National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Rice
Records: All Properties
Page 2 of 2 showing 6 records of 16 total,
starting on record 111 | 2
Santa Fe Trail - Rice County Segment 3 (Swanson's Swales)
RestrictedLittle River (Rice County)
Listed in National Register Aug 6, 2013
Architect: N/A
Area of Significance: transportation
Thematic Nomination: Historic Resources of the Santa Fe Trail (Amended 2013)
The Santa Fe Trail - Rice County Segment 3, also known as Swanson's Swales, is a 7.5-acre remnant of the main route of the trail, which was active from 1821 until 1880, though the association of this site with the trail ends in 1866 with the coming of the railroad. This trail remnant was associated with the Little Arkansas River crossings to the west of this site. As the trail approached the river from the east, it split into two branches four miles to the east of the crossing; the branches converged a little over one mile southwest of the crossing. This split of the main route was most likely due to the condition of the two crossings at the river, which were one-quarter mile apart. Scouts would ride ahead to determine which crossing was safest and least difficult to cross and direct the caravan accordingly. This site is nationally significant under Criteria A and D for its association with the transportation and commerce along the Santa Fe Trail and for its potential to yield important archeological information. It was nominated as part of the "Historic Resources of the Santa Fe Trail" multiple property nomination.
Saxman Archeological Site
Address RestrictedSaxman (Rice County)
Listed in National Register May 3, 1976
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: archaeological site; village site
Shay Building
202 South Broadway AvenueSterling (Rice County)
Listed in National Register Apr 12, 2010
Architect: unknown
Area of Significance: specialty store; multiple dwelling; commerce; recreational district
Architectural Style(s): Commercial Style
The Shay Building is located at a prominent downtown Sterling intersection less than a block north of the railroad tracks. Built in 1881 after a fire destroyed several downtown businesses, it is representative of commercial development in small Kansas towns during the late 19th- and early 20th-centuries. The two-story corner building assumed its present appearance in 1906 when the exterior brick was parged with a layer of stucco and a decorative metal cornice. It has served a variety of commercial purposes including clothing, dry goods, grocery and retail businesses. Apartments, offices, a photography studio, and a Knights of Pythias hall have occupied the building's second floor. It was nominated for its association with local commercial history.
Station Little Arkansas
5 miles south of US56 on FAS Hwy. 443, 3/4 mile west on gravel road, Windom vicinityWindom (Rice County)
Listed in National Register May 11, 1995
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: military facility; graves/burials
Thematic Nomination: Historic Resources of the Santa Fe Trail (Amended 2013)
Sterling Free Public Carnegie Library
132 North BroadwaySterling (Rice County)
Listed in National Register Jun 25, 1987
Architect: George Washburn
Area of Significance: library
Architectural Style(s): Tudor Revival; Other
Thematic Nomination: Carnegie Libraries of Kansas
Tobias-Thompson Complex / Little River Archeological District
Address RestrictedGeneseo (Rice County)
Listed in National Register Oct 15, 1966
National Historic Landmark, 7/4/1964
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: archaeological site; village site
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