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This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Pipestone County, Minnesota. It is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Pipestone 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.
There are 16 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county, including one National Monument. A supplementary list includes one additional site that was formerly on the National Register. Many of Pipestone County's listings are constructed of locally quarried Sioux Quartzite.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted September 13, 2024.[1]
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[3] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bauman Hall | March 3, 1980 (#80002116) |
201 West Wall Street 43°50′59″N 96°23′56″W |
Jasper | 1891 vestige of the abandoned town of North Sioux Falls, Minnesota, relocated circa 1893 as the first in a row of Sioux Quartzite buildings on Jasper's main street.[4] | |
2 | Burlington Cedar Rapids and Northern Depot | March 3, 1980 (#80002124) |
400 North Hiawatha Avenue 44°00′14″N 96°19′05″W |
Pipestone | 1890 railway station symbolizing the importance of railroads in southwestern Minnesota's development.[5] | |
3 | Calumet Hotel | March 16, 1976 (#76001066) |
104 West Main Street 44°00′01″N 96°19′04″W |
Pipestone | 1888 hotel listed for its architectural prominence and importance to Pipestone's early commerce.[6] Also a contributing property to the Pipestone Commercial Historic District.[7] | |
4 | Cannomok'e-Pipestone National Monument | October 15, 1966 (#66000112) |
36 Reservation Avenue 44°00′48″N 96°19′30″W |
Pipestone vicinity | Primary source of pipestone quarried by Plains Indians from prehistory to present for ceremonial pipes and other sacred or artistic items. Now a National Park unit.[8] | |
5 | Gerber Hospital and Garage | March 3, 1980 (#80002119) |
120 East Wall Street 43°51′00″N 96°23′45″W |
Jasper | Hospital clinic built circa 1913, noted for its unusual use of Sioux Quartzite on a Stick style design.[9] | |
6 | Ihlen Mercantile Company | March 3, 1980 (#80002115) |
Holman Street and Sherman Avenue 43°54′30″N 96°22′07″W |
Ihlen | 1892 home of Ihlen's first business, also noted as southwestern Minnesota's most intact frame commercial building.[10] Likely demolished (see talk page). | |
7 | Jasper School Building | June 17, 2019 (#100004075) |
100 N. Hill Ave. 43°51′01″N 96°23′37″W |
Jasper | Five-section school in service 1911–2001, illustrating Jasper's distinctive use of Sioux Quartzite across multiple decades and architectural styles as well as its evolving educational priorities.[11] | |
8 | Pipestone Commercial Historic District | May 2, 1977 (#77000761) |
Along Main Street between Second Avenue NW/SW and Second Avenue NE/SE 44°00′02″N 96°19′03″W |
Pipestone | Two-block district featuring Minnesota's greatest concentration of Sioux Quartzite buildings, with 22 contributing properties mostly dating to the 1890s.[7] | |
9 | Pipestone County Courthouse | March 3, 1980 (#80002121) |
416 South Hiawatha 43°59′51″N 96°19′06″W |
Pipestone | 1900 courthouse, significant as the county's seat of government and most elaborate architecture and use of Sioux Quartzite.[12] | |
10 | Pipestone Indian School Superintendent's House | April 5, 1993 (#93000232) |
Off North Hiawatha Avenue 44°01′15″N 96°19′11″W |
Pipestone | 1907 staff housing, a rare vestige in Minnesota of federal Native American boarding schools such as Pipestone Indian School, which operated 1892–1953.[13] | |
11 | Pipestone Public Library | March 3, 1980 (#80002122) |
317 South Hiawatha Avenue 43°59′55″N 96°19′02″W |
Pipestone | 1904 Carnegie library also significant for its architecture, designed by Joseph Schwartz in Sioux Quartzite.[14] | |
12 | Pipestone Water Tower | March 3, 1980 (#80002123) |
Second Street, N.E. 44°00′06″N 96°18′39″W |
Pipestone | 1920 water tower, one of the first to be built with concrete. Designer L.P. Wolff pioneered the method in 1918 for the nearly identical Brainerd Water Tower in Brainerd, Minnesota.[15] | |
13 | John M. Poorbaugh Block | January 12, 2023 (#100008546) |
102 East Wall St. 43°51′00″N 96°23′49″W |
Jasper | One of Jasper's best surviving examples of its distinctive Sioux Quartzite commercial buildings, built in 1889, and the home 1917–1972 of its long-serving local newspaper, the Jasper Journal. Now a museum.[16] | |
14 | John Rowe House | March 3, 1980 (#80002118) |
200 East Second Street 43°51′04″N 96°23′44″W |
Jasper | Unusual stone bungalow built circa 1905, juxtaposing a common design with an atypical construction material.[17] | |
15 | Split Rock Bridge | November 6, 1989 (#89001823) |
County Road 54 over Split Rock Creek 43°53′31″N 96°22′02″W |
Ihlen vicinity | Quartzite arch bridge built 1937–38, noted for its aesthetic simplicity and 50-foot (15 m) length—the longest stone arch span on a Minnesota highway.[18] | |
16 | Stordahl Building | March 3, 1980 (#80002120) |
119 West Wall Street 43°50′59″N 96°23′54″W |
Jasper | Nominated as one of Jasper's earliest and most intact quartzite buildings, constructed in 1894.[19] Second floor has since been removed. |
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