National Register of Historic Places listings in Minnesota
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{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2014}}
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This is a list of sites in Minnesota which are included in the National Register of Historic Places. There are more than 1,700 properties and historic districts listed on the NRHP; each of Minnesota's 87 counties has at least 2 listings. Twenty-two sites are also National Historic Landmarks.
{{TOC top
|title=Contents: Counties in Minnesota (links in italic lead to a new page)}}
- Aitkin
- Anoka
- Becker
- Beltrami
- Benton
- Big Stone
- Blue Earth
- Brown
- Carlton
- Carver
- Cass
- Chippewa
- Chisago
- Clay
- Clearwater
- Cook
- Cottonwood
- Crow Wing
- Dakota
- Dodge
- Douglas
- Faribault
- Fillmore
- Freeborn
- Goodhue
- Grant
- Hennepin
- Houston
- Hubbard
- Isanti
- Itasca
- Jackson
- Kanabec
- Kandiyohi
- Kittson
- Koochiching
- Lac qui Parle
- Lake
- Lake of the Woods
- Le Sueur
- Lincoln
- Lyon
- Mahnomen
- Marshall
- Martin
- McLeod
- Meeker
- Mille Lacs
- Morrison
- Mower
- Murray
- Nicollet
- Nobles
- Norman
- Olmsted
- Otter Tail
- Pennington
- Pine
- Pipestone
- Polk
- Pope
- Ramsey
- Red Lake
- Redwood
- Renville
- Rice
- Rock
- Roseau
- St. Louis
- Scott
- Sherburne
- Sibley
- Stearns
- Steele
- Stevens
- Swift
- Todd
- Traverse
- Wabasha
- Wadena
- Waseca
- Washington
- Watonwan
- Wilkin
- Winona
- Wright
- Yellow Medicine
{{TOC bottom}}
Minneapolis listings are in the Hennepin County list; St. Paul's listings are in the Ramsey County list.
{{NRHP date for lists|Minnesota}}
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Image:Minnesota-counties-map.png
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Current listings by county
The following are approximate tallies of current listings by county. These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of April 24, 2008{{NRISref|2008b}} and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site.{{cite web |url=http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/nrlist.htm |title=National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions |access-date=January 2, 2009 |publisher=National Park Service |archive-date=January 26, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110126114305/http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/nrlist.htm |url-status=dead }} There are frequent additions to the listings and occasional delistings and the counts here are approximate and not official. New entries are added to the official Register on a weekly basis.[http://www.nps.gov/history/nr/nrlist.htm Weekly List Actions], National Register of Historic Places website Also, the counts in this table exclude boundary increase and decrease listings which modify the area covered by an existing property or district and which carry a separate National Register reference number. The numbers of NRHP listings in each county are documented by tables in each of the individual county list-articles.
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[[Aitkin County, Minnesota|Aitkin County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Aitkin County, Minnesota}}
[[Anoka County, Minnesota|Anoka County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Anoka County, Minnesota}}
[[Becker County, Minnesota|Becker County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Becker County, Minnesota}}
[[Beltrami County, Minnesota|Beltrami County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Beltrami County, Minnesota}}
[[Benton County, Minnesota|Benton County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=82002932
|type=NRHP
|article=Church of Sts. Peter and Paul-Catholic
|name=Church of Sts. Peter and Paul-Catholic
|address=State St.
|city=Gilman
|county=Benton County, Minnesota
|date=April 6, 1982
|image=Church of Sts. Peter and Paul.jpg
|lat=45.736515
|lon=-93.945352
|description=Landmark religious complex of a Polish American settlement, consisting of a 1909 parochial school, 1924 rectory, and 1930 Beaux-Arts church.{{cite web |last=Haidet |first=Mark |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Ss. Peter and Paul Catholic Church Complex |url={{NRHP url|id=82002932}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=November 1980 |access-date=2015-10-04}}
|commonscat=Saints Peter and Paul Church (Gilman, Minnesota)
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=82002936
|type=NRHP
|article=Cota Round Barns
|name=Cota Round Barns
|address=County Highway 48
|city=St. George Township
|county=Benton County, Minnesota
|date=April 6, 1982
|image=Cota Round Barns.jpg
|lat=45.578976
|lon=-93.950223
|description=Two round barns constructed in the early 1920s, prominent examples of the numerous reinforced concrete structures built in the area by contractor Al Cota and his successors from 1913 through the 1940s.{{cite web |last=Haidet |first=Mark |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Cota Round Barns |url={{NRHP url|id=82002936}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=November 1980 |access-date=2015-10-04}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=82002933
|type=NRHP
|article=Esselman Brothers General Store
|name=Esselman Brothers General Store
|address=County Highways 1 and 13
|city=Mayhew Lake Township
|county=Benton County, Minnesota
|date=April 6, 1982
|image=Esselman Brothers General Store.jpg
|lat=45.713327
|lon=-94.110686
|description=Well-preserved 1897 example of the general stores common to Benton County's crossroads communities, and a reminder of Mayhew Lake Township's settlement by German Americans.{{cite web |last=Haidet |first=Mark |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Esselman Brothers General Store |url={{NRHP url|id=82002933}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=November 1980 |access-date=2015-10-04}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=73000964
|type=NRHP
|article=Posch Site
|name=Posch Site
|address={{Address restricted}}
|city=Langola Township
|county=Benton County, Minnesota
|date=October 2, 1973
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=Archaeological site potentially dating back to the Archaic Period, having yielded a few stone tools but no ceramics.{{cite document |last=George |first=Douglas |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Posch Site |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-04-13}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=82002935
|type=NRHP
|article=Leonard Robinson House
|name=Leonard Robinson House
|address=202 2nd Ave., S.
|city=Sauk Rapids
|county=Benton County, Minnesota
|date=April 6, 1982
|image=Leonard Robinson House.jpg
|lat=45.5879
|lon=-94.163024
|description=1873 house of a pioneer in the area's significant granite quarrying industry.{{cite web |last=Haidet |first=Mark |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Leonard Robinson House |url={{NRHP url|id=82002935}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=November 1980 |access-date=2015-09-06}}
}}
|}
=Former listings=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=82002934
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Ronneby Charcoal Kiln
|name=Ronneby Charcoal Kiln
|address=Off Minnesota Highway 23
|city=Ronneby vicinity
|county=Benton County, Minnesota
|date=April 6, 1982
|delisted_date=2003-01-15
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1901 charcoal kiln.{{cite web |title=Ronneby Charcoal Kiln |url=http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/NRDetails.cfm-NPSNum=82002934.html |work=Minnesota National Register Properties Database |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |year=2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190618061040/http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/NRDetails.cfm-NPSNum=82002934.html |archive-date=2019-06-18}} Demolished in 2002.{{cite web |title=Changes to the National Register of Historic Places in Minnesota, 2003-2010 |url=https://www.facebook.com/notes/minnesota-state-historic-preservation-office/changes-to-the-national-register-of-historic-places-in-minnesota-2003-2010/180913725280298 |publisher=Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office |date=February 1, 2011 |access-date=August 23, 2013}}
}}
|}
[[Big Stone County, Minnesota|Big Stone County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Big Stone County, Minnesota}}
[[Blue Earth County, Minnesota|Blue Earth County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Blue Earth County, Minnesota}}
[[Brown County, Minnesota|Brown County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Brown County, Minnesota}}
[[Carlton County, Minnesota|Carlton County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Carlton County, Minnesota}}
[[Carver County, Minnesota|Carver County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Carver County, Minnesota}}
[[Cass County, Minnesota|Cass County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Cass County, Minnesota}}
[[Chippewa County, Minnesota|Chippewa County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Chippewa County, Minnesota}}
[[Chisago County, Minnesota|Chisago County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Chisago County, Minnesota}}
[[Clay County, Minnesota|Clay County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Clay County, Minnesota}}
[[Clearwater County, Minnesota|Clearwater County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=88000593
|type=NRHP
|article=Gran Evangelical Lutheran Church
|name=Gran Evangelical Lutheran Church
|address=County Road 92 and County Highway 20
|city=Bagley vicinity
|county=Clearwater County, Minnesota
|date=May 19, 1988
|image=Gran Church.jpg
|lat=47.543333
|lon=-95.484722
|description=1897 log church—the first church in what became Clearwater County—which played a key role in the area's settlement by loggers and homesteaders and in the religious life of its Norwegian immigrants.{{cite web |last=Hess |first=Jeffrey A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Gran Evangelical Lutheran Church |url={{NRHP url|id=88000593}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1987-01-28 |access-date=2016-04-23}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=70000912
|type=NRHP
|article=Itasca State Park#Archaeological and cemetery sites
|name=Itasca Bison Site
|address=Address restricted
|city=Park Rapids vicinity
|county=Clearwater County, Minnesota
|date=December 29, 1970
|image=Itasca Bison Site.JPG
|lat=47.19407
|lon=-95.230884
|description=Site where Archaic hunters killed and butchered Bison occidentalis.{{cite web |title=The Itasca Bison Kill Site |url=http://www.fromsitetostory.org/nhr/21ce0001itascabison/21ce0001itascabison.asp |work=From Site to Story: The Upper Mississippi's Buried Past |publisher=The Institute for Minnesota Archaeology |date=June 27, 1999 |access-date=September 21, 2012}} Also a contributing property to Itasca State Park.{{cite web|last=Mitchell |first=Diana |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Itasca State Park |url={{NRHP url|id=73000972}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-03-09 |access-date=2016-04-23}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=73000972
|type=HD
|article=Itasca State Park
|name=Itasca State Park
|address={{convert|21|mi|km|abbr=on}} north of Park Rapids off U.S. Route 71
|city=Park Rapids vicinity
|county=Clearwater County, Minnesota
|date=May 7, 1973
|image=Mississippi River origin monument.jpg
|lat=47.193889
|lon=-95.2175
|description=Minnesota's oldest state park, established in 1891. Also significant for its extensive archaeological resources, association with the quest for the Mississippi River headwaters, pioneer sites, and 72 park facilities built 1905–1942 noted for their rustic log construction and association with early park development. Extends into Becker and Hubbard Counties.
