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National Register of Historic Places listings in Door County, Wisconsin

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Location of Door County in Wisconsin

This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Door County, Wisconsin. It is intended to provide a comprehensive listing of entries in the National Register of Historic Places that are located in Door County, Wisconsin. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below may be seen in a map.[1]

There are 79 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county. Another property was once listed but has been removed. Two listings have also been designated as National Historic Landmarks.


          This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 8, 2024.[2]

Current listings

[edit]
[3] Name on the Register[4] Image Date listed[5] Location City or town Description
1 ADVANCE shipwreck (Barge) June 10, 2019
(#100004024)
0.1 mi. E. of Sand Bay Peninsula, Sand Bay
Coordinates missing
Nasewaupee vicinity 139-foot 2-masted wooden schooner-barge built in 1871 by Alvin A. Turner in Trenton, Michigan. Hauled lumber from Peshtigo to Chicago, then in 1898 started hauling stone. In 1921, while off-loading 7,000 tons of coal from a stranded steamer, she was caught by the wind and sank.[6][7]
2 Anderson Dock Historic District
Anderson Dock Historic District
Anderson Dock Historic District
June 11, 1985
(#85001249)
Roughly bounded by Anderson Lane and North Water St.
45°09′43″N 87°10′19″W / 45.161944°N 87.171944°W / 45.161944; -87.171944 (Anderson Dock Historic District)
Ephraim Norwegian immigrant Aslag Anderson started a pier here in 1858, from which Ephraim shipped out poles and ships brought in cargo and passengers.[8] Remaining are the store started in 1858, Aslag's house built in 1864, the warehouse, an ice house, and other structures.[9][10]
3 AUSTRALASIA (wooden bulk carrier) Shipwreck
AUSTRALASIA (wooden bulk carrier) Shipwreck
AUSTRALASIA (wooden bulk carrier) Shipwreck
July 3, 2013
(#13000466)
820 feet southeast of Whitefish Dunes State Park in Lake Michigan
44°55′20″N 87°11′13″W / 44.9222°N 87.1870°W / 44.9222; -87.1870 (AUSTRALASIA (wooden bulk carrier) Shipwreck)
Sevastopol 285-foot bulk carrier built in 1884 in Bay City, the largest wooden ship ever built at that time. She hauled salt, wheat, etc from Duluth to Buffalo to Cleveland. On Oct 10, 1896, heading for Milwaukee carrying 2,200 tons of coal, she caught fire off Baileys Harbor and the crew scuttled her in shallow water.[11][12]
4 Baileys Harbor Range Light
Baileys Harbor Range Light
Baileys Harbor Range Light
September 21, 1989
(#89001466)
Roughly Co. Rd. Q, Ridges Rd., and WI 57
45°04′19″N 87°07′13″W / 45.071944°N 87.120278°W / 45.071944; -87.120278 (Baileys Harbor Range Light)
Baileys Harbor A pair of lights built in 1869 to show ships a safe channel into Bailey's Harbor. The rear light was also a house for the lightkeeper. Served until 1969.[13]
5 Baileys Harbor Town Hall-McArdle Library
Baileys Harbor Town Hall-McArdle Library
Baileys Harbor Town Hall-McArdle Library
April 21, 2000
(#00000408)
2392 Cty Trunk Highway F
45°03′58″N 87°07′28″W / 45.066111°N 87.124444°W / 45.066111; -87.124444 (Baileys Harbor Town Hall-McArdle Library)
Baileys Harbor 1937 Colonial revival building clad with local limestone, designed by Two Rivers architect Sylvester Schmitt, and funded by local-boy-become-Chicago-industrialist William McArdle and the WPA. Still serves the community.[14]
6 BOAZ (schooner) Shipwreck October 10, 2023
(#100009414)
0.5 miles (0.80 km) southeast of the entrance of North Bay, Door County in Lake Michigan
Coordinates missing
Liberty Grove vicinity The Boaz was built by Amos Stoakes of Sheboygan in 1869 as an 83-foot 3-masted wooden schooner with a single centerboard. It spent its life carrying lumber around southern Lake Michigan. After damage in a squall at Green Bay in 1873, the ship was lengthened to 114 feet. A second centerboard was probably added then. In November 1900, heading to Racine with a load of elm lumber, the ship began leaking in a storm and was towed to North Bay, where it sank.[15]
7 Bohjanen's Door Bluff Pictographs
Bohjanen's Door Bluff Pictographs
Bohjanen's Door Bluff Pictographs
September 2, 1993
(#93000881)
Address Restricted
Liberty Grove Figures of Indians and canoes painted on the rocks 15 or 20 feet above the water.[16]
8 J.B. Bouche House
J.B. Bouche House
J.B. Bouche House
May 6, 2004
(#04000411)
9697 School Rd.
44°44′02″N 87°37′15″W / 44.733889°N 87.620833°W / 44.733889; -87.620833 (J.B. Bouche House)
Brussels Brick front-gabled house started in 1880, with wooden gable-roofed barn.[17]
9 Bullhead Point Historical and Archeological District
Bullhead Point Historical and Archeological District
Bullhead Point Historical and Archeological District
March 26, 2003
(#03000167)
N. Duluth Ave.
44°50′37″N 87°23′43″W / 44.843611°N 87.395278°W / 44.843611; -87.395278 (Bullhead Point Historical and Archeological District)
Sturgeon Bay Remains of three ships visible in shallow water from shore. All hauled limestone for the Sturgeon Bay Stone Company at the ends of their lives and were burned in 1931. They are the 212-foot steamer Empire State built in 1862, the 134-foot centerboard schooner Oak Leaf, and the 168-foot schooner-barge Ida Corning.[18]
10 Cana Island Lighthouse
Cana Island Lighthouse
Cana Island Lighthouse
November 21, 1976
(#76000201)
NE of Baileys Harbor on E side of Cana Island
45°05′18″N 87°02′54″W / 45.088333°N 87.048333°W / 45.088333; -87.048333 (Cana Island Lighthouse)
Baileys Harbor In 1869 a 65-foot brick tower was built, with a lightkeeper's house and third-order Fresnel lens. A steel skin was added to protect the deteriorating brick in 1902.[19]
11 Cardy Site April 19, 2010
(#10000197)
322 W Spruce St.
Coordinates missing
Sturgeon Bay Paleo-Indians camped here about 9000 BCE, not far from the retreating last glacier and Lake Algonquin. Date is based on Clovis-like points found at the site.[20]
12 Carnegie Free Library
Carnegie Free Library
Carnegie Free Library
December 29, 1988
(#88003069)
