National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Montgomery
Records: All Properties
Page 1 of 4 showing 10 records of 37 total,
starting on record 11 | 2 | 3 | 4
Ball, Charles M., House
702 Spruce StreetCoffeyville (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Feb 7, 2011
Architect: Undetermined
Area of Significance: single dwelling
Architectural Style(s): Queen Anne
Built between 1906 and 1908, the Ball House at 702 Spruce Street in Coffeyville combines the irregular Queen Anne house form with Classical Revival stylistic features and captures an important transitional period in architecture when the two styles were commonly blended. Its asymmetrical massing and variety of shapes and textures distinguish this three-story house. Charles Ball, who gained local notoriety for his banking, business, and real estate dealings during the early twentieth century, owned the house until his death in 1922. In addition to his many professional and community-related endeavors, Ball is perhaps most well known for his involvement in the Dalton Gang’s hold-up of Condon Bank on October 5, 1892. As the gang entered the bank that morning, they encountered cashier Charles Ball, who concocted a story about the safe being on a time lock. Four of the five robbers were eventually fatally wounded by the ensuing gunfire outside the bank. Although his link with the Dalton Gang robbery is interesting, it significantly pre-dates Ball’s association with the residence at 702 Spruce Street. Therefore, the house was nominated only for its local architectural significance.
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church
202 West 12th StreetCoffeyville (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Jul 28, 1995
Architect: John Simon
Area of Significance: religious facility
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque; Late Gothic Revival
Blakeslee Motor Company Building
211 West MyrtleIndependence (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Aug 25, 1989
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: specialty store
Architectural Style(s): Chicago; Other
Booth Hotel
201-209 West MainIndependence (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Apr 28, 1983
Architect: Frank Bender
Area of Significance: hotel
Architectural Style(s): Classical Revival
Booth Theater
119 West MyrtleIndependence (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Oct 13, 1988
Architect: Boller Brothers
Area of Significance: theater
Architectural Style(s): Mission/Spanish Revival; Other
Brown Barn
5879 CR4300Independence (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Apr 8, 2009
Architect: unknown
Area of Significance: animal facility
Architectural Style(s): Other
Thematic Nomination: Historic Agriculture Related Resources of Kansas
Located north of Independence in Montgomery County, the Brown Barn is part of the James B. Brown farmstead that dates to 1880. The 2 ½-story sandstone and wood barn was built in 1885 and is nestled into a bluff out of which the stone for the barn was quarried. The barn is an example of the bank barn property type, which is characterized by its on-grade access to two levels, either through the use of a natural or soil bank or by a constructed ramp. It is nominated for its architectural and agricultural history.
Brown, W.P., Mansion
South Walnut and Eldridge StreetsCoffeyville (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Dec 12, 1976
Architect: Wilder and Wight
Area of Significance: secondary structure; single dwelling
Architectural Style(s): Colonial Revival
Cedar Manor Farm
2326 CR 6400Lafontaine vicinity (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Jan 8, 2014
Architect: Unknown
Area of Significance: Agricultural District
Architectural Style(s): Colonial Revival
Thematic Nomination: Historic Agriculture Related Resources of Kansas
The Cedar Manor Farm traces its roots back to Lafayette and Martha Pound, who settled the property in the early 1870s. The Pounds purchased this land from the United States government, which was selling tracts of the former Osage Trust Lands in southeast Kansas during this period. State and federal census records suggest Pound established a productive, much diversified farm by 1880, but the recurring cycles of financial depression and drought may have pushed the family to leave in 1893. The property changed hands several times and sat vacant many years until Clarence (Doc) and Bernice Raymond purchased it in 1929 and developed it into a dairy farm - known as Cedar Manor Farm - with an award winning registered Guernsey herd. Only a portion of the original Pound residence remains from the earliest occupation, and the majority of the farmstead was developed during the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, reflecting the peak years of the dairy operation. Raymond enjoyed competition as he noted in an interview with the Coffeyville Journal: "If I couldn't show at fairs and livestock shows I would sell the herd. This dairying is work and the shows and fairs are the fun of the game." He retired from the dairy business in 1969 and sold the herd. The farm remains in the Raymond family. It was nominated as part of the "Historic Agriculture-Related Resources of Kansas" multiple property nomination for its local significance in the area of agriculture.
Cherryvale Carnegie Free Library
329 East MainCherryvale (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Aug 18, 1987
Architect: George Washburn
Area of Significance: library
Architectural Style(s): Classical Revival
Thematic Nomination: Carnegie Libraries of Kansas
Coffeyville Carnegie Public Library Building
15 West EighthCoffeyville (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Jun 25, 1987
Architect: Henderson, Clare (C.A.)
Area of Significance: library
Architectural Style(s): Classical Revival
Thematic Nomination: Carnegie Libraries of Kansas
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