|commonscat=Itasca State Park
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=78001527
|type=HD
|article=Lower Rice Lake Site
|name=Lower Rice Lake Site
|address={{Address restricted}}
|city=Bagley vicinity
|county=Clearwater County, Minnesota
|date=December 18, 1978
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=Woodland period site for wild rice harvesting, a subsistence activity unique to this region of North America. Also noted for an artifact assemblage suggesting ties to the north and the northern Great Plains.{{cite document |last=Schissel |first=Pat |author2=Scott Anfinson |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: The Lower Rice Lake Archaeological District |publisher=National Park Service |date=1977-11-15}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=78001526
|type=NRHP
|article=Upper Rice Lake Site
|name=Upper Rice Lake Site
|address={{Address restricted}}
|city=Shevlin vicinity
|county=Clearwater County, Minnesota
|date=December 19, 1978
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=Woodland period site for wild rice harvesting, with artifacts associated with northern Minnesota, the northern plains, and the Mississippi basin, indicating broad migration and trade.{{cite document |last=Anfinson |first=Scott |author2=Pat Schissel |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Upper Rice Lake District |publisher=National Park Service |date=1977-11-14}}
}}
|}
[[Cook County, Minnesota|Cook County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Cook County, Minnesota}}
[[Cottonwood County, Minnesota|Cottonwood County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=86001285
|type=NRHP
|article=Isaac Bargen House
|name=Isaac Bargen House
|address=1215 Mountain Lake Rd.
|city=Mountain Lake
|county=Cottonwood County, Minnesota
|date=June 13, 1986
|image=Bargen, Isaac, House.jpg
|lat=43.935009
|lon=-94.924761
|description=1888 house of a transformational educator and administrator (1857–1943) who was one of the first in his Mennonite community to promote secular public education and government service.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene A. |author2=Charles Quinn |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Isaac Bargen House |url={{NRHP url|id=86001286}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1985-07-05 |access-date=2016-05-21}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=86001286
|type=NRHP
|article=Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Omaha Depot (Westbrook, Minnesota)
|name=Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Omaha Depot
|address=4th St. at 1st Ave.
|city=Westbrook
|county=Cottonwood County, Minnesota
|date=June 13, 1986
|image=Westbrook Depot.jpg
|lat=44.039748
|lon=-95.435303
|description=1900 railway station, the last remaining on a branch line that opened the area up to development, and the essential link of commerce and communication for Westbrook and its surrounding farmers.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene A. |author2=Charles Quinn |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Chicago St. Paul Minneapolis and Omaha Depot |url={{NRHP url|id=86001286}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1985-07-05 |access-date=2016-05-21}} Now a museum.{{cite web |title=Westbrook Heritage House Museum |url=http://www.exploreminnesota.com/things-to-do/2814/westbrook-heritage-house-museum |publisher=Explore Minnesota |access-date=2016-05-21}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=77000728
|type=NRHP
|article=Cottonwood County Courthouse
|name=Cottonwood County Courthouse
|address=900 3rd Ave.
|city=Windom
|county=Cottonwood County, Minnesota
|date=April 18, 1977
|image=Cottonwood_County_Courthouse.jpg
|lat=43.86598
|lon=-95.117035
|description=Prominent 1904 courthouse noted for the neoclassicism expressed throughout the building, from the exterior architecture to the interior design and artwork.{{cite web |last=Nelson |first=Charles W. |author2=Susan Zeik |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Cottonwood County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=77000728}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1976-10-26 |access-date=2016-05-21}}
|commonscat=Cottonwood County Courthouse
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=70000291
|type=NRHP
|article=Jeffers Petroglyphs
|name=Jeffers Petroglyphs Site
|address=Off County Highway 2
|city=Jeffers vicinity
|county=Cottonwood County, Minnesota
|date=October 15, 1970
|image=Jeffers Petroglyphs Arrow.jpg
|lat=44.092239
|lon=-95.052885
|description={{convert|300|by|50|yd|m|adj=on}} rock outcrop bearing some 4,000 petroglyphs ranging from 7,000 to 250 years old, nominated as Minnesota's finest collection of precontact Native American rock art. Now a public site managed by the Minnesota Historical Society.{{cite web |title=The Rock |url=http://sites.mnhs.org/historic-sites/jeffers-petroglyphs/the-rock |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |access-date=2016-05-15}}{{cite web |last=Johnson |first=Elden |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Jeffers Petroglyph Site 21CO3 |url={{NRHP url|id=70000291}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1970-04-28 |access-date=2016-05-15}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=73000973
|type=NRHP
|article=Mountain Lake Site
|name=Mountain Lake Site
|address=Former island in the former Mountain LakeBonney, Rachel A. "[https://www.jstor.org/stable/25666953 Early Woodland in Minnesota]". Plains Anthropologist 15.50 (1970): 302-304: 302.
|city=Mountain Lake vicinity
|county=Cottonwood County, Minnesota
|date=June 4, 1973
|image=Mountain County Park.JPG
|lat=43.920833
|lon=-94.890556
|description=Deeply stratified village site spanning the precontact era from the late Archaic to an Oneota occupation, with a particular concentration of Woodland period ceramics.{{cite document |last=Johnson |first=Elden |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Mountain Lake Site |publisher=National Park Service |date=1971-12-27}}
}}
|}
[[Crow Wing County, Minnesota|Crow Wing County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Crow Wing County, Minnesota}}
[[Dakota County, Minnesota|Dakota County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Dakota County, Minnesota}}
[[Dodge County, Minnesota|Dodge County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Dodge County, Minnesota}}
[[Douglas County, Minnesota|Douglas County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Douglas County, Minnesota}}
[[Faribault County, Minnesota|Faribault County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Faribault County, Minnesota}}
[[Fillmore County, Minnesota|Fillmore County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Fillmore County, Minnesota}}
[[Freeborn County, Minnesota|Freeborn County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=84001412
|type=NRHP
|article=Albert Lea City Hall
|name=Albert Lea City Hall
|address=212 North Broadway
|city=Albert Lea
|county=Freeborn County, Minnesota
|date=May 17, 1984
|image=OldCityHallAlbertLeaMN.jpg
|lat=43.65051
|lon=-93.368999
|description=1903 municipal building that served as Albert Lea's seat of government until 1968.{{cite web |last=Ostberg |first=Gary |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Albert Lea City Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=84001412}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1984-01-03 |access-date=2016-09-05}} Also a contributing property to the Albert Lea Commercial Historic District.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Albert Lea Commercial Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=87001214}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1986-01-30 |access-date=2016-09-05}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=87001214
|type=HD
|article=Albert Lea Commercial Historic District
|name=Albert Lea Commercial Historic District
|address=North Broadway between Water and East Main Streets
|city=Albert Lea
|county=Freeborn County, Minnesota
|date=July 16, 1987
|image=Bessessen.jpg
|lat=43.64839
|lon=-93.368715
|description=Three-block retail district whose buildings, constructed 1874–1928, are noted for their fine commercial architecture and multigenerational occupation by family businesses.