354 Michigan St.
44°50′06″N 87°22′32″W / 44.835°N 87.375556°W / 44.835; -87.375556 (Carnegie Free Library)
Sturgeon Bay Carnegie Library designed by Fred Crandell in Classical Revival style, and built in 1912 with exterior of Sturgeon Bay limestone and Bedford stone.[21]
13 Chambers Island Lighthouse
Chambers Island Lighthouse
Chambers Island Lighthouse
August 19, 1975
(#75000063)
7 mi. NW of Fish Creek at NW tip of Chambers Island
45°12′05″N 87°21′50″W / 45.201389°N 87.363889°W / 45.201389; -87.363889 (Chambers Island Lighthouse)
Fish Creek 42-foot brick tower built in 1868 with fourth order Fresnel lens, integrated with light-keeper's dwelling.[22]
14 Christina Nilsson (shipwreck)
Christina Nilsson (shipwreck)
Christina Nilsson (shipwreck)
July 17, 2003
(#03000668)
Baileys Harbor
45°03′23″N 87°05′52″W / 45.056389°N 87.097778°W / 45.056389; -87.097778 (Christina Nilsson (shipwreck))
Baileys Harbor 139-foot schooner built by Hanson & Scove in Manitowoc in 1871 and named for a Swedish diva. In October 1884, hauling 575 tons of pig iron to Chicago, she was driven by a gale onto a reef and wrecked.[23]
15 Church of the Atonement
Church of the Atonement
Church of the Atonement
March 7, 1985
(#85000487)
Fire No. 9410
45°07′41″N 87°14′58″W / 45.128056°N 87.249444°W / 45.128056; -87.249444 (Church of the Atonement)
Fish Creek Oldest remaining church building in Fish Creek, built in 1878 in Carpenter Gothic style with board and batten exterior as an Episcopal mission church.[24]
16 Clafin Point Site
Clafin Point Site
Clafin Point Site
January 18, 2000
(#99001660)
Address Restricted
Gardner Wreck of a 170-foot wooden vessel next to remains of a crib-and-stone pier in Little Sturgeon Bay, lost under murky circumstances around 1898. It is believed to be a once-fast steamship reduced after burning to a barge for hauling limestone. A.k.a. Claflin Point.[25]
17 The Clearing
The Clearing
The Clearing
December 31, 1974
(#74000080)
Off WI 42
45°15′48″N 87°04′25″W / 45.263333°N 87.073611°W / 45.263333; -87.073611 (The Clearing)
Ellison Bay Nature retreat and education center founded in 1935 by Danish immigrant and landscape architect Jens Jensen.[26]
18 Cupola House
Cupola House
Cupola House
July 16, 1979
(#79000073)
7836 Egg Harbor Rd.
45°03′06″N 87°16′48″W / 45.051667°N 87.28°W / 45.051667; -87.28 (Cupola House)
Egg Harbor Italianate/Gothic Revival house built in 1871 by merchant Levi Thorp, paid for with money he made in the California gold rush of 1849. Now houses shops.[27][28]
19 August Draize Farmstead
August Draize Farmstead
August Draize Farmstead
May 6, 2004
(#04000398)
814 Tru-Way Rd.
44°42′37″N 87°39′01″W / 44.710278°N 87.650278°W / 44.710278; -87.650278 (August Draize Farmstead)
Union Front-gabled brick farmhouse built in 1880,[29] with outbuildings.[30]
20 Eagle Bluff Lighthouse
Eagle Bluff Lighthouse
Eagle Bluff Lighthouse
October 15, 1970
(#70000032)
3.5 mi. N of Fish Creek on Shore Rd., in Peninsula State Park
45°09′35″N 87°14′11″W / 45.159722°N 87.236389°W / 45.159722; -87.236389 (Eagle Bluff Lighthouse)
Fish Creek Brick lighthouse built in 1868, with a third and a half order Fresnel lens atop a square 44-foot tower.[31]
21 Emiline (schooner) Shipwreck July 28, 2023
(#100009197)
0.5 miles (0.80 km) southeast of the entrance of the Baileys Harbor marina
45°02′43″N 87°06′09″W / 45.0453°N 87.1025°W / 45.0453; -87.1025 (Emiline (schooner) Shipwreck)
Baileys Harbor 83-foot 2-masted wooden single-centerboard schooner built by Myron Williams of Marysville, Michigan around 1862. In 1864 it was modified for speed, expanded to a 111-foot 3-masted double-centerboard schooner. In 1875 it was damaged in a collision with the Rouse Simmons. In 1896, carrying a load of tamarack tan-bark to the Allen and Sons Tannery in Kenosha, she overturned in a squall. Salvage attempts got her into Bailey's Harbor where she sank just short of rescue.[32]
22 Ephraim Moravian Church
Ephraim Moravian Church
Ephraim Moravian Church
March 27, 1985
(#85000662)
9970 Moravia St.
45°09′17″N 87°10′07″W / 45.154722°N 87.168611°W / 45.154722; -87.168611 (Ephraim Moravian Church)
Ephraim First church on the Door Peninsula, begun in 1857 by Moravian evangelist Andreas Iverson. It originally sat near the shore, but was moved up the hill in 1883.[33]
23 Ephraim Village Hall
Ephraim Village Hall
Ephraim Village Hall
March 27, 1985
(#85000663)
9996 S. Water St.
45°09′22″N 87°10′16″W / 45.156111°N 87.171111°W / 45.156111; -87.171111 (Ephraim Village Hall)
Ephraim Community hall built in 1927 in Arts and Crafts style, clad in limestone from Eagle Bluff. Hosted village meetings, basketball, a library, fish boils, rummage sales, etc.[34]
24 Joachine J. Falque House
Joachine J. Falque House
Joachine J. Falque House
May 6, 2004
(#04000407)
1059 County Trunk Highway C
44°43′19″N 87°37′17″W / 44.721944°N 87.621389°W / 44.721944; -87.621389 (Joachine J. Falque House)
Brussels Brick farmhouse built in 1880, with barn. A.k.a. Vlies house.[35]
25 FLEETWING (shipwreck)
FLEETWING (shipwreck)
FLEETWING (shipwreck)
July 11, 2001
(#01000734)
Garrett Bay[36]
45°17′15″N 87°02′59″W / 45.2875°N 87.049833°W / 45.2875; -87.049833 (FLEETWING (shipwreck))
Liberty Grove 132-foot two-masted schooner built in 1867 in Manitowoc by Henry Burger. Carried grain, coal and lumber from Chicago to Buffalo. On Sept 26, 1888, heading from Menominee toward Chicago in a gale, she tried to pass through Death's Door, but ran off course and grounded.[37]
26 FRANK O'CONNOR (bulk carrier)
FRANK O'CONNOR (bulk carrier)
FRANK O'CONNOR (bulk carrier)
July 1, 1994
(#94000656)
2 miles (3.2 km) off Cana Island[36]
45°06′52″N 87°00′44″W / 45.1145°N 87.012167°W / 45.1145; -87.012167 (FRANK O'CONNOR (bulk carrier))
North Bay 301-foot wooden bulk carrier built in 1892 by James Davidson's shipyard in Bay City. On Sept 29, 1919, heading from Buffalo to Milwaukee hauling 3000 tons of coal, she caught fire and sank off Cana Island.[38]
27 Free Evangelical Lutheran Church-Bethania Scandinavian Evangelical Lutheran Congregation
Free Evangelical Lutheran Church-Bethania Scandinavian Evangelical Lutheran Congregation
Free Evangelical Lutheran Church-Bethania Scandinavian Evangelical Lutheran Congregation
March 27, 1985
(#85000664)
