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This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Scott County, Minnesota. It is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Scott 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 19 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county. A supplementary list includes four additional sites that were formerly on the National Register.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted September 13, 2024.[1]
[2] | Name on the Register[3] | Image | Date listed[4] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Abraham Bisson House | April 17, 1980 (#80002164) |
20150 County Rd. 57 44°39′28″N 93°42′30″W |
Jordan vicinity | 1884 house notable for its local sandstone masonry and association with the now-vanished town of St. Lawrence.[5] | |
2 | Church of St. Wenceslaus | February 19, 1982 (#82003035) |
215–227 E. Main St. 44°32′39″N 93°34′27″W |
New Prague | Religious and educational hub of a large Catholic Czech immigrant community, featuring a 1907 church, 1908 rectory, and 1914 parochial school.[6] | |
3 | Julius A. Coller House | April 17, 1980 (#80002168) |
434 S. Lewis St. 44°47′41″N 93°31′29″W |
Shakopee | 1887 house of a significant community leader who served 16 years as a state senator. Also recognized as one of the best-preserved Scott County residences of its era.[7] | |
4 | Early Shakopee Houses | April 17, 1980 (#80002169) |
411 and 419 E. 2nd Ave. 44°47′54″N 93°31′18″W |
Shakopee | Two adjacent houses built circa 1865, well-preserved examples of Shakopee's early residences.[8] | |
5 | Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration | April 17, 1980 (#80002159) |
201 N. Walnut St. 44°37′28″N 93°45′48″W |
Belle Plaine | Unusual 1869 Stick style church.[9] | |
6 | Foss and Wells House | April 17, 1980 (#80002161) |
613 S. Broadway St. 44°39′23″N 93°37′36″W |
Jordan | Shared 1858 house of two families who co-owned one of Jordan's key gristmills. Also noted for its sandstone masonry and Italianate architecture.[10] | |
7 | Holmes Street Bridge | July 6, 2010 (#10000414) |
Holmes St. over the Minnesota River 44°48′01″N 93°31′38″W |
Shakopee | Rare Minnesota example of a deck truss bridge, built in 1927 by the Minneapolis Steel & Machinery Company.[11] | |
8 | Hooper-Bowler-Hillstrom House | April 17, 1980 (#80002160) |
410 N. Cedar St. 44°37′36″N 93°45′56″W |
Belle Plaine | Circa-1871 house significant as Scott County's best preserved 19th-century frame house and for its successive ownership by two prominent local businessmen.[12] Now a house museum.[13] | |
9 | Inyan Ceyaka Otonwe | February 12, 1999 (#99000191) |
Carver Rapids unit of Minnesota Valley State Recreation Area[14] |
Louisville Township | Precolumbian mounds and site of a post-contact Wahpeton Dakota village led by notable chief Mazomani.[15] | |
10 | Jordan Brewery Ruins | April 17, 1980 (#80002162) |
415 S. Broadway St. 44°39′48″N 93°37′32″W |
Jordan | Prominent remains of a brewery complex active 1861–1948, one of the leading businesses that made Jordan into an early industrial center.[16] | |
11 | Jordan Historic District | April 17, 1980 (#80002163) |
Water St. and S. Broadway St. 44°39′55″N 93°37′34″W |
Jordan | Scott County's best-preserved 19th-century business district, with 14 contributing properties mostly dating to Jordan's peak as a commercial center 1865–1880.[17][18] | |
12 | Wencl Kajer Farmstead | April 17, 1980 (#80002166) |
County Highway 2 44°34′30″N 93°23′33″W |
New Market Township | Hilltop dairy farm established in 1907, a highly visible representative of local agricultural development, with a distinctive 1918 round barn and a 1920 brick farmhouse.[19] | |
13 | Maka Yusota | January 16, 2003 (#02001703) |
Address restricted 44°46′14″N 93°23′52″W |
Savage vicinity | A sacred spring important in Dakota history and culture.[20] | |
14 | Mudbaden Sulphur Springs Company | April 17, 1980 (#80002165) |
17706 Valley View Dr. 44°41′35″N 93°37′01″W |
Jordan vicinity | 1915 spa building of a popular health resort in operation 1890s–1947, serving patients and vacationers attracted to its sulfur-rich mud baths.[21] | |
15 | New Market Hotel and Store | April 17, 1980 (#80002167) |
441 Main St. 44°34′24″N 93°21′07″W |
Elko New Market | Well-preserved example—built 1897—of Scott County towns' late-19th-century commercial buildings, and the only surviving example from New Market.[22] | |
16 | St. Mary's Church of the Purification | April 17, 1980 (#80002173) |
15850 Marystown Rd. 44°43′13″N 93°32′31″W |
Marystown | 1882 Romanesque Revival church and associated buildings constructed 1893–1921, representative of the Catholic church properties around which many German American settlements grew in rural Scott County.[23] | |
17 | Herman Schroeder House and Livery | January 19, 2023 (#100008547) |
717–719 Bluff Ave. E. 44°48′03″N 93°31′05″W |
Shakopee | Ornate 1880 house and outbuilding of Herman Schroeder (1854–1922), longtime owner of Shakopee's most successful brickyard and an influential civic leader.[24] | |
18 | Shakopee Historic District | April 11, 1972 (#72000682) |
1801–2187 County Highway 101 44°48′11″N 93°29′48″W |
Shakopee | District encompassing ancient habitation sites and mounds, a contact-era Dakota village, and pioneer-era buildings and a ferry landing.[25] | |
19 | Strunk-Nyssen House | April 17, 1980 (#80002174) |
11120 Chaparral Ave. 44°47′20″N 93°33′26″W |
Shakopee vicinity | Circa-1856 house enlarged circa 1880, significant as the successive home of notable local brewers Herman H. Strunk and Hubert Nyssen and as an example of 19th-century vernacular architecture.[26] |
[2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bridge No. L3040 | November 6, 1989 (#89001829) | September 20, 2007 | County Road 51, North of Minnesota State Highway 19 |
Belle Plaine | Unusually early stone arch road bridge, built 1878.[27] Demolished in 2006.[28] | |
2 | Merchants Hotel | April 17, 1980 (#80002171) | September 25, 1987 | 211 E. 2nd St. |
Shakopee | 1865 hotel.[29] Fell into disrepair and demolished in 1987.[30] | |
3 | Reis Block | April 17, 1980 (#80002172) | May 15, 1987 | 1st and Holmes Sts. |
Shakopee | 1883 Queen Anne commercial building with second-floor auditorium. Demolished by owner in 1986.[31] | |
4 | Roehl-Lenzmeier House | April 17, 1980 (#82003032) | June 11, 2003 | 10th Ave. W. |
Shakopee vicinity | Circa-1860 stone farmhouse of a notable homesteader.[32] Demolished in 2002.[28] |
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