|commonscat=Albert Lea Commercial Historic District
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=82002954
|type=NRHP
|article=Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Depot (Albert Lea, Minnesota)
|name=Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Depot
|address=606 South Broadway
|city=Albert Lea
|county=Freeborn County, Minnesota
|date=February 4, 1982
|image=DepotAlbertLeaMN.jpg
|lat=43.644676
|lon=-93.369361
|description=1914 train station emblematic of the rail connections that contributed to Albert Lea's growth and development.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul, and Pacific Railroad Depot |url={{NRHP url|id=82002954}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=January 1981 |access-date=2016-09-05}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=86000480
|type=NRHP
|article=Clarks Grove Cooperative Creamery
|name=Clarks Grove Cooperative Creamery
|address=Main Street East and Independence Avenue
|city=Clarks Grove
|county=Freeborn County, Minnesota
|date=March 20, 1986
|image=ClarksGroveCreamery.JPG
|lat=43.763538
|lon=-93.328812
|description=Third home of Minnesota's first and most influential cooperative creamery, built in 1927 with a second-floor meeting hall. Also noted for its fine architecture and association with a successful Danish American dairying community.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Clarks Grove Cooperative Creamery |url={{NRHP url|id=86000480}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1985-07-31 |access-date=2016-09-05}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=86000479
|type=NRHP
|article=Lodge Zare Zapadu No. 44
|name=Lodge Zare Zapadu No. 44
|address=County Highway 30
|city=Hayward vicinity
|county=Freeborn County, Minnesota
|date=March 20, 1986
|image=ZareZapadu.JPG
|lat=43.608292
|lon=-93.16955
|description=1909 meeting hall of the Zapadni Ceska Bratrska Jednota fraternal society; the last of three halls that served as social and recreational centers for southeast Freeborn County's Czech American population.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Lodge Záře Zapádu No. 44 |url={{NRHP url|id=86000479}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1985-07-24 |access-date=2016-09-04}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=86000481
|type=NRHP
|article=H. A. Paine House
|name=H. A. Paine House
|address=609 West Fountain Street
|city=Albert Lea
|county=Freeborn County, Minnesota
|date=March 20, 1986
|image=PaineHouseAlbertLeaMN.jpg
|lat=43.651276
|lon=-93.375797
|description=1898 Queen Anne house, called "a masterpiece and a perfect example" of the style in its nomination.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: H. A. Paine House |url={{NRHP url|id=86000481}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1985-07-18 |access-date=2016-09-04}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=7
|refnum=86001332
|type=NRHP
|article=Dr. Albert C. Wedge House
|name=Dr. Albert C. Wedge House
|address=216 West Fountain Street
|city=Albert Lea
|county=Freeborn County, Minnesota
|date=June 13, 1986
|image=WedgeHouseAlbertLeaMN.jpg
|lat=43.651983
|lon=-93.370827
|description=Circa-1880 house noted for its exemplary Shingle style architecture and association with Albert C. Wedge (1834–1911), Albert Lea's leading doctor for over 50 years and an active figure in local and state affairs.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Dr. Albert C. Wedge House |url={{NRHP url|id=86001332}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1985-04-29 |access-date=2016-09-04}}
}}
|}
=Former listings=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=86000439
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=John Niebuhr Farmhouse
|name=John Niebuhr Farmhouse
|address=Off County Highway 2
|city=Conger vicinity
|county=Freeborn County, Minnesota
|date=March 20, 1986
|delisted_date=1998-06-22
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1873 farmhouse.{{cite web |title=Niebuhr, John, Farmhouse (removed) |url=http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/NRDetails.cfm-NPSNum=86000439.html |work=Minnesota National Register Properties Database |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |year=2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190618075744/http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/NRDetails.cfm-NPSNum=86000439.html |archive-date=2019-06-18}} Burned down in 1997.{{cite book |title=The National Register of Historic Places in Minnesota |last=Nord |first=Mary Ann |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |year=2003 |isbn=0-87351-448-3 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/nationalregister0000nord }}
}}
|}
[[Goodhue County, Minnesota|Goodhue County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Goodhue County, Minnesota}}
[[Grant County, Minnesota|Grant County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=74001018
|type=NRHP
|article=Fort Pomme de Terre site
|name=Fort Pomme de Terre Site
|address=Address restricted
|city=Ashby vicinity
|county=Grant County, Minnesota
|date=May 23, 1974
|image=Fort Pomme de Terre site.jpg
|lat=46.06684
|lon=-95.88237
|description=Site of an 1859 stagecoach station expanded into a U.S. Army fort for a few years after the Dakota War of 1862; a uniquely well-documented site from the earliest period of white settlement.{{cite document |last=Nelson |first=Charles W. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Fort Pomme de Terre Site |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-10-31}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=85001945
|type=NRHP
|article=Grant County Courthouse (Elbow Lake, Minnesota)
|name=Grant County Courthouse
|address=10 2nd St., NE.
|city=Elbow Lake
|county=Grant County, Minnesota
|date=September 5, 1985
|image=Grant County Courthouse 2012.jpg
|lat=45.994837
|lon=-95.976809
|description=One of Minnesota's few monumental Victorian courthouses remaining, built in 1905; Grant County's most prominent turn-of-the-20th-century building and its long-serving seat of government, and an important work of architects Bell & Detweiler and interior designer Odin J. Oyen.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Grant County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=85001945}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=October 1983 |access-date=2016-09-05}}
|commonscat=Grant County Courthouse (Minnesota)
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=85001819
|type=NRHP
|article=Roosevelt Hall (Minnesota)
|name=Roosevelt Hall
|address=Hawkins Ave.
|city=Barrett
|county=Grant County, Minnesota
|date=August 23, 1985
|image=Roosevelt Hall (Minnesota).jpg
|lat=45.91094
|lon=-95.888498
|description=Municipal auditorium built 1933–34, one of Minnesota's few surviving projects by the short-lived Civil Works Administration, and an example of the refined but low-cost public buildings the New Deal brought to small Minnesota towns.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Roosevelt Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=85001819}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=August 1984 |access-date=2016-09-05}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=15000212
|type=NRHP
|article=Anna J. Scofield Memorial Auditorium and Harold E. Thorson Memorial Library
|name=Anna J. Scofield Memorial Auditorium and Harold E. Thorson Memorial Library
|address=117 Central Ave., N.
|city=Elbow Lake
|county=Grant County, Minnesota
|date=2015-05-11
|image=Thorson Memorial Library 01.jpg
|commonscat=Thorson Memorial Library
|lat=45.99392
|lon=-95.976267
|description=Dual-purpose municipal facility constructed 1933–34, the first building project in Minnesota funded by the Public Works Administration and one of the program's best works nationally, according to the agency in 1939.{{cite web |last=Ganzel |first=Emily |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Anna J. Scofield Memorial Auditorium and Harold E. Thorson Memorial Library |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0082_scofieldauditorium.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=November 2014 |access-date=2016-06-25}}
}}
|}
[[Hennepin County, Minnesota|Hennepin County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Hennepin County, Minnesota}}
[[Houston County, Minnesota|Houston County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Houston County, Minnesota}}
[[Hubbard County, Minnesota|Hubbard County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=100000565
|type=NRHP
|article=Consolidated School District No. 22
|name=Consolidated School District No. 22
|address=25895 County Road 9
|city=Nary
|county=Hubbard County, Minnesota
|date=2017-01-24
|image=NarySchool.jpg
|lat=47.366423
|lon=-94.822593
|description=Two-story school built in 1918, a distinctive example of the larger facilities built to begin consolidating Minnesota's rural school districts. Also called Nary School; now the Helga Township Community Center.{{cite web |last=LeVasseur |first=Andrea |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Consolidated School District No. 22 |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0113_schooldistrict22.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=2016-09-06 |access-date=2017-02-20}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=84001475
|type=NRHP
|article=Hubbard County Courthouse
|name=Hubbard County Courthouse
|address=301 Court Ave.