3028 Church St.
45°09′20″N 87°10′08″W / 45.155556°N 87.168889°W / 45.155556; -87.168889 (Free Evangelical Lutheran Church-Bethania Scandinavian Evangelical Lutheran Congregation)
Ephraim Gothic Revival styled church built in 1882 by local Scandinavians, initially independent of any Lutheran denomination to be inclusive.[39] Worship on summer Sundays.[40]
28 Gibraltar District School No. 2
Gibraltar District School No. 2
Gibraltar District School No. 2
June 11, 1985
(#85001250)
9988 Moravia St.
45°09′22″N 87°10′07″W / 45.156111°N 87.168611°W / 45.156111; -87.168611 (Gibraltar District School No. 2)
Ephraim Balloon frame, clapboard-clad schoolhouse started after a school consolidation in 1868. Served as a school for 80 years, and now a museum.[41]
29 Globe Hotel
Globe Hotel
Globe Hotel
January 28, 1982
(#82000663)
8090 Main St.
45°03′47″N 87°07′26″W / 45.063056°N 87.123889°W / 45.063056; -87.123889 (Globe Hotel)
Baileys Harbor Greek Revival building started in 1867. Served as a hotel from 1874 to 1886, run by Roger Eatough, early businessman and politician.[42]
30 GRAPE SHOT (schooner) Shipwreck August 19, 2016
(#16000564)
0.2 miles (0.32 km) NW of USCCG Station on Plum Island
45°19′28″N 86°58′02″W / 45.324422°N 86.967096°W / 45.324422; -86.967096 (GRAPE SHOT (schooner) Shipwreck)
Washington 130-foot wooden centerboard schooner built in 1855 by B.B. Jones in Buffalo. Hauled lumber, wheat and coal on the upper Great Lakes until November 1867, when a gale drove her aground near Plum Island.[43]
31 GREEN BAY shipwreck (sloop) November 18, 2009
(#09000952)
In Green Bay, four miles off Sturgeon Bay
Sevastopol Remains of an unidentified commercial freighting sloop from circa 1840 to 1860 - the only wreck of this type in Wisconsin waters.[44]
32 HANOVER (schooner) Shipwreck October 5, 2015
(#15000710)
1.75 mi. NW. of Fish Cr.
45°08′48″N 87°16′13″W / 45.146532°N 87.270168°W / 45.146532; -87.270168 (HANOVER (schooner) Shipwreck)
Gibraltar The Hanover was a 109-foot 2-masted schooner constructed in New York in 1853. It hauled bulk cargo (primarily grain) up and down the Great Lakes until 1863, when a gale drove it aground off the Strawberry Islands, where it was stripped and abandoned.[45][46]
33 Hillside Hotel
Hillside Hotel
Hillside Hotel
March 27, 1985
(#85000665)
9980 S. Water St.
45°09′19″N 87°10′10″W / 45.155278°N 87.169444°W / 45.155278; -87.169444 (Hillside Hotel)
Ephraim One of the first hotels in Ephraim, opened around 1900 as the area transitioned from lumber and fishing to tourism. Started by Norwegian immigrant Martin Oleson and his family. Includes wooden hotel, cottages and outbuildings, with one started as early as 1864.[47][48]
34 IRIS (Shipwreck) July 19, 2006
(#06000638)
Adjacent of Rock Island Ferry Dock, Jackson Harbor
45°24′03″N 86°51′12″W / 45.400817°N 86.853325°W / 45.400817; -86.853325 (IRIS (Shipwreck))
Washington Island 74-foot scow schooner built in 1866 at Port Huron. Abandoned in 1913 after grounding in Jackson Harbor.[49]
35 Jacksonport Wharf Archeological District February 28, 2012
(#12000053)
Near Lakeside Park off Cty. Rd. V
44°58′43″N 87°11′00″W / 44.978582°N 87.183216°W / 44.978582; -87.183216 (Jacksonport Wharf Archeological District)
Jacksonport Remains of three old piers started in 1848 for loading shingles and poles into schooners headed for Milwaukee and Chicago. Remains of three schooners lie nearby: the Perry Hannah was wrecked by the Alpena Blow of 1880, the Cecilia wrecked by a storm in 1885, and possibly the Annie Dahl, wrecked by a storm in 1898.[50] Additional documentation and boundary increase July 27, 2015 (#15000478)
36 Jischke's Meat Market
Jischke's Meat Market
Jischke's Meat Market
September 11, 1986
(#86002306)
