National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Montgomery
Records: All Properties
Page 4 of 4 showing 7 records of 37 total,
starting on record 311 | 2 | 3 | 4
Petroglyph Site 14MY1320
Address RestrictedLiberty (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Jul 9, 1982
Architect: Not applicable
Area of Significance: work of art
Thematic Nomination: Kansas Rock Art
This is one of 30 American Indian rock art sites located in the state of Kansas. The majority of the sites are located in four counties in the central part of the state. Smaller numbers are located in southeast and southwestern Kansas. These sites have examples of anthropomorphic figures and human-like forms, animals and animal-like forms, geometric designs, straight lines, and grooves. Several styles of anthropomorphic petroglyphs have been recognized. Previous analysis of a fraction of this rock art indicates it is the product of Indian tribes inhabiting Kansas during the protohistoric and historic periods of circa AD 1541 to AD 1870.
Petroglyph Site 14MY365
Address RestrictedLiberty (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Jul 9, 1982
Architect: Not applicable
Area of Significance: work of art
Thematic Nomination: Kansas Rock Art
This is one of 30 American Indian rock art sites located in the state of Kansas. The majority of the sites are located in four counties in the central part of the state. Smaller numbers are located in southeast and southwestern Kansas. These sites have examples of anthropomorphic figures and human-like forms, animals and animal-like forms, geometric designs, straight lines, and grooves. Several styles of anthropomorphic petroglyphs have been recognized. Previous analysis of a fraction of this rock art indicates it is the product of Indian tribes inhabiting Kansas during the protohistoric and historic periods of circa AD 1541 to AD 1870.
Terminal Building
717 Walnut StreetCoffeyville (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Jun 14, 1982
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: organizational; road-related
Architectural Style(s): Commercial Style
Treaty Rocks Petroglyph Site (14MY1)
Address RestrictedLiberty (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Jul 9, 1982
Architect: Not applicable
Area of Significance: work of art
Thematic Nomination: Kansas Rock Art
This is one of 30 American Indian rock art sites located in the state of Kansas. The majority of the sites are located in four counties in the central part of the state. Smaller numbers are located in southeast and southwestern Kansas. These sites have examples of anthropomorphic figures and human-like forms, animals and animal-like forms, geometric designs, straight lines, and grooves. Several styles of anthropomorphic petroglyphs have been recognized. Previous analysis of a fraction of this rock art indicates it is the product of Indian tribes inhabiting Kansas during the protohistoric and historic periods of circa AD 1541 to AD 1870.
Union Implement and Hardware Building - Masonic Temple
121-123 West MainIndependence (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Oct 13, 1988
Architect: Frank Brewster, contractor
Area of Significance: specialty store; meeting hall
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
Washington School
300 E. Myrtle StreetIndependence (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Apr 14, 2015
Architect: Williamson, Thomas
Area of Significance: school
Architectural Style(s): Modern Movement
Thematic Nomination: Historic Public Schools of Kansas
Washington School was constructed with the assistance of the federal Public Works Administration (PWA) and officially opened January 3, 1940. The two-story building is constructed of architectural concrete and reflects the early Modern Movement in architecture, defined by its stepped rectangular massing and clean lines with contrasting forms. Entrances feature curved concrete walls and railings characteristic of the Art Moderne style. The school was designed by Thomas W. Williamson and Co., a Topeka-based firm with hundreds of public school commissions. Washington School served the community of Independence as a public grade school until 2011. It was nominated as part of the "Historic Public Schools of Kansas" and "New Deal-Era Resources of Kansas" multiple property nominations in the areas of education and architecture.
William Inge Boyhood Home
514 N 4th StIndependence (Montgomery County)
Listed in National Register Jan 5, 2018
Architect: Unknown
Area of Significance: single dwelling
Architectural Style(s): Queen Anne
This 1895 Queen Anne house in Independence sheltered William Motter Inge (1913-1973) from the time he was a year old until he left Independence in 1930 to attend the University of Kansas. Inge is an acclaimed mid-20th century playwright whose dramas continue to be produced by theatres across the nation, including Broadway. Inge’s major awards include a 1953 Pulitzer Prize in Drama (Picnic) and a 1961 Academy Award for Best Screenplay (Splendor in the Grass). The home he occupied from infancy to young adulthood, and which scholars cite as influential in his dramatic works, is significant for its association with William Inge. This is the best extant resource associated with the playwright, as its architecture and his life here informed and inspired his works.
- National Register Nomination
- Inventory Record
- Kansas Memory: William Inge's childhood home, Independence, Kansas
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