|city=Park Rapids
|county=Hubbard County, Minnesota
|date=1984-03-08
|image=Hubbard County Courthouse SE.jpg
|lat=46.91999
|lon=-95.063777
|description=1900 Neoclassical courthouse, a prominent public building and home of the county government into the 1970s.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Hubbard County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=84001475}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-08-29 |access-date=2015-10-23}} Now houses the Hubbard County Historical Museum and Nemeth Art Center.{{cite web |title=Hubbard County Historical Society - Museum |url=http://www.hubbardcountyhistory.org/ |publisher=Hubbard County Historical Society |year=2013 |access-date=July 20, 2014}}{{cite web |title=Visit |url=http://www.nemethartcenter.org/visit |publisher=Nemeth Art Center |year=2014 |access-date=July 20, 2014}}
|commonscat=Hubbard County Courthouse
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=73000972
|type=HD
|article=Itasca State Park
|name=Itasca State Park
|address=21 miles north of Park Rapids off U.S. Route 71
|city=Park Rapids vicinity
|county=Hubbard County, Minnesota
|date=1973-05-07
|image=Douglas Lodge Itasca State Park MN.jpg
|lat=47.193889
|lon=-95.2175
|description=Minnesota's oldest state park, established in 1891. Also significant for its extensive archaeological resources, association with the quest for the Mississippi River headwaters, pioneer sites, and 72 park facilities built 1905–1942 noted for their rustic log construction and association with early park development. Extends into Becker and Clearwater Counties.
|commonscat=Itasca State Park
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=79001250
|type=NRHP
|article=Louis J. Moser House
|name=Louis J. Moser House
|address=28104 Junco Dr.
|city=Thorpe Township
|county=Hubbard County, Minnesota
|date=1979-04-17
|image=Louis J. Moser House.jpg
|lat=47.068433
|lon=-94.900859
|description=Circa-1907 homesteader's cabin used as one of Minnesota's first fishing resorts. Also noted for its locally unusual post and sill construction.{{cite web |last=Gruss |first=Fremont |author2=Karen Gruss |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Moser, Louis J., Homestead (known as Louie's Camp) |url={{NRHP url|id=79001250}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=April 28, 1978 |access-date=July 20, 2014}} Now the main office of Fremont's Point Resort.{{cite web |title=Fremont's Point Resort - Cabins and History |url=http://www.fremontspoint.com/html/cabinshistory.html |publisher=Fremont's Point Resort |access-date=November 12, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=88002053
|type=NRHP
|article=Park Rapids Jail
|name=Park Rapids Jail
|address=205 W. 2nd St.
|city=Park Rapids
|county=Hubbard County, Minnesota
|date=1988-10-27
|image=Park Rapids Jail.jpg
|lat=46.921201
|lon=-95.060635
|description=1901 jail, the only largely intact municipal building from Park Rapid's early boom years.{{cite web |last=Hess |first=Jeffrey A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Park Rapids Jail |url={{NRHP url|id=88002053}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=February 3, 1987 |access-date=July 20, 2014}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=73000980
|type=HD
|article=Shell River Prehistoric Village and Mound District
|name=Shell River Prehistoric Village and Mound District
|address={{Address restricted}}
|city=Park Rapids vicinity
|county=Hubbard County, Minnesota
|date=1973-06-19
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=Large habitation and mound complex at the junction of two major river routes, likely harboring a deep Woodland period stratigraphy at the far northern boundary of Mississippian culture influence.{{cite document |last=George |first=Douglas |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Shell River Prehistoric Village and Mound District |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-05-01}}
}}
|}
=Former listing=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=88000194
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Hubbard Lodge No. 130
|name=Hubbard Lodge No. 130
|address=Off County Highway 6
|city=Hubbard Township
|county=Hubbard County, Minnesota
|date=1988-03-10
|delisted_date=1993-04-27
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1899 Independent Order of Odd Fellows hall. Restored in 1989 but destroyed by arson on February 14, 1991.{{cite book |last=El-Hai |first=Jack |title=Lost Minnesota: Stories of Vanished Places |location=Minneapolis |publisher=University of Minnesota Press |year=2000 |isbn=0816635153}}
}}
|}
[[Isanti County, Minnesota|Isanti County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Isanti County, Minnesota}}
[[Itasca County, Minnesota|Itasca County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Itasca County, Minnesota}}
[[Jackson County, Minnesota|Jackson County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=89000157
|type=NRHP
|article=Church of the Sacred Heart (Heron Lake, Minnesota)
|name=Church of the Sacred Heart (Catholic)
|address=9th St. and 4th Ave.
|city=Heron Lake
|county=Jackson County, Minnesota
|date=March 20, 1989
|image=Church of the Sacred Heart (Heron Lake, MN).jpg
|commonscat=Sacred Heart Catholic Church (Heron Lake, Minnesota)
|lat=43.794722
|lon=-95.317222
|description=Southwest Minnesota's largest and most elaborately appointed early-20th-century church, built 1920–21 with Neoclassical and Baroque Revival influences, conveying its importance as a religious and cultural center.{{cite web |last=Koop |first=Michael |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Church of the Sacred Heart (Catholic) |url={{NRHP url|id=89000157}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1988-01-27 |access-date=2016-12-04}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=88002082
|type=NRHP
|article=District No. 92 School
|name=District No. 92 School
|address=County Highway 9
|city=Jackson
|county=Jackson County, Minnesota
|date=October 27, 1988
|image=District92School.jpg
|lat=43.566326
|lon=-95.035182
|description=Unusual octagonal schoolhouse built in 1906, one of only two surviving examples in Minnesota inspired by the octagon house concept promoted by Orson Squire Fowler.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: District School No. 92 |url={{NRHP url|id=88002082}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=February 1986 |access-date=2016-12-04}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=87002155
|type=HD
|article=Jackson Commercial Historic District
|name=Jackson Commercial Historic District
|address=2nd St. between Sheridan and White Sts.
|city=Jackson
|county=Jackson County, Minnesota
|date=December 17, 1987
|image=JacksonFederal.JPG
|lat=43.621594
|lon=-94.987713
|description=Cohesive commercial district charting the small businesses that composed a late-19th/early-20th-century railroad-based trade center. 31 contributing properties built 1880–1928 include seven associated with influential local businessman Frank A. Matuska (1872–1947).{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Jackson Commercial Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=87002155}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=March 1986 |access-date=2016-12-04}}
|commonscat=Jackson Commercial Historic District
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=77000747
|type=NRHP
|article=Jackson County Courthouse (Minnesota)
|name=Jackson County Courthouse
|address=413 4th St.
|city=Jackson
|county=Jackson County, Minnesota
|date=April 13, 1977
|image=CourthouseJacksonCountyMinnesota2009.JPG
|lat=43.621223
|lon=-94.990159
|description=1908 courthouse, longstanding government seat and local landmark distinguished by the Neoclassical architecture and art that carry through from exterior to interior.{{cite web |last=Nelson |first=Charles W. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Jackson County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=77000747}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1976-10-26 |access-date=2016-12-04}}
|commonscat=Jackson County Courthouse (Minnesota)
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=86003604
|type=NRHP
|article=George M. Moore Farmstead
|name=George M. Moore Farmstead
|address=Off County Highway 4
|city=Jackson
|county=Jackson County, Minnesota
|date=January 7, 1987
|image=MooreFarmstead.jpg
|lat=43.514722
|lon=-95.079167
|description=Farmstead also known as Moorland featuring Jackson County's most architecturally sophisticated farmhouse and two other American Craftsman buildings, all constructed in 1917.{{cite web|last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: George M. Moore Farmstead |url={{NRHP url|id=86003604}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=February 1986 |access-date=2016-11-19}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=80002082
|type=NRHP
|article=Robertson Park Site
|name=Robertson Park Site
|address={{Address restricted}}
|city=Jackson
|county=Jackson County, Minnesota
|date=August 1, 1980
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=Habitation site occupied c. 100 BCE–800 CE.