414 Maple Dr.
45°11′16″N 87°07′26″W / 45.187778°N 87.123889°W / 45.187778; -87.123889 (Jischke's Meat Market)
Sister Bay Butcher shop built in 1902 by German immigrant Frank Jischke and his family. Some walls are of unusual stovewood construction. A.K.A. "White Apron",[51] "Inn on Maple",[52] and "Roots Inn"[53]
37 Joint Brussels and Garner District School Number One
Joint Brussels and Garner District School Number One
Joint Brussels and Garner District School Number One
May 6, 2004
(#04000408)
8571 State Trunk Highway 57
44°45′42″N 87°32′57″W / 44.761667°N 87.549167°W / 44.761667; -87.549167 (Joint Brussels and Garner District School Number One)
Brussels Two-room state-graded school built in 1910 in Neoclassical style with cupola and exterior of rock-faced concrete block. A.k.a. Tornado School.[54][55]
38 JOYS (Shipwreck)
JOYS (Shipwreck)
JOYS (Shipwreck)
November 21, 2007
(#07001218)
500 ft. W of Sunset Park
44°51′04″N 87°23′21″W / 44.851111°N 87.389167°W / 44.851111; -87.389167 (JOYS (Shipwreck))
Sturgeon Bay 131-foot wooden steam barge built in 1884 by the Milwaukee Shipyard Company. Hauled lumber, iron and stone. Caught fire in the Sturgeon Bay ship canal in 1898, burned and sank.[56][57]
39 LAKELAND (steam screw) Shipwreck
LAKELAND (steam screw) Shipwreck
LAKELAND (steam screw) Shipwreck
July 7, 2015
(#15000403)
6 mi. E. of Sturgeon Bay Canal
44°47′34″N 87°11′32″W / 44.792683°N 87.192217°W / 44.792683; -87.192217 (LAKELAND (steam screw) Shipwreck)
Sturgeon Bay In 1886, the Cambria was built as a bulk freighter and was an early user of steel hull plates and a triple-expansion steam engine. In 1910 it was remodeled into a passenger steamer, and in 1920 into a car carrier. In December 1924, hauling a load of automobiles from Chicago, some of her steel plates buckled in heavy seas, and she eventually went down in 205 feet of water.[58]
40 L. A. Larson & Co. Store
L. A. Larson & Co. Store
L. A. Larson & Co. Store
June 19, 1985
(#85001357)
306 S. 3rd Ave.
44°49′55″N 87°22′25″W / 44.831944°N 87.373611°W / 44.831944; -87.373611 (L. A. Larson & Co. Store)
Sturgeon Bay Elegant Italianate office built in 1875, with a large cornice atop a Boomtown front. Built by Adolph Larson, who manufactured ornamental woodwork, furniture and coffins. A.k.a. Challoner Morse McBride Law Office.[59]
41 Little Lake Archeological District
Little Lake Archeological District
Little Lake Archeological District
February 27, 2002
(#02000147)
Address Restricted
Washington Site of Woodland village and burial ground, which has produced artifacts dating back 3000 years.[60]
42 LOUISIANA (Shipwreck)
LOUISIANA (Shipwreck)
LOUISIANA (Shipwreck)
March 19, 1992
(#92000104)
Southeast side of Washington Harbor[36]
45°23′59″N 86°55′22″W / 45.399667°N 86.922667°W / 45.399667; -86.922667 (LOUISIANA (Shipwreck))
Washington Island 267-foot bulk steamer built in 1887 in Marine City, Michigan. Driven aground at Death's Door in a snowstorm Nov. 2, 1913, while heading for Escanaba to pick up a load of iron ore.[61]
43 Louisiana Street/Seventh Avenue Historic District
Louisiana Street/Seventh Avenue Historic District
Louisiana Street/Seventh Avenue Historic District
September 22, 1983
(#83003372)
Roughly bounded by Louisiana and Kentucky Sts., N. 5th, N. 7th, and N. 8th Aves.
44°50′13″N 87°22′19″W / 44.836944°N 87.371944°W / 44.836944; -87.371944 (Louisiana Street/Seventh Avenue Historic District)
Sturgeon Bay Historic district with 28 contributing buildings, including the 1909 Romanesque Revival St. Joseph's church and various homes built from 1890 to 1920.[62]
44 MERIDIAN (schooner) Shipwreck Site March 21, 1996
(#96000294)
Sister Island Shoals[36]
45°12′01″N 87°10′10″W / 45.200318°N 87.169561°W / 45.200318; -87.169561 (MERIDIAN (schooner) Shipwreck Site)
Sister Bay 120-foot schooner built in 1848 at Black River, Ohio. Hauled timber around the Great Lakes for 25 years until October of 1873, when she was driven by a fall storm onto the Sister Islands shoal in Green Bay and wrecked.[63]
45 Joseph Monfils Farmstead
Joseph Monfils Farmstead
Joseph Monfils Farmstead
May 6, 2004
(#04000409)
1463 Dump Rd.
44°44′29″N 87°34′50″W / 44.741389°N 87.580556°W / 44.741389; -87.580556 (Joseph Monfils Farmstead)
Brussels Farm built around 1921, with house, 2 barns, silo and shed. A.k.a. Dale Hendrickson house.[64]
46 Murphy Farms Number 1 May 24, 2012 (Apparently listed a second time (same refnum) November 19, 2018)
(#12000314)
7195, 7199, 7203, 7207, 7212, & 7213 Horseshoe Bay Rd.
45°01′12″N 87°19′40″W / 45.019974°N 87.327856°W / 45.019974; -87.327856 (Murphy Farms Number 1)
Egg Harbor Show farm built 1918 to 1925 by Green Bay millionaires Frank and Eldridge Murphy to show off their Holstein-Friesian cattle breeding project. Includes Dutch Colonial Revival homes and gambrel-roofed barns.[65]
47 Namur Belgian-American District
Namur Belgian-American District
Namur Belgian-American District
November 6, 1989
(#87002553)
Roughly bounded by CR K, Brussels Rd., Wis. 57, Belgian Dr., and the Green Bay
44°45′02″N 87°39′58″W / 44.750556°N 87.666111°W / 44.750556; -87.666111 (Namur Belgian-American District)
Namur Rural historic district settled by French-speaking Belgian farmers, consisting of 261 buildings built between 1871 and 1930,[66] including farmsteads, homes, the 1891 St. Mary of the Snows Catholic Church, the 1910 Fairland School, and the 1916 William Struck store.[67]
48 Alexander Noble House
Alexander Noble House
Alexander Noble House
February 23, 1996
(#96000159)
4167 WI 42
45°07′39″N 87°14′48″W / 45.1275°N 87.246667°W / 45.1275; -87.246667 (Alexander Noble House)
Fish Creek The first home in Fish Creek fancier than a log cabin, built 1868 or 1875. Noble was a blacksmith, farmer, postmaster, and town chairman. Today the house is a museum, and the oldest building in town on its original location.[68][69]
49 OCEAN WAVE (Shipwreck)
OCEAN WAVE (Shipwreck)
OCEAN WAVE (Shipwreck)
July 19, 2006
(#06000639)
2 mi. off Whitefish Point
44°53′07″N 87°09′08″W / 44.885278°N 87.152222°W / 44.885278; -87.152222 (OCEAN WAVE (Shipwreck))
Lake Michigan Woodean scow schooner built 1860 at Harrison's Island, Michigan. Sank in a storm September 23, 1869, hauling limestone.[70]
50 PEORIA Shipwreck (Schooner) April 5, 2024
(#100010152)
0.15 miles (0.24 km) northeast of the Baileys Harbor Marina entrance, in Baileys Harbor, Lake Michigan
Coordinates missing
Baileys Harbor vicinity 112-foot wood-hulled two-masted schooner built in 1854 by Alanson Gilmore at Black River, Ohio. Hauled grain, lumber and other bulk cargo around the Great Lakes. In November 1901, while hauling lumber from East Jordan, Michigan to Chicago, a storm forced her to shelter in Baileys Harbor, where the storm drove her onto the beach.[71][72]
51 Peter Peterson House
Peter Peterson House
Peter Peterson House
March 27, 1985
(#85000666)
