National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Crawford
Records: All Properties
Page 2 of 3 showing 10 records of 24 total,
starting on record 111 | 2 | 3
Hotel Stilwell

Pittsburg (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 1980-04-30
Architect: JB Lindsly & Son
Category: hotel
Hudgeon Bridge

Girard (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 1985-07-02
Architect: Topeka Bridge and Construction Company
Category: road-related
Thematic Nomination: Masonry Arch Bridges of Kansas
Leonard, J.T. & Anna, House

Girard (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 2017-01-11
Architect: Unknown
Category: single dwelling
Built between 1907 and 1908 for one of Girard’s leading families, the J.T. & Anna Leonard House is significant for its architecture. The house was designed in a late version of the Free Classic Queen Anne style, a building type not widely utilized in Girard. Queen Anne was the most popular house style from around 1880 to 1910, but this house is more restrained than earlier interpretations of the style. The largest house ever built in Girard, the Leonard House served as boarding house, a funeral home, and an inn before again becoming a single-family residence.
Little Walnut Creek Bowstring Bridge

Walnut (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 1990-01-04
Architect: King Iron Bridge Company
Category: road-related
Thematic Nomination: Metal Truss Bridges in Kansas
Pittsburg Foundry and Machine Company

Pittsburg (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 2022-01-06
Architect: Not listed
Category: manufacturing facility
The Pittsburg Foundry and Machine Co. located on North Locust Street in Pittsburg, Kansas. Pittsburg was platted in 1876 as a 150-acre coal mining settlement that would provide zinc and coal to the industry in southeastern Kansas and Missouri. The Foundry is locally significant for its part in establishing the town as more than a coal mining settlement by bringing prosperous industry to the region.
Pittsburg Public Library

Pittsburg (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 1977-11-09
Architect: Normand Patton & Grant Miller
Category: library
Raymond, J.E., House

Girard (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 2007-04-03
Architect: Not listed
Category: single dwelling; clubhouse; meeting hall
St. Aloysius Catholic Church (Old)

Greenbush (Crawford County)
Listed in State Register 1994-02-26
Architect: Owen McMahan; Fr. Van der Hagen
Category: religious facility
State Bank of Girard

Girard (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 2009-08-07
Architect: unknown
Category: financial institution
Crawford County pioneer attorney and banker Franklin Playter built this building in 1873. The Julius family owned the bank from the mid-1880s until 1925 when it was sold to the Crawford County Bank. When the bank's president, Henry Haldeman, died in 1905, his wife Sarah Addams Haldeman assumed responsibility of the bank becoming the first woman bank president in the state. The bank failed in the Great Depression and the building was converted to offices. The building reflects two distinct architectural styles - an Italianate second floor dating from the building's original construction, and Neoclassical first floor dating to circa 1915. The building was nominated for its association with local banking history, with Playter, and the Haldeman and Julius families.
St. John's Episcopal Church

Girard (Crawford County)
Listed in National Register 2009-04-22
Architect: unknown
Category: religious facility
Girard Episcopalians first met on March 19, 1870 to organize a local Episcopal church. By the mid-1880s, the parish had raised enough money to construct a permanent church building. They purchased 2,100 pounds of stone from a quarry southwest of town and finished construction in 1888 for a total cost of $4,230.16. When the church disbanded in the 1970s, the Museum of Crawford County purchased it to house its collections. The Gothic Revival-style building is situated near downtown at the southwest corner of Buffalo and Summit Streets. It features a steeply pitched gabled roof, rough-cut limestone walls, pointed-arch openings, faux buttresses, and original stained glass windows. The building was nominated for its Gothic Revival architecture.
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