}}
|}
=Former listings=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=85001769
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Heron Lake Public School
|name=Heron Lake Public School
|address=Sixth Ave. and Tenth St.
|city=Heron Lake
|county=Jackson County, Minnesota
|date=August 15, 1985
|delisted_date=1987-05-15
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1896 Romanesque Revival school. Closed in 1982 and demolished in 1986.
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=88002081
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Winter Hotel
|name=Winter Hotel
|address=111 Main St.
|city=Lakefield
|county=Jackson County, Minnesota
|date=September 30, 1988
|delisted_date=1991-02-13
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1895 hotel.{{cite web |title=Winter Hotel (removed) |url=http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/NRDetails.cfm-NPSNum=88002081.html |work=Minnesota National Register Properties Database |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |year=2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190618064356/http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/NRDetails.cfm-NPSNum=88002081.html |archive-date=2019-06-18}} Demolished in 1990.
}}
|}
[[Kanabec County, Minnesota|Kanabec County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=80002085
|type=NRHP
|article=Ann River Logging Company Farm
|name=Ann River Logging Company Farm
|address=1884 Minnesota Highway 23
|city=Mora vicinity
|county=Kanabec County, Minnesota
|date=August 18, 1980
|image=Ann River Logging Company Farm 02.jpg
|lat=45.854451
|lon=-93.331883
|description=One of Kanabec County's earliest and largest farmsteads, established in 1880 to support a logging operation (the era's leading local industry) as a headquarters, food and feed producer, and stable for work animals.{{cite web |last=Haidet |first=Mark |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Bronson Farm |url={{NRHP url|id=80002085}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=March 1980 |access-date=2016-12-09}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=77000748
|type=NRHP
|article=Kanabec County Courthouse
|name=Kanabec County Courthouse
|address=18 N. Vine St.
|city=Mora
|county=Kanabec County, Minnesota
|date=April 11, 1977
|image=Kanabec County Courthouse.jpg
|lat=45.877433
|lon=-93.293444
|description=1894 courthouse with two 20th-century additions, the long-serving seat of county government. Also noted for its unusually restrained Romanesque Revival architecture.{{cite web |last=Nelson |first=Charles W. |author2=Susan Zeik |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Kanabec County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=77000748}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1976-11-02 |access-date=2016-12-09}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=74001028
|type=HD
|article=Knife Lake Prehistoric District
|name=Knife Lake Prehistoric District
|address={{Address restricted}}
|city=Mora vicinity
|county=Kanabec County, Minnesota
|date=January 21, 1974
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=District of Native American village, mound, and wild ricing sites spanning from 200 BCE to the 19th century.
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=80002087
|type=NRHP
|article=Ogilvie Watertower
|name=Ogilvie Watertower
|address=Anderson St.
|city=Ogilvie
|county=Kanabec County, Minnesota
|date=August 18, 1980
|image=Ogilvie Watertower.jpg
|lat=45.830982
|lon=-93.428046
|description=Rare surviving example of Minnesota's earliest reinforced-concrete watertowers—built in 1918—and a symbol of the local infrastructure improvements that enabled the organization of Ogilvie's fire department.{{cite web |last=Haidet |first=Mark |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Ogilvie Watertower |url={{NRHP url|id=80002087}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=March 1980 |access-date=2016-12-09}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=80002083
|type=NRHP
|article=C. E. Williams House
|name=C. E. Williams House
|address=206 E. Maple Ave.
|city=Mora
|county=Kanabec County, Minnesota
|date=August 18, 1980
|image=C.E. Williams House 2.JPG
|lat=45.878143
|lon=-93.295236
|description=1902 Queen Anne house, significant as one of Kanabec County's most distinctive residences and for its 1909–1951 occupancy by local civic leader C. E. Williams.{{cite web |last=Haidet |first=Mark |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Williams, C.E., House |url={{NRHP url|id=80002083}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=February 1980 |access-date=2016-12-09}}
}}
|}
=Former listings=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=80002086
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Coin School
|name=Coin School
|address=Hwys. 4 and 16 (original address)
Current coordinates are
|city=Mora vicinity
|county=Kanabec County, Minnesota
|date=August 18, 1980
|delisted_date=2000-05-17
|image=Coin School.jpg
|lat=45.873783
|lon=-93.30808
|description=1899 rural schoolhouse, moved to the Kanabec History Center in 1995.{{cite web |last=Leatherberry |first=E. C. |title=Minnesota, Kanabec County, Coin School (194) |url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/23711298@N07/2469421872/ |publisher=Flickr |access-date=September 5, 2013|date=March 1988 }}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=80002084
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Zetterberg Company
|name=Zetterberg Company
|address=630 E. Forest St.
|city=Mora
|county=Kanabec County, Minnesota
|delisted_date=2024-03-28
|date=1980-08-18
|image=Zetterberg Co 2.JPG
|lat=45.876219
|lon=-93.288319
|description=Railside farm machinery dealership built in 1912, reflecting the region's shift from logging to agriculture and the railroads' influence on town development.{{cite web |last=Haidet |first=Mark |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Zetterberg Company |url={{NRHP url|id=80002084}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=March 1980 |access-date=2016-12-04}} Demolished in 2014.{{cite news |last=Faurie |first=Kirsten |title= Historic shop pulverized |url=https://www.presspubs.com/kanabec/news/historic-shop-pulverized/article_33737a02-7f8c-11e3-9930-001a4bcf887a.html |publisher=Press Publications |date=2014-01-17 |access-date=2025-04-29}}
}}
|}
[[Kandiyohi County, Minnesota|Kandiyohi County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Kandiyohi County, Minnesota}}
[[Kittson County, Minnesota|Kittson County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=78001549
|type=NRHP
|article=Lake Bronson Site
|name=Lake Bronson Site
|city=Lake Bronson vicinity
|county=Kittson County, Minnesota
|date=May 22, 1978
|image=Lake Bronson prairie (14787966926).jpg
|lat=48.716667
|lon=-96.624167
|description=Middle Woodland period burial mounds and the site of a Middle/Late Woodland seasonal bison-hunting village.{{cite web |last=Anfinson |first=Scott |title=Finding Minnesota: A Geographic Guide to Minnesota Archaeology |url=http://www.osa.admin.state.mn.us/documents/ArchweekPoster09-72dpi.pdf |publisher=Minnesota Office of the State Archaeologist |year=2009 |access-date=December 18, 2012 |journal= |archive-date=December 22, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141222163848/http://www.osa.admin.state.mn.us/documents/ArchweekPoster09-72dpi.pdf |url-status=dead }}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=89001659
|type=HD
|article=Lake Bronson State Park
|name=Lake Bronson State Park WPA/Rustic Style Historic Resources
|address=Off County Highway 28 east of Lake Bronson
|city=Lake Bronson vicinity
|county=Kittson County, Minnesota
|date=October 25, 1989
|image=Lake Bronson SP observation tower.JPG
|lat=48.723309
|lon=-96.622787
|description=Park developments significant as examples of New Deal federal work relief, strategic placement of state recreational facilities, and National Park Service rustic design, with 12 contributing properties built 1936–1940, including a unique observation/water tower and a dam engineered over quicksand.{{cite web |last=Anderson |first=Rolf T. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form:Lake Bronson State Park WPA/Rustic Style Historic Resources |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/89001659.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 6, 1988 |access-date=June 23, 2014}}
|commonscat=Lake Bronson State Park
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=84001480
|type=NRHP
|article=St. Nicholas Orthodox Church (Minnesota)
|name=St. Nicholas Orthodox Church
|address=County Highway 4
|city=Caribou Township
|county=Kittson County, Minnesota
|date=March 8, 1984
|image=StNick.jpg
|lat=48.982372
|lon=-96.451649
|description=1905 church associated with Ukrainian immigrant settlement in northwestern Minnesota.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Thomas |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: St. Nicholas Orthodox Church |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/84001480.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=October 31, 1983 |access-date=June 23, 2014 }}{{Dead link|date=May 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=14000257
|type=NRHP
|article=U.S. Inspection Station-Noyes, Minnesota
|name=U.S. Inspection Station-Noyes, Minnesota
|address=U.S. Route 75
|city=Noyes
|county=Kittson County, Minnesota
|date=May 22, 2014
|image=Noyes Customs and Immigration Station.jpg
|lat=48.999872
|lon=-97.206953
|description=1931 Colonial Revival customs and immigration station, a well-preserved example of the nation's first purpose-built border checkpoints at land crossings.{{cite web|last=Paul |first=Daniel D. |author2=Richard Starzak |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: U.S. Inspection Station—Noyes, Minnesota |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/feature/places/pdfs/14000257.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 2011 |access-date=2016-07-16}}
}}
|}
[[Koochiching County, Minnesota|Koochiching County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Koochiching County, Minnesota}}
[[Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota|Lac qui Parle County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota}}
[[Lake County, Minnesota|Lake County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Lake County, Minnesota}}
[[Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota|Lake of the Woods County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=05000809
|type=NRHP
|article=Canadian National Railways Depot
|name=Canadian National Railways Depot
|address=420 N. Main Ave.