10020 N. Water St.
45°09′28″N 87°10′14″W / 45.157778°N 87.170556°W / 45.157778; -87.170556 (Peter Peterson House)
Ephraim Norwegian immigrant Peterson was storekeeper, town chairman, justice of the peace, and founder of the congregation that would become Bethany Lutheran. The 1874 house was used as a parsonage after Peterson returned to Norway in 1883.[73]
52 Pilot Island Light
Pilot Island Light
Pilot Island Light
November 21, 1983
(#83004279)
Portes des Norts Passage, Pilot Island
45°17′03″N 86°55′10″W / 45.284167°N 86.919444°W / 45.284167; -86.919444 (Pilot Island Light)
Gills Rock Brick lightkeeper's house built in 1858 with a 41-foot tower on top, on an island at the east end of Death's Door. Regular heavy fogs in the area prompted addition of Daboll's trumpets foghorns in 1864, with later upgrades.[74]
53 Pilot Island NW Site
Pilot Island NW Site
Pilot Island NW Site
March 19, 1992
(#92000103)
Address Restricted
Washington Wrecks of three wooden ships commingled on the reef SW of the island: the 115-foot scow-schooner Forest built in 1857 and wrecked by a storm in October of 1891, the 147-foot schooner A. P. Nichols built in 1861 and wrecked by a storm in October of 1892, and the 138-foot canaller-schooner J. E. Gilmore, built in 1867 and wrecked by another storm only 11 days after the Nichols.[75]
54 Plum Island Life-Saving and Light Stations
Plum Island Life-Saving and Light Stations
Plum Island Life-Saving and Light Stations
June 24, 2010
(#10000385)
Plum Island
45°18′44″N 86°56′53″W / 45.312222°N 86.948056°W / 45.312222; -86.948056 (Plum Island Life-Saving and Light Stations)
Washington The first light to guide ships through Death's Door was built here in 1846, but moved to Pilot Island around 1858. In 1896 a set of range lights was built, with foghorn, keeper's house and a life-saving station.[76]
55 Plum Island Range Rear Light
Plum Island Range Rear Light
Plum Island Range Rear Light
July 19, 1984
(#84003659)
Plum Island
45°18′28″N 86°57′28″W / 45.307778°N 86.957778°W / 45.307778; -86.957778 (Plum Island Range Rear Light)
Gills Rock One of a pair of range lights built around 1897 so ships could line up on a safe course through the dangerous Death's Door passage. The front light was replaced in 1964.[76]
56 Porte des Morts Site
Porte des Morts Site
Porte des Morts Site
March 16, 1976
(#76000058)
Address Restricted
Northport Prehistoric lakeshore camp along the Porte des Morts strait; occupied by Woodland and Mississippian peoples, the site has produced varied tools and styles of pottery.[77]
57 Potawatomi State Park Observation Tower
Potawatomi State Park Observation Tower
Potawatomi State Park Observation Tower
February 5, 2021
(#100006108)
3740 County PD
44°52′35″N 87°25′41″W / 44.876412°N 87.427988°W / 44.876412; -87.427988 (Potawatomi State Park Observation Tower)
Nasewaupee 75-foot wooden observation tower built in 1931[78] by the Wisconsin State Conservation Corps - the first purpose-built recreational tower in a Wisconsin state park.[79]
58 Pottawatomie Lighthouse
Pottawatomie Lighthouse
Pottawatomie Lighthouse
April 20, 1979
(#79000074)
NW Rock Island
45°25′40″N 86°49′42″W / 45.427778°N 86.828333°W / 45.427778; -86.828333 (Pottawatomie Lighthouse)
Rock Island Keeper's dwelling and light tower, built in 1858 of native limestone on a bluff 137 feet above water level at the tip of the Door Peninsula. Served until 1988. An earlier lighthouse on the site, built 1836-7, was the first lighthouse on Lake Michigan and first in Wisconsin.[80]
59 PRIDE Shipwreck (Schooner) September 27, 2024
(#100010860)
250 feet (76 m) north of the intersection of W Juniper St and N Lancing Ave in Sturgeon Bay, in the waters of Sturgeon Bay
44°49′54″N 87°23′12″W / 44.8317°N 87.3867°W / 44.8317; -87.3867 (PRIDE Shipwreck (Schooner))
Sturgeon Bay 71-foot wood-hulled 2-masted schooner built in 1866 by Henry Root in Black River, Ohio, initially to haul trade goods around Lake Erie. Later hauled lumber and building stone on Lake Michigan. In August 1898 she was caught in a tornado at Egg Harbor and overturned, with the captain's son lost, then towed to Sturgeon Bay and abandoned.[81]
60 Rock Island Historic District
Rock Island Historic District
Rock Island Historic District
May 19, 1972
(#72000050)
Rock Island, off NE tip of Washington Island
45°24′27″N 86°49′21″W / 45.4075°N 86.8225°W / 45.4075; -86.8225 (Rock Island Historic District)
Rock Island Site of camps of Native Americans, ranging from Middle Woodland around 0 CE to Oneota, to Potawatomi in the 1670s, to Ottawa in the 1760s.[82] The site was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2023.
61 Sherwood Point Light
Sherwood Point Light
Sherwood Point Light
July 19, 1984
(#84003663)
Sherwood Point Road on Green Bay
44°53′34″N 87°25′59″W / 44.892778°N 87.433056°W / 44.892778; -87.433056 (Sherwood Point Light)
Sturgeon Bay Red brick lightkeeper's dwelling with light tower built in 1883 on a 30-foot bluff at the west entrance to the Sturgeon Bay Ship Canal. A 600-pound fog bell was added in 1892.[83]
62 Dr. Joseph and Olivia Soper House May 1, 2024
(#100010301)
23 North 5th Avenue
44°50′09″N 87°22′28″W / 44.8359°N 87.3744°W / 44.8359; -87.3744 (Dr. Joseph and Olivia Soper House)
Sturgeon Bay Built in 1881, this is the only remaining residence in Sturgeon Bay that is clad in Frear stone, an early concrete cladding system licensed from Chicago but manufactured locally by Giles Kirtland. The style is Italianate, with window hoods of Frear stone and decorative cross-bracing in the gable ends.[84][85]
63 Sturgeon Bay Bridge
Sturgeon Bay Bridge
Sturgeon Bay Bridge
January 17, 2008
(#07001420)
Michigan St.
