Pierce County
Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Location | City or town | Summary | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Diamond Bluff Site-Mero Mound Group | 01975-08-01August 1, 1975 | Address Restricted |
Diamond Bluff | At least two villages, surrounded by hundreds of burial mounds and a bird and several animal effigy mounds. Some think this might be a place where Late Woodland culture transitioned to Oneota. | ||
Roscius S. and Lydia R. Freeman House | 02007-05-30May 30, 2007 | 220 N. Third St. |
River Falls | Freeman was a local druggist who built the house in 1908, mixing elements of the Queen Anne, Shingle and Colonial Revival architecture styles. | ||
Glen Park Municipal Swimming Pool | 02007-06-05June 5, 2007 | 355 Park St. |
River Falls | Public pool complex constructed by the CWA, PWA and WPA from 1933 to 1937, during the Great Depression. Still in use. | ||
H. S. Miller Bank | 01994-08-19August 19, 1994 | 223 Broad St. |
Prescott | 1885 bank building with Italianate and Romanesque elements. Now houses visitor center. | ||
North Hall-River Falls State Normal School | 01986-04-03April 3, 1986 | University of Wisconsin |
River Falls | North Hall of the University of Wisconsin-River Falls (housed the Campus School, the last of its kind in the state) | ||
Pierce County Courthouse | 01982-03-09March 9, 1982 | 411 W. Main St. |
Ellsworth | 1905 building with Neoclassical and Beaux-Arts elements. | ||
Daniel Smith House | 01984-03-15March 15, 1984 | 331 N. Lake St. |
Prescott | 1853 Greek Revival home built by gunsmith Smith. | ||
South Hall, River Falls State Normal School | 01976-11-07November 7, 1976 | 320 E. Cascade Ave. |
River Falls | Site of the sole building when the fourth Wisconsin Normal School started at River Falls in 1874. It burned in 1897 and was rebuilt in 1898. Now South Hall at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls. |
Read more about this topic: National Register Of Historic Places In Wisconsin
Famous quotes containing the words pierce and/or county:
“Now you grab me by the ankles.
Now you work your way up the legs
and come to pierce me at my hunger mark.”
—Anne Sexton (19281974)
“In the County Tyrone, in the town of Dungannon,”
—Unknown. The Old Orange Flute (l. 1)