|city=Baudette
|county=Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota
|date=August 7, 2005
|image=Baudette Depot.jpg
|lat=48.716004
|lon=-94.600123
|description=1923 train station owned by the Canadian National Railway but also housing U.S. federal border agencies; a symbol of international cooperation and the chief conduit for Baudette's growth and development.{{cite web |last=Tschofen |first=Carmen |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Canadian National Railways Depot |url={{NRHP url|id=05000809}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=2005-03-15 |access-date=2017-03-25}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=83000911
|type=NRHP
|article=Fort Saint Charles
|name=Fort St. Charles Archeological Site
|address=Magnusons Island
|city=Angle Inlet vicinity
|county=Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota
|date=April 8, 1983
|image=Fort St.Charles.jpg
|lat=49.361794
|lon=-94.980918
|description=Site of a French outpost active 1732 to the mid-1750s, a key vestige of European exploration and colonialism.{{cite document |last=Birk |first=Douglas A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Fort St. Charles Archaeological Site |publisher=National Park Service |date=1982-11-18}} A reconstruction was built nearby in the 1950s.{{cite web |title=Historical Timeline of Fort St. Charles |url=http://fortstcharles.com/about/historical-timeline/ |publisher=Fort St. Charles |year=2017 |access-date=2017-03-25}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=94001080
|type=HD
|article=Norris Camp
|name=Norris Camp
|address=Off Norris-Roosevelt Forest Rd. in the Red Lake Wildlife Management Area
|city=Roosevelt vicinity
|county=Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota
|date=September 19, 1994
|image=1935NorrisCampMN.jpg
|lat=48.610278
|lon=-95.181944
|description=Rare surviving Civilian Conservation Corps work camp with 14 remaining buildings constructed 1935–36, then used 1936–42 as the headquarters for Minnesota's largest Resettlement Administration project, which relocated settlers from inadequate farmland and restored it for resource extraction and recreation.{{cite web |last=Anderson |first=Rolf T. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Norris Camp |url={{NRHP url|id=94001080}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1993-04-30 |access-date=2017-03-25}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=73000982
|type=NRHP
|article=Northwestern point of the Lake of the Woods
|name=Northwest Point
|address=Between Bear and Harrison Creeks
|city=Angle Inlet vicinity
|county=Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota
|date=February 23, 1973
|image=NorthwesternPointLakeoftheWoods.svg
|lat=49.375248
|lon=-95.14997
|description=Remote wedge of land from which the Canada–United States border was drawn to satisfy the Treaty of 1818—creating the distinctive Northwest Angle exclave—but mistakenly used by Canadian commercial interests until 1874.{{cite web |last=Mitchell |first=Diana |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Northwest Point |url={{NRHP url|id=73000982}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-01-29 |access-date=2017-03-25}}
}}
|}
=Former listing=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=83000913
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Spooner Public School
|name=Spooner Public School
|address=1st St., N
|city=Baudette
|county=Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota
|date=February 11, 1983
|delisted_date=2002-07-01
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1909 brick school.{{cite web |title=Spooner School (removed) |url=http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/NRDetails.cfm-NPSNum=83000913.html |work=Minnesota National Register Properties Database |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |year=2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190618035310/http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/NRDetails.cfm-NPSNum=83000913.html |archive-date=2019-06-18}} Demolished in 2001.
}}
|}
[[Le Sueur County, Minnesota|Le Sueur County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Le Sueur County, Minnesota}}
[[Lincoln County, Minnesota|Lincoln County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=75000993
|type=HD
|article=Danebod
|name=Danebod
|address=Danebod Court
|city=Tyler
|county=Lincoln County, Minnesota
|date=June 30, 1975
|image=Danebod.jpg
|lat=44.267983
|lon=-96.133579
|description=1889 meeting hall, 1895 church, 1904 gymnasium, and 1917 folk school central to Minnesota's first Danish immigrant settlement, founded in 1884.{{cite web |last=VanBrocklin |first=Lynne |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Danebod |url={{NRHP url|id=75000993}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1974-12-11 |access-date=2017-04-15}}
|commonscat=Danebod
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=80004539
|type=NRHP
|article=Drammen Farmers' Club
|name=Drammen Farmers' Club
|address=County Highway 13
|city=Drammen Township
|county=Lincoln County, Minnesota
|date=December 1, 1980
|image=1Drammen.jpg
|lat=44.327744
|lon=-96.382819
|description=Long-serving 1921 meeting hall, atypically built by a purely social (rather than religious or political) club to host events for a sparsely populated agricultural community.{{cite web |last=Roth |first=Susan |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Drammen Farmers' Club |url={{NRHP url|id=80004539}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1980 |access-date=2017-04-15}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=77000753, 82002979
|type=NRHP
|article=Lake Benton Opera House and Kimball Building
|name=Lake Benton Opera House and Kimball Building
|address=Benton Street between Fremont and Center Streets
|city=Lake Benton
|county=Lincoln County, Minnesota
|date=March 25, 1977
|image=LakeBentonOpera.jpg
|lat=44.260757
|lon=-96.286226
|description=1896 opera house that hosted numerous community events and was restored to its original use in 1970. Boundary expanded in 1982 (#82002979) to include the adjacent commercial building constructed at the same time.{{cite web |last=Roth |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Lake Benton Opera House and Kimball Building |url=http://www.mnhs.org/preserve/nrhp/nomination/82002979.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=October 1980 |access-date=2017-04-15}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=80004541
|type=NRHP
|article=Lincoln County Courthouse and Jail
|name=Lincoln County Courthouse and Jail
|address=319 North Rebecca Street
|city=Ivanhoe
|county=Lincoln County, Minnesota
|date=December 1, 1980
|image=JailIvanhoeMN.jpg
|lat=44.462777
|lon=-96.252141
|description=1904 jail and 1919 courthouse, prominent public buildings and longtime seat of county government; further associated with the effects of railroad placement in determining Lincoln County's most viable communities.{{cite web |last=Roth |first=Susan |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Lincoln County Courthouse & Jail |url={{NRHP url|id=80004541}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1980 |access-date=2017-04-15}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=80002088
|type=NRHP
|article=Lincoln County Fairgrounds
|name=Lincoln County Fairgrounds
|address=Strong and Marsh Streets
|city=Tyler
|county=Lincoln County, Minnesota
|date=December 12, 1980
|image=LincolnFairgrounds.jpg
|lat=44.282117
|lon=-96.137297
|description=Unusually intact fairground with 18 contributing properties built 1921–1945, representative of Lincoln County's agriculture and strong county fair tradition.{{cite web |last=Roth |first=Susan |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Lincoln County Fairgrounds |url={{NRHP url|id=80002088}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1980 |access-date=2017-04-15}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=80004540
|type=NRHP
|article=Ernst Osbeck House
|name=Ernst Osbeck House
|address=106 South Fremont Street
|city=Lake Benton
|county=Lincoln County, Minnesota
|date=December 2, 1980
|image=OsbeckHouse.jpg
|lat=44.260198
|lon=-96.28604
|description=One of Lake Benton's most prominent houses, built in 1887 for Ernest Osbeck (b. 1859), a prosperous grocery merchant who helped found numerous local endeavors.{{cite web |last=Roth |first=Susan |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Ernest Osbeck House |url={{NRHP url|id=80004540}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1980 |access-date=2017-04-15}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=7
|refnum=80002089
|type=NRHP
|article=Tyler Public School
|name=Tyler Public School
|address=Strong Street
|city=Tyler
|county=Lincoln County, Minnesota
|date=December 1, 1980
|image=TylerPublicSchool.jpg
|lat=44.281675
|lon=-96.133968
|description=Distinctive public school noted for its well-preserved Renaissance/Romanesque Revival original section, built in 1903.{{cite web |last=Roth |first=Susan |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Tyler Public School |url={{NRHP url|id=80002089}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1980 |access-date=2017-04-15}}
}}
|}
[[Lyon County, Minnesota|Lyon County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Lyon County, Minnesota}}
[[Mahnomen County, Minnesota|Mahnomen County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=88003011
|type=NRHP
|article=Mahnomen City Hall
|name=Mahnomen City Hall
|address=104 West Madison Avenue
|city=Mahnomen
|county=Mahnomen County, Minnesota
|date=December 22, 1988
|image=Mahnomen City Hall 2.jpg
|lat=47.31407
|lon=-95.969138