44°49′55″N 87°22′52″W / 44.8319°N 87.3811°W / 44.8319; -87.3811 (Sturgeon Bay Bridge)
Sturgeon Bay Iron overhead-truss bridge with drawbridge section built in 1931 over Sturgeon Bay to connect the two halves of Door County.[86]
64 Sturgeon Bay Canal Light
Sturgeon Bay Canal Light
Sturgeon Bay Canal Light
July 19, 1984
(#84003666)
Sturgeon Bay Canal
44°47′42″N 87°18′46″W / 44.795°N 87.312778°W / 44.795; -87.312778 (Sturgeon Bay Canal Light)
Sturgeon Bay Light on a 98-foot steel tower, initially built in 1898 and finally stabilized in 1903.[87][88]
65 Sturgeon Bay Post Office
Sturgeon Bay Post Office
Sturgeon Bay Post Office
October 24, 2000
(#00001237)
359 Louisiana Ave.
44°50′07″N 87°22′33″W / 44.8353°N 87.3758°W / 44.8353; -87.3758 (Sturgeon Bay Post Office)
Sturgeon Bay Brick and limestone building designed in Art Moderne style under Louis A. Simon and built in 1937, with mural inside.[89][90]
66 Success (shipwreck) October 5, 2015
(#15000711)
.13 mi. SW. of Whitefish Dunes State Park
44°54′59″N 87°12′10″W / 44.9164°N 87.2028°W / 44.9164; -87.2028 (Success (shipwreck))
Sevastopol 151-ton 2-masted scow schooner built in 1875 in Manitowoc. Hauled lumber on Lake Michigan until November 1896, when she was pushed aground by a storm while loading in Whitefish Bay. Still quite intact, with wire rigging, deadeyes, bilge pump and centerboard present.[91][92]
67 Sunshine Shipwreck (Scow Schooner) October 30, 2023
(#100009481)
1.1 miles (1.8 km) southeast of the entrance of North Bay, Door County in Lake Michigan
Coordinates missing
Liberty Grove vicinity Wooden scow schooner built by Jerry Dupree in Detroit in 1856. Mostly carried lumber from northern Michigan to Wisconsin and Illinois. Driven ashore by a gale in September 1869, while heading for Chicago with a load of lumber.[93]
68 Teweles and Brandeis Grain Elevator
Teweles and Brandeis Grain Elevator
Teweles and Brandeis Grain Elevator
February 5, 2018
(#100002091)
92 E Maple St.
44°49′44″N 87°22′58″W / 44.8290°N 87.3829°W / 44.8290; -87.3829 (Teweles and Brandeis Grain Elevator)
Sturgeon Bay Grain processing and storage building built in 1901.[94]
69 Third Avenue Historic District
Third Avenue Historic District
Third Avenue Historic District
October 6, 1983
(#83004282)
Roughly bounded by Kentucky St., N. 2nd, N. 3rd, and S. 3rd Aves.
44°50′05″N 87°22′36″W / 44.8347°N 87.3767°W / 44.8347; -87.3767 (Third Avenue Historic District)
Sturgeon Bay Mixed business and residential district including the 1872 John Masse Hardware-Tin Shop, the Queen Anne Wegener Business Block built in the 1880s and 1890s, the 1906 Neoclassical Merchant's Exchange Bank, and the 1935 Art Moderne George Draeb Jewelry Store.[95]
70 Thordarson Estate Historic District
Thordarson Estate Historic District
Thordarson Estate Historic District
March 21, 1985
(#85000641)
Rock Island State Park
45°24′39″N 86°49′43″W / 45.4108°N 86.8286°W / 45.4108; -86.8286 (Thordarson Estate Historic District)
Rock Island Island estate of Chester Thordarson, Icelandic immigrant, Chicago electrical inventor, businessman, and book collector. Remaining buildings are rustic limestone and wood-frame, built from 1910 to 1935, some designed by Frederick Dinkelberg.[96][97]
71 Freeman and Jesse Thorp House and Cottages
Freeman and Jesse Thorp House and Cottages
Freeman and Jesse Thorp House and Cottages
August 15, 1997
(#97000887)
4135 Bluff Street
45°07′36″N 87°14′40″W / 45.1267°N 87.2444°W / 45.1267; -87.2444 (Freeman and Jesse Thorp House and Cottages)
Fish Creek Queen Anne-style house started in 1902 by boat-builder Freeman Thorpe. After he drowned in Green Bay in 1903, his wife Jesse finished the house and rented out rooms. Six tourist cottages were added in the 1940s.[98] Now a B&B.[99]
72 Louis Vangindertahlen House
Louis Vangindertahlen House
Louis Vangindertahlen House
May 6, 2004
(#04000410)
1514 Dump Rd.
44°44′38″N 87°34′47″W / 44.7439°N 87.5797°W / 44.7439; -87.5797 (Louis Vangindertahlen House)
Brussels 1.5-story front-gabled house with concrete walls, built in 1921.[100]
73 Vorous General Store
Vorous General Store
Vorous General Store
May 9, 1997
(#97000429)
4153 WI 42
45°07′39″N 87°14′47″W / 45.1275°N 87.2464°W / 45.1275; -87.2464 (Vorous General Store)
Fish Creek Third general store in Fish Creek, built by Levi Vorous in Italianate commercial style in 1895. Later housed a garage and the town post office.[101]
74 Water Tower
Water Tower
Water Tower
March 21, 1985
(#85000640)
Rock Island State Park
45°24′44″N 86°48′23″W / 45.4122°N 86.8064°W / 45.4122; -86.8064 (Water Tower)
Rock Island Rustic limestone water tower of the Thordarson Estate, built in 1929 and probably designed by Puckey and Jenkins.[96][97]
75 Welcker's Resort Historic District
Welcker's Resort Historic District
Welcker's Resort Historic District
April 14, 1997
(#97000328)
Roughly bounded by Cottage Row, Maple, Cedar, and Main Sts.
