
This house, designed by Madison's premier architectural firm of Claude and Starck in 1908, incorporates an eclectic mix of popular styles of the era and includes Prairie, Tudor and Craftsman features. Windows take center stage at the front faηade: . . . Map (db m49272) HM
148 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 89 — Badger State Shoe Factory — Ferdinand Kronenberg, Architect — 1910 —
Albert and Henry Atkins founded the Badger State Shoe Factory in Milwaukee in 1893. They expanded production to Madison in 1900 and in 1910 constructed this building to consolidate manufacturing operations. Significant for its association with turn . . . Map (db m49284) HM
149 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 47 — Bernard - Hoover Boat House — 1915
This frame building is the third boat house on the site. The site symbolizes the importance of pleasure boating in Madison in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The original boat yards and house were operated by Charles Bernard in . . . Map (db m38703) HM
150 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — Breese Stevens Field
Madison's oldest sports park is named for Breese Stevens (1834-1903). A New York native, he came to Wisconsin in 1856 to look after family landed interests. Stevens became Mayor of Madison in 1884, UW Regent in 1891, and Doctor of Law in 1902. . . . Map (db m32639) HM
151 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 132 — Breese Stevens Field — Claude and Starck, Architects — 1925; 1934 —
Breese Stevens Field, named for the former Madison mayor whose family donated the land, is significant as the city's premier athletic facility from 1926 through the 1960s. The grandstand, designed by prominent Madison architects Claude and Starck in . . . Map (db m58008) HM
152 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 351 — Ceramic Arts Studio of Madison — Reported missing
Once located at this site on North Blount Street, the Ceramic Arts Studio of Madison operated from 1940 until its closing in 1956. Founded by Lawrence Rabbitt and Reuben Sand, the company was one of the largest manufacturers of figurines in the . . . Map (db m31833) HM
153 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 86 — City Horse Barn — Built 1910-1914
This simple brick structure is a rare survivor of the horse-and-wagon era. Built as part of the old city yards, the barn housed up to nine draft horses whose job it was to pull maintenance and service vehicles. Each of the nine windows on the Dayton . . . Map (db m32640) HM
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154 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 50 — City Market — 1909 — Robert L. Wright —
The City Market reflects the active civic improvement work in Madison at the turn of the century. Like other public projects, the Market was intended to enhance the advantages of city life. The building design by Madison architect Robert L. Wright . . . Map (db m32638) HM
155 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 29 — Collins House — c. 1911 — Claude & Starck —
Built for lumber executive William Collins, this dwelling was designed by architects Louis Claude and Edward Starck. The house is characterized by a gable roof, wide eaves, leaded glass windows, and horizontal and vertical banding that lends an . . . Map (db m40964) HM
156 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 163 — Fuller & Johnson Manufacturing Co. Office Building — 1885; Additions c. 1892 and 1909
This building is significant for its association with Madison's industrial history. It is all that remains of the once expansive Fuller & Johnson Manufacturing Co., a producer of farm implements and the first major industry in Madison. The building . . . Map (db m52125) HM
157 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — Here was Madison’s first African-American neighborhood — The Madison Heritage Series
John Hill first set eyes on Madison while visiting a relative who was attending the University of Wisconsin. He moved his family here from Atlanta in 1910 to join a modest community of about 140 African Americans. In 1917, Hill bought a house and . . . Map (db m33612) HM
158 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 30 — Hirsig House — c. 1913 — Small —
Commissioned to Madison architect Alvan E. Small by retail store owner Louis Hirsig, this stucco and brick house exemplifies the simplicity of the Prairie style. The horizontal lines of the windows along with the distinctive red tile roof and wide . . . Map (db m40926) HM
159 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 101 — Irene and Robert Connor Residence — 1920
This Colonial Revival house was built for Robert and Irene Connor, daughter of lumber magnates Anna and Cornelius Collins who lived next door. Irene took over the position of vice-president of the family firm. The house is significant for its . . . Map (db m49271) HM
160 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 19 — Leitch House — 1857-58
The buff-colored sandstone for this Gothic Revival house was quarried in Westport, barged across Lake Mendota, and cut on the building site. The exterior of the structure is characterized by high peaked gables, decorative barge boards, spiked . . . Map (db m38700) HM
161 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 58 — Lincoln School — Claude and Starck — 1915 —
Lincoln School is a superb example of the Prairie School of architecture. Some of the reflections of this style are the bands of terra cotta and stone that emphasize the horizontal lines of the design, detailed terra cotta ornament on capitals and . . . Map (db m38704) HM
162 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 57 — Miller House — Moved 1908
The earliest known Black-owned building remaining in Madison, this unassuming house has been the residence of two generations of the Miller family. From the time of William Miller's arrival here from Kentucky in 1901 members of the Miller family . . . Map (db m54184) HM
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163 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — Steensland Bridge
The Steensland Bridge was named after Norwegian Consul Halle Steensland who donated $10,000 in 1904 for construction of a stone bridge over the Yahara River. The bridge was widened in 1950 reusing the original stone facing. The bridge was replaced . . . Map (db m39088) HM
164 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — Tenney Park
This park was named for its principle benefactor, Daniel Kent Tenney (1834 - 1915), an attorney, who purchased a portion of this marshland in 1899 and donated it to the Madison Park and Pleasure Drive Association to be developed and maintained as an . . . Map (db m50087) HM
165 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 125 — Tenney Park — O.C. Simonds & John Nolen, Landscape Architects — 1900-1911 —
Designed by O.C. Simonds, the founder of the Prairie School of landscape architecture, Madison's first city park emphasizes naturalistic placement of native plant species. The design created lagoons to symbolize prairie rivers and meadows to . . . Map (db m50062) HM
166 Wisconsin, Dane County, Madison, Tenney-Lapham — 96 — Thomas / Hill Grocery and Residence — c. 1850; moved 1901, 1912
These vernacular buildings are significant for their association with, and are among the last vestiges of, Madison's first African-American community. Both were moved to the site by African-American civic leader, John Turner. The two-story, . . . Map (db m54181) HM

166 entries matched your criteria. Entries 101 through 166 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100
 
 
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Jun. 7, 2024