|description=Distinctive 1937 municipal building with an asymmetrical design, cut fieldstone façade, and sympathetic 1948 addition, emblematic of the Depression-era infrastructure sponsored by the Works Progress Administration.{{cite web |last=Koop |first=Michael |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Mahnomen City Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=88003011}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 1987 |access-date=2017-05-27}}
|commonscat=Mahnomen City Hall
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=84001488
|type=NRHP
|article=Mahnomen County Courthouse
|name=Mahnomen County Courthouse
|address=311 North Main Street
|city=Mahnomen
|county=Mahnomen County, Minnesota
|date=February 16, 1984
|image=Mahnomen County Courthouse.jpg
|lat=47.317785
|lon=-95.969205
|description=1909 courthouse expanded in 1977, noted for its simple Neoclassical architecture and long service as the seat of an unusual county established entirely within a Native American reservation.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Thomas |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Mahnomen County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=84001488}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-10-31 |access-date=2017-05-27}}
|commonscat=Mahnomen County Courthouse
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=89000077
|type=HD
|article=Mahnomen County Fairgrounds Historic District
|name=Mahnomen County Fairgrounds Historic District
|address=Junction of Minnesota Highway 200 and County Highway 137
|city=Mahnomen vicinity
|county=Mahnomen County, Minnesota
|date=March 2, 1989
|image=Mahnomen County Fairgrounds.jpg
|lat=47.322345
|lon=-95.977582
|description=Fairground with eight contributing properties built 1936–38, representative of the importance of the county fair in rural Minnesota culture and the enduring output of the Works Progress Administration.{{cite web |last=Koop |first=Michael |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Mahnomen County Fairgrounds Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=89000077}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 1987 |access-date=2017-05-06}}
}}
|}
[[Marshall County, Minnesota|Marshall County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=73000983
|type=NRHP
|article=Old Mill State Park
|name=Larson Mill
|address=County Road 39 in Old Mill State Park
|city=Argyle vicinity
|county=Marshall County, Minnesota
|date=June 4, 1973
|image=Larson Mill.jpg
|lat=48.366571
|lon=-96.567421
|description=One of western Minnesota's best surviving early gristmills, built in 1889 and restored to operating capacity with its original 1878 steam engine.{{cite report |last=Mitchell |first=Diana |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Old Mill |url={{NRHP url|id=73000983}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-03-07 |access-date=2017-05-27}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=89001667
|type=HD
|article=Old Mill State Park
|name=Old Mill State Park WPA/Rustic Style Historic Resources
|address=Off County Highway 39 east of Argyle
|city=Argyle vicinity
|county=Marshall County, Minnesota
|date=October 25, 1989
|image=BridgeOMSP.jpg
|lat=48.3625
|lon=-96.57
|description=Eight park facilities built 1937–41, significant as examples of New Deal federal work relief, early Minnesota state park development, NPS Rustic split-stone architecture, and environmentally sensitive master planning.{{cite web |last=Anderson |first=Rolf T. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Old Mill State Park WPA/Rustic Style Historic Resources |url={{NRHP url|id=89001667}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1988-08-28 |access-date=2017-05-27}}
|commonscat=Old Mill State Park
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=02000938
|type=NRHP
|article=K. J. Taralseth Company
|name=K. J. Taralseth Company
|address=427 North Main Street
|city=Warren
|county=Marshall County, Minnesota
|date=September 6, 2002
|image=KJTaralsethWarrenMN.jpg
|lat=48.196424
|lon=-96.773377
|description=1911 commercial building that housed a major local retailer active 1888–1959, various offices, and a Masonic Temple that was a key venue for social events.{{cite report |last=Kooiman |first=Barbara |author2=Michael Larson |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: K. J. Taralseth Company |url={{NRHP url|id=02000938}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=April 2002 |access-date=2017-05-27}}
}}
|}
[[Martin County, Minnesota|Martin County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Martin County, Minnesota}}
[[McLeod County, Minnesota|McLeod County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=12000872
|type=NRHP
|article=Glencoe Grade and High School
|name=Glencoe Grade and High School
|address=1107 11th St., E.
|city=Glencoe
|county=Mcleod County, Minnesota
|date=October 17, 2012
|image=2013-0415-GlencoeSchool.jpg
|lat=44.770523
|lon=-94.147848
|description=1933 brick school, Glencoe's sole public education facility for kindergarten through high school until 1954. Also housed community services and events.{{cite web |last=Hoisington |first=Daniel J. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Glencoe Grade and High School |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0039_glencoeschool.pdf |date=June 2012 |access-date=February 17, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=85001771
|type=NRHP
|article=Merton S. Goodnow House
|name=Merton S. Goodnow House
|address=446 S. Main St.
|city=Hutchinson
|county=McLeod County, Minnesota
|date=August 15, 1985
|image=2012-0814-MSGoodnowHouse.jpg
|lat=44.886815
|lon=-94.369614
|description=1913 Prairie School house designed by Purcell & Elmslie, a fine example of the architectural firm's work, which was typified in its early years by modest residences for small lots.{{cite report |last=Sazevich |first=James A. |author2=Rolf Anderson |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Merton S. Goodnow House |url={{NRHP url|id=85001771}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-11-15 |access-date=2017-05-29}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=77001507
|type=NRHP
|article=Hutchinson Carnegie Library
|name=Hutchinson Carnegie Library
|address=Main St.
|city=Hutchinson
|county=McLeod County, Minnesota
|date=December 12, 1977
|image=Hutchinson, MN Carnegie Library 1.jpg
|lat=44.891685
|lon=-94.368074
|description=1904 Carnegie library noted for its Neoclassical architecture and role in the intellectual and cultural life of Hutchinson.{{cite report |last=Spaeth |first=Lynne VanBrocklin |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Hutchinson Free Public Library |url={{NRHP url|id=77001507}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1977-04-07 |access-date=2017-05-29}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=09000622
|type=NRHP
|article=Komensky School
|name=Komensky School
|address=19981 Major Ave.
|city=Hutchinson vicinity
|county=McLeod County, Minnesota
|date=August 20, 2009
|image=2012-0814-KomenskySchool.jpg
|lat=44.906771
|lon=-94.277075
|description=School active 1912–1959, serving as the focal point of a rural Czech American community.{{cite report |last=Hoisington |first=Daniel J. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Komensky School |url={{NRHP url|id=09000622}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=2009-03-01 |access-date=2017-05-29}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=84001620
|type=NRHP
|article=McLeod County Courthouse
|name=McLeod County Courthouse
|address=830 11th St., E.
|city=Glencoe
|county=McLeod County, Minnesota
|date=August 23, 1984
|image=2012-0814-McLeodCtyCrt.jpg
|lat=44.7698
|lon=-94.150681
|description=Long-serving government seat, dating to 1876; extensively enlarged and remodeled in 1909 to become McLeod County's leading example of Beaux-Arts architecture.{{cite report |last=Sazevich |first=James A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: McLeod County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=84001620}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-11-15 |access-date=2017-05-29}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=12000460
|type=NRHP
|article=Harry Merrill House
|name=Harry Merrill House
|address=225 Washington St., W.
|city=Hutchinson
|county=McLeod County, Minnesota
|date=August 1, 2012
|image=2013-0415-HarryMerrillHouse.jpg
|lat=44.89288
|lon=-94.373172
|description=House occupied 1886–1932 by local education leader Harry Merrill, superintendent of Hutchinson public schools for 33 years.{{cite web |last=Hoisington |first=Daniel J. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Merrill, Harry, House |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0035_harrymerrillhouse.pdf |date=March 14, 2012 |access-date=February 17, 2013}}
|commonscat=Harry Merrill House
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=7
|refnum=82002988
|type=NRHP
|article=Winsted City Hall
|name=Winsted City Hall
|address=181 1st St., N.
|city=Winsted
|county=McLeod County, Minnesota
|date=August 19, 1982
|image=2012-0814-WinstedCH.jpg
|lat=44.965019
|lon=-94.046531
|description=Well-preserved example of a late-19th-century Queen Anne municipal building—constructed in 1895—and the long-serving seat of local government.{{cite report |last=Nelson |first=Charles |author2=Susan Roth |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Winsted City Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=82002988}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1982-04-27 |access-date=2017-05-29}}
}}
|}
=Former listings=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=84001492
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=American House Hotel
|name=American House Hotel
|address=12th and Ford Sts.
|city=Glencoe
|county=McLeod County, Minnesota
|date=August 23, 1984
|delisted_date=1990-05-07
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1881 hotel built to serve railroad travelers and salesmen. Demolished by owner in 1988.