45°07′42″N 87°14′59″W / 45.1283°N 87.2497°W / 45.1283; -87.2497 (Welcker's Resort Historic District)
Gibraltar Largely consists of buildings from the resort founded by German immigrant Dr. Herman Welcker in 1907 with a regimen influenced by European health spas of the time, catering initially to Germans from Milwaukee. District includes former cottages of the resort, the current White Gull Inn, and the current Whistling Swan, which was the Lumberman's Hotel in Marinette before Welcker had it hauled across Green Bay on the ice to become his "Casino."[102][103][104]
76 Whitefish Dunes-Bay View Site
Whitefish Dunes-Bay View Site
Whitefish Dunes-Bay View Site
December 28, 1990
(#90001960)
located at Whitefish Dunes State Park
Address Restricted

Sevastopol Artifacts found in the sand show successive occupations, beginning with the North Bay People around 100 B.C.[105]
77 William Zachow Farmstead
William Zachow Farmstead
William Zachow Farmstead
January 9, 1997
(#96001578)
9533 WI 57
45°08′01″N 87°07′57″W / 45.1336°N 87.1325°W / 45.1336; -87.1325 (William Zachow Farmstead)
Baileys Harbor Barn and house built around 1896 by Zachow. Walls of the barn and part of the house are unusual stovewood construction. It was later used as the Alchemy Fields art gallery.[106][107][108]
78 Albert Zahn House
Albert Zahn House
Albert Zahn House
May 11, 2000
(#00000492)
8223 WI trunk Hwy. 57
45°04′15″N 87°07′24″W / 45.0708°N 87.1233°W / 45.0708; -87.1233 (Albert Zahn House)
Baileys Harbor Retired farmer Zahn and his wife Louise built the concrete house in 1924, surrounded it with folk art carvings, and named it Bird's Park.[109]
79 August Zahn Blacksmith Shop and House
August Zahn Blacksmith Shop and House
August Zahn Blacksmith Shop and House
May 5, 2000
(#00000455)
8152 WI trunk 57
45°04′00″N 87°07′26″W / 45.0667°N 87.1239°W / 45.0667; -87.1239 (August Zahn Blacksmith Shop and House)
Baileys Harbor Blacksmith shop with stovewood walls built in 1905[110] and house built in 1912.[111] Now the Blacksmith Inn.[112]

Former listings

[edit]
[3] Name on the Register Image Date listedDate removed Location City or town Description
1 Frank and Clara Englebert House
Frank and Clara Englebert House
Frank and Clara Englebert House
May 6, 2004
(#04000397)
September 29, 2011 9390 Cemetery Rd.
44°44′51″N 87°35′59″W / 44.7475°N 87.5997°W / 44.7475; -87.5997 (Frank and Clara Englebert House)
Brussels Gambrel-roofed Dutch Colonial Revival house built in 1924. Now demolished, following a lightning strike.[113]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ The latitude and longitude information provided is primarily from the National Register Information System, and has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. For 1%, the location info may be way off. We seek to correct the coordinate information wherever it is found to be erroneous. Please leave a note in the Discussion page for this article if you believe any specific location is incorrect.
  2. ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved November 8, 2024.
  3. ^ a b Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
  4. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 24, 2008.
  5. ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
  6. ^ "Advance (1871)". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant, Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-06-19.
  7. ^ "Advance Shipwreck (Barge)". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2019-06-19.
  8. ^ "Anderson Barn and Archival Resource Center". Ephraim Historical Foundation. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
  9. ^ "List of structures in Anderson Dock Historic District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-16.
  10. ^ Claudette Stager (August 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Anderson Dock Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2024-07-29. With 25 photos from 1984
  11. ^ "Australasia Shipwreck (Wooden Bulk Carrier)". Features. National Park Service - U.S. Department of the Interior. Retrieved 2013-11-16. Includes a great photo of the wreck.
  12. ^ Thomsen, Tamara; Keith Meverden. "Australasia Shipwreck (Wooden Bulk Carrier)" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. National Park Service - U.S. Department of the Interior (Archive.org). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 June 2015. Retrieved 2015-06-11.
  13. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Baileys Harbor Range Lights". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  14. ^ "Bailey's Harbor Town Hall / Mc Ardle Library". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  15. ^ "Boaz (1869)". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant & Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2023-10-17.
  16. ^ Ritzenthaler, Robert E. (December 1950). "Wisconsin Petroglyphs and Pictographs". Wisconsin Archeologist. 31 (4): 97.
  17. ^ "J.B. Bouche House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
  18. ^ "Bullhead Point Site". Wisconsin's Great Lakes Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Historical Society / UW - Sea Grant. Archived from the original on 2022-04-07. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
  19. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Cana Island Lighthouse". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2013-11-19.
  20. ^ Gardner, Paul; David Overstreet (Fall 2010). "Life During the End of the Ice Age". American Archaeology. 14 (3): 46–47.
  21. ^ "Carnegie Free Library". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-19.
  22. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Chambers Island Light". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2013-11-19.
  23. ^ "Christina Nilsson". Wisconsin's Great Lakes Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Historical Society & University of Wisconsin Sea Grant. Archived from the original on 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2013-11-23.
  24. ^ "Church of the Atonement". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-23.
  25. ^ Rodgers, Bradley A. "The 1995 Pre-Disturbance Wreck Site Investigation at Claflin Point, Sturgeon Bay Wisconsin" (PDF). Research Report No. 10. East Carolina University (Archive.org). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 2013-12-02.
  26. ^ "History". The Clearing Folk School. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
  27. ^ "Cupola House Shops - About". Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  28. ^ "Cupola House (Levi Thorp House)". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  29. ^ "August Draize Farmstead". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  30. ^ "Draize, August, Farmstead". National Or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  31. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Eagle Bluff Light". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  32. ^ "Emeline (1864)". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant, Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2023-08-07.
  33. ^ "History of the Ephraim Moravian Church". Ephraim Moravian Church. Retrieved 2013-11-29.
  34. ^ "Ephraim Village Hall". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-29.
  35. ^ "Joachine J. Falque House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-29.
  36. ^ a b c d Location given in Kohl, Cris (2001). The Great Lakes Diving Guide. West Chicago, Ill.: Seawolf Communications, Inc. NRIS lists site as "address restricted".
  37. ^ "Fleetwing". Wisconsin's Great Lakes Shipwrecks. University of Wisconsin Sea Grant and Wisconsin Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2013-11-29.
  38. ^ "Frank O'Connor". Wisconsin's Great Lakes Shipwrecks. University of Wisconsin Sea Grant and Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-11-29.
  39. ^ "Free Evangelical Lutheran Church-Bethania Scandinavian ELC". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-03.
  40. ^ "Bethany Lutheran Church". Bethany Lutheran Church. Retrieved 2013-12-03.
  41. ^ "Gibraltar District School #2". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-03.
