User:IvoShandor/Sycamore Historic District work page
The propeties on this List of properties (Sycamore Historic District) are within the boundaries of a National Register of Historic Places historic district. The Sycamore Historic District, in Sycamore, Illinois, was designated in 1978. The list contains 226 properties which are all located within the Sycamore Historic District's 99 acres.[1] Of those properties, 187 are listed as contributing structures in the district while an additional 22 are non-contributing.[2] Of all the homes and other buildings within the district a full 75% fit within the historic district concept.[3]
Contributing properties
[edit]Churches
[edit]These are the churches that are listed as contributing properties within the boundaries of the Sycamore Historic District.
Image | Building name | Address | Architecture | Built | Architect(s) | Contributing property |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n/a | Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. John | 327 S. Main Street | 1937-1938 | [4] | ||
First Baptist Church | NE corner of Maple and Elm | Gothic Revival | 1899 | |||
St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church | Waterman and California | |||||
St. Peter's Episcopal Church | 206 Somonauk Street | Classical Revival | 1879 | |||
Old Congregational Church | SE corner of High and Somonauk | Gothic Revival | 1884 | George O. Garnsey | ||
Universalist Church/Arthur Stark House | 212 S. Main Street | Italianate | 1855 | unknown, Arthur Stark |
Commercial buildings
[edit]The list below contains commercial properties with the Sycamore Historic District. Many of the commercial, contributing properties date from the mid to late 19th century. While downtown Sycamore, where the core of the commercial properties are located, is typical of other small, Illinois county seats that developed during the same era. Setting Sycamore apart is the large number of period structures that survived into the 20th century.
Image | Building name | Address | Architecture | Built | Architect(s) | Contributing property | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
156 W. State St. | 1896 | ||||||
Central Block | Classical Revival | 1905 | Herbert T. Hazelton | ||||
Citizens National Bank Building | NE corner of State and Main | Classical Revival | 1905 | Paul O. Moratz | |||
Court Building | |||||||
Daniel Pierce Block | N | Classical Revival | 1905 | Paul O. Moratz | |||
Frederick Townsend Garage | 1906 | ||||||
George's Block | NE corner of State and Main | Classical Revival | 1905 | Paul O. Moratz | |||
National Bank & Trust Company Building | Classical Revival | 1925 | Weary & Alford | ||||
Old Sycamore Hospital | Classical Revival | ||||||
State Street Theater | SE corner of State and Main | Classical Revival | |||||
Stratford Inn | SE corner of State and Main | Classical Revival | |||||
Townsend Building | Classical Revival | 1905 | Paul O. Moratz | ||||
Waterman Block | Classical Revival |
Government properties
[edit]These are the government buildings and structures within the Sycamore Historic District that are considered contributing properties to the district.
Image | Building name | Address | Architecture | Built | Architect(s) | Contributing property |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Civil War Memorial | State Street (Courthouse lawn) | 1896 | ||||
DeKalb County Courthouse | State Street | Classical Revival | 1905 | Herbert T. Hazelton | ||
Old East School | 410 E. Elm St. | |||||
Sycamore Public Library | NE corner of State and Main | Classical Revival | 1905 | Paul O. Moratz | ||
U.S. Post Office | SE corner of State and Main | Classical Revival |
Houses
[edit]These are the houses that are considered contributing properties to the Sycamore Historic District. Many of the houses lie on Somonauk and Main Streets in Sycamore, both streets are north-south and the majority of the homes that are part of the historic district are south of State Street (Illinois Route 64). The homes cover a variety of architectural styles, many of which were popular around the time the residential areas that comprises part of the Sycamore Historic District came to maturity.
References
[edit]- Mikolajczyk, Paul L. Fire destroys church, Daily Chronicle, 10 February 2004, Retrieved 7 July 2007.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Bigolin, Steve. The Sycamore Historic District: Introduction, Daily Chronicle, 14 August 2006. Retrieved on August 14 2007.
- ^ HAARGIS Database, Property Information Report, Sycamore Historic District, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. Retrieved January 29, 2007.
- ^ Sycamore Historic District, (PDF), Illinois Historic Sites Inventory Survey, HAARGIS Database, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency [1]. Retrieved 18 February 2007.
- ^ The Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. John was destroyed by fire in 2004. See Mikolajczyk, "Fire destroys church."
- ^ The house at 123 W. Lincoln was split off from the main Charles Kellum House in the 1920s. It is listed as a contributing property with the original structure adjacent to it. See Kellum House, Property Information Report.