All Saints Historic District
All Saints Historic District | |
Location | Roughly Main to 2nd Avenue from 14th to 23rd Streets, and 18th to 21st Streets to 5th Avenue, Sioux Falls, South Dakota |
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Area | 70 acres (28 ha) |
Built | 1880 |
Architectural style | Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Bungalow/Craftsman |
NRHP reference No. | 84003349[1] |
Added to NRHP | February 23, 1984 |
All Saints Historic District is a 70-acre (28 ha) area in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Consisting mainly of over 374 late 19th- and early 20th-century homes, it is named for one of its landmark contributing properties, the All Saints School. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.[2]
Geography
[edit]All Saints Historic District encompasses a 70-acre (28 ha) area just south of the Sioux Falls Downtown Historic District. It is roughly bounded by 14th and 23rd Streets to the north and south, respectively; between Main and Phillips Avenues on the west; and between 1st and 2nd Avenues to the east, with an additional eastern portion roughly between 18th and 21st Streets and 5th Avenue.[2]
In total, there are 374 contributing properties (CPs) and 48 non-contributing properties. Of the CPs, all are buildings except one, which is Lyons Park. Of the contributing buildings, 214 are primarily residential buildings, and 159 are outbuildings.[2]
Landmark properties
[edit]The district lists 27 landmark properties, or entries which contribute significantly to the historic and architectural significance of the listing. These are:
- All Saints School, 101 West 17th Street (built 1884)
- W. L. Baker House, 1301 South Phillips Avenue (built 1890)
- A. Harry Beach House, 201 East 20th Street (built 1924)
- Russell Bell House, 106 East 23rd Street (built 1917)
- Henry Carlson House, 1119 South 3rd Avenue (built 1918)
- Sivert A. Christienson House, 131 West 8th Street (built 1902)
- Charles A. Christopherson House, 1000 South Phillips Avenue (built 1903)
- Edward Coughran House, 1203 South 1st Avenue (built 1887)
- Roger Dennis House, 118 West 19th Street (built 1912)
- Wallace Dow Duplex, 704–706 South 1st Avenue (built 1895)
- Wallace Dow House, 700 South 1st Avenue (built 1885)
- Dunham Hospital Building, 601 South 1st Avenue (built 1900)
- Daniel Glidden Duplex, 1109 South Phillips Avenue (built 1900)
- Cyrus W. Grannis House, 104 East 20th Street (built 1903)
- Arthur B. Hewson House, 804 South Phillips Avenue (built 1915)
- D. Clinton Jewett House, 1309 South Phillips Avenue (built 1916)
- Longfellow School, 1116 South 4th Avenue (built 1916)
- Lyons Park, corner of Phillips Avenue and South 14th Street (established 1928)
- Dennis McKinney House, 701 South Phillips Avenue (built 1912)
- Robert Perkins House, 1114 South 2nd Avenue (built 1912)
- Residences at 715–717 South Phillips Avenue (built 1911)
- Jacob Schaetzel, Jr.–William Lyon House, 746 South Phillips Avenue (built 1881, moved to current site in 1906)
- Thomas Y. Stephenson House, 1201 South 4th Avenue (built 1910)
- Erick Swenson House, 1118 South 1st Avenue (built 1900)
- Edward R. Tornberg House, 110 East 23rd Street (built 1919)
- Edgar Wenzlaff House, 1117 South 3rd Avenue (built 1917)
- Frank T. Williams House, 100 West 21st Street (built 1918)
References
[edit]- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
- ^ a b c "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: All Saints Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved March 12, 2022. With accompanying pictures