  42. ^ "Globe Hotel". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-03.
  43. ^ "Grape Shot (1855)". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant, Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-02-16.
  44. ^ "Green Bay Sloop Shipwreck". Wisconsin National Register of Historic Places. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-03.
  45. ^ "Current Research". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant/Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  46. ^ "Hanover Shipwreck". Wisconsin National Register of Historic Places. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  47. ^ "Hillside Hotel / Hillside Cottages". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
  48. ^ "Inventory Form for Nominated Properties: Hillside Hotel". National Park Service. Retrieved 2024-07-29. With eight photos from 1984
  49. ^ "Iris Shipwreck". Wisconsin National Register of Historic Places. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
  50. ^ "Jacksonport Wharf Archaeological District". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
  51. ^ "Jischke's Meat Market". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
  52. ^ "Inn on Maple - Amenities". Inn on Maple. Archived from the original on 2013-12-25. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
  53. ^ Roots.
  54. ^ "Joint Brussels and Gardner District School Number One". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-11.
  55. ^ Pogany, Erin; Becker, Matt; Happel, Jeremy (April 2003). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Joint Brussels and Gardner District School Number One". National Park Service. Retrieved 2024-07-29. With seven photos.
  56. ^ "Shipwrecks". Wisconsin's Schooner Coast. Wisconsin's Schooner Coast (on Archive.org). Archived from the original on 7 July 2014. Retrieved 2014-07-07.
  57. ^ "Joys (1884)". Wisconsin Historical Society Shipwreck Database. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
  58. ^ "Lakeland Shipwreck (Steam Screw)". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  59. ^ "L.A. Larson and Company Store". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-11.
  60. ^ "Recent Projects". Door County Land Trust. Retrieved 2013-12-11.
  61. ^ "Louisiana (1887)". Wisconsin Historical Society Shipwreck Database. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
  62. ^ "List for Louisiana St./Seventh Ave Historic District". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  63. ^ "Meridian". Wisconsin's Great Lakes Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Historical Society and UW Sea Grant Institute. Archived from the original on 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  64. ^ "Joseph Monfils Farmstead". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-22.
  65. ^ "Murphy Farms Number 1". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-22.
  66. ^ "Namur Belgian-American District". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-22.
  67. ^ "List of Sites in the Namur Belgian-American Rural Historic District". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-27.
  68. ^ "History of Alexander Noble". Gibraltar History Association. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
  69. ^ "Alexander Noble House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-27.
  70. ^ "Ocean Wave Shipwreck". Wisconsin National Register of Historic Places. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-27.
  71. ^ "Peoria (1854)". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant, Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-04-26.
  72. ^ "Peoria Shipwreck (Schooner)". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-04-26.
  73. ^ "Peterson, Peter, House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2013-12-27.
  74. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Pilot Island". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2013-12-31.
  75. ^ "Pilot Island". Wisconsin's Great Lakes Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Historical Society and UW-Sea Grant. Archived from the original on 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2013-12-31.
  76. ^ a b Pepper, Terry. "Plum Island Range Lights". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2013-12-31.
  77. ^ Mason, Ronald J. (December 1967). "The North Bay Component at the Porte des Morts Site, Door County Wisconsin". The Wisconsin Archeologist. 48 (4): 267–345. Retrieved 2013-12-31.
  78. ^ "Potawatomi State Park Tower". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2021-02-15.
  79. ^ Fitzgerald, Debra (2020-07-10). "Historic Listring Sought for Potawatomi Tower". Door County Pulse. Retrieved 2021-02-15.
  80. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Pottawotamie Lighthouse". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2014-01-03.
  81. ^ "Pride (1866)". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Wisconsin Sea Grant, Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-10-05.
  82. ^ Mason, Ronald J. (Summer 1991). "Biography of an Island". Wisconsin Academic Review. Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters: 35–39.
  83. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Sherwood Point Lighthouse". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2014-01-03.
  84. ^ "Dr. Joseph and Olivia Soper House". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-05-07.
  85. ^ "Dr. Joseph and Olivia Soper House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-05-07.
  86. ^ "Sturgeon Bay Bridge". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-03.
  87. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Sturgeon Bay Canal Light Station". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
  88. ^ Pepper, Terry. "Tower Heights". Seeing the Light. Terry Pepper. Archived from the original on 2000-09-18. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
  89. ^ "U. S. Post Office". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
  90. ^ "Post Office Mural - Sturgeon Bay WI". The Living New Deal. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
  91. ^ "Current Research". Wisconsin Shipwrecks. Sea Grant Foundation/Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  92. ^ "Success Shipwreck (Scow Schooner)". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
  93. ^ "The Sunshine Shipwreck (Scow Schooner) Listed on the State Register of Historic Places". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2023-11-04.
  94. ^ "Tewels and Brandeis Grain Elevator". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2018-02-16.
  95. ^ "List of Buildings in the Third Avenue/Downtown Historic District". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
  96. ^ a b Cartwright, Carol Lohry (1984-12-17). "Historic Chester H. Thordarson Estate" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places - Inventory Nomination Form. U.S. Department of the Interior - National Park Service. Archived from the original on 2012-10-15. Retrieved 2014-01-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  97. ^ a b "List of Structures in the Thordarson District". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  98. ^ "Thorpe House Cottages". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  99. ^ "Thorp House History". Thorp House Inn and Cottages. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  100. ^ "Louis Vangindertahlen House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  101. ^ "Vorous General Store". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
  102. ^ "White Gull Inn History". White Gull Inn. Archived from the original on 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2014-01-18. Includes reminiscences of Welcker's era.
  103. ^ "Henriette". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  104. ^ "Welcker's Casino". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  105. ^ "Whitefish Dunes State Park - History". Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
  106. ^ "William Zachow Farmstead". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  107. ^ "Alchemy Fields - About". Alchemy Fields. Archived from the original on 2014-01-09. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  108. ^ Vollmert, Lesslie J. (1995-08-11). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Zachow, William, Farmstead". National Park Service. Retrieved 2024-07-29. With 20 photos.
  109. ^ "Zahn, Albert, House". National Register or State Register. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  110. ^ "August Zahn Blacksmith Shop and Residence - Shop". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  111. ^ Sweeten, Lena L.; Abing, Laura; Schnel, Traci E. (1999-09-27). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Zahn, August, Blacksmith Shop and Residence". National Park Service. Retrieved 2024-07-29. With nine photos.
  112. ^ "August Zahn Blacksmith Shop and Residence - House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  113. ^ "Frank and Clara Englebert House". Architecture and History Inventory. Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved 2014-01-18.