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=78003073
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Maplewood Academy
|name=Maplewood Academy
|address=700 N. Main St.
|city=Hutchinson
|county=McLeod County, Minnesota
|date=March 31, 1978
|delisted_date=1984-03-19
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=Also Known as Ansgar College. Architecturally eclectic 1902 academic hall occupied by a succession of educational institutions. Deemed uneconomical to renovate and demolished in 1980.
}}
|}
[[Meeker County, Minnesota|Meeker County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Meeker County, Minnesota}}
[[Mille Lacs County, Minnesota|Mille Lacs County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Mille Lacs County, Minnesota}}
[[Morrison County, Minnesota|Morrison County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Morrison County, Minnesota}}
[[Mower County, Minnesota|Mower County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Mower County, Minnesota}}
[[Murray County, Minnesota|Murray County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Murray County, Minnesota}}
[[Nicollet County, Minnesota|Nicollet County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Nicollet County, Minnesota}}
[[Nobles County, Minnesota|Nobles County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Nobles County, Minnesota}}
[[Norman County, Minnesota|Norman County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=98000154
|type=NRHP
|article=Ada Village Hall
|name=Ada Village Hall
|address=404 W. Main St.
|city=Ada
|county=Norman County, Minnesota
|date=February 26, 1998
|image=Ada Village Hall.jpg
|lat=47.29996
|lon=-96.516623
|description=1904 example of the multipurpose municipal halls common in turn-of-the-20th-century Minnesota, serving as Ada's seat of government and primary event venue for nearly the next hundred years.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |author2=Kay Grossman |author3=Patricia Murphy |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Ada Village Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=98000154}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1997-07-31 |access-date=2022-07-16}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=86001358
|type=NRHP
|article=Canning Site (21NR9)
|name=Canning Site (21NR9)
|address=Address Restricted
|city=Hendrum vicinity
|county=Norman County, Minnesota
|date=June 19, 1986
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=c. 1500 BCE seasonal bison-processing camp.
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=84000236
|type=NRHP
|article=Congregational Church of Ada
|name=Congregational Church of Ada
|address=E. 2nd Ave. and 1st St.
|city=Ada
|county=Norman County, Minnesota
|date=November 8, 1984
|image=Congregational Church of Ada.jpg
|lat=47.298256
|lon=-96.512323
|description=1900 church noted for its regionally unusual American Craftsman architecture and illustration of the ties between some of Ada's early settlers and congregational churches in New England.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Thomas |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Congregational Church of Ada |url={{NRHP url|id=83000923}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-10-31 |access-date=2022-07-15}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=83000923
|type=NRHP
|article=Norman County Courthouse
|name=Norman County Courthouse
|address=16 E. 3rd Ave.
|city=Ada
|county=Norman County, Minnesota
|date=May 9, 1983
|image=Norman County Courthouse.jpg
|lat=47.298441
|lon=-96.513474
|description=1904 courthouse noted for its fine Romanesque Revival architecture and role as the long-serving seat of Norman County government.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Norman County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=83000923}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-02-16 |access-date=2022-07-15}}
|commonscat=Norman County Courthouse
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=99001269
|type=NRHP
|article=Zion Lutheran Church (Shelly, Minnesota)
|name=Zion Lutheran Church
|address=County Highway 3
|city=Shelly vicinity
|county=Norman County, Minnesota
|date=October 21, 1999
|image=Zion Lutheran Church Shelly MN Right.jpg
|lat=47.455563
|lon=-96.791104
|description=1883 church and cemetery, representing the area's initial Norwegian American settlers and the maintenance of their ethnic identity through church-sponsored activities.{{cite web |last=Anderson |first=David C. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Zion Lutheran Church |url={{NRHP url|id=99001269}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1999-05-15 |access-date=2022-07-15}}
|commonscat=Zion Lutheran Church (Shelly Township, Minnesota)
}}
|}
=Former listings=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=78001553
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Faith Milling Company
|name=Faith Milling Company
|address=CR 40
|city=Twin Valley vicinity
|county=Norman County, Minnesota
|date=January 31, 1978
|delisted_date=1990-05-07
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1916 water-powered flour mill. Continued to operate until August 13, 1989, when it was struck by lightning and burned down.
}}
|}
[[Olmsted County, Minnesota|Olmsted County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Olmsted County, Minnesota}}
[[Otter Tail County, Minnesota|Otter Tail County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Otter Tail County, Minnesota}}
[[Pennington County, Minnesota|Pennington County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=95000852
|type=NRHP
|article=Thief River Falls station
|name=Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Depot
|address=405 3rd St. E.
|city=Thief River Falls
|county=Pennington County, Minnesota
|date=July 14, 1995
|image=Soo line depot thief river falls.jpg
|lat=48.119359
|lon=-96.176065
|description=Distinctive 1914 American Craftsman train station associated with the development of the rail network and agriculture in northwestern Minnesota and South Dakota. Listing includes a 1912 2-8-2 steam locomotive.{{cite web |last=Hesser |first=Heather |author2=Elizabeth A. Butterfield |author3=Barbara M. Kooiman |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minneapolis St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Depot |url={{NRHP url|id=95000852}} |publisher=National Park Service |access-date=2018-11-11}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=100005247
|type=NRHP
|article=Thief River Falls Auditorium and Municipal Building
|name=Thief River Falls Auditorium and Municipal Building
|address=123 Main Ave. N.
|city=Thief River Falls
|county=Pennington County, Minnesota
|date=2020-05-29
|image=
|lat=48.1178
|lon=-96.1820
|description=1933 multipurpose municipal hall with a public auditorium; a key venue of government, civic, and recreational activity in Thief River Falls for much of the 20th century. Also noted for its locally distinctive Moderne architecture.{{cite report |last=Schmidt |first=Andrew |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Thief River Falls Auditorium and Municipal Building |url=https://mn.gov/admin/assets/SRB_Combined%20Nomination_tcm36-419677.pdf |publisher=Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office |date=2019-06-24 |access-date=2021-01-24 |type=none}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=90002202
|type=NRHP
|article=Red River Trails
|name=Red River Trail: Goose Lake Swamp Section
|address=Off County Highway 10 south of Goose Lake Swamp
|city=Polk Centre Township
|county=Pennington County, Minnesota
|date=February 6, 1991
|image=
|lat=47.973296
|lon=-96.473179
|description=Unimproved one-mile fragment of the Woods Trail route in use circa 1844–1871; Minnesota's best preserved segment of the Red River Trails.{{cite web |last=Hess |first=Demian |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Red River Trail (Woods Trail): Goose Lake Swamp Section |url={{NRHP url|id=90002202}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 1989 |access-date=2018-11-11}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=83003763
|type=NRHP
|article=Thief River Falls Public Library
|name=Thief River Falls Public Library
|address=102 N. Main Ave.
|city=Thief River Falls
|county=Pennington County, Minnesota
|date=October 6, 1983
|image=Carnegie library thief river falls.jpg
|lat=48.117276
|lon=-96.181137
|description=Well-preserved example of Minnesota's Carnegie libraries, built in 1914 with fine craftsmanship by local firms.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Thief River Falls Public Library |url={{NRHP url|id=83003763}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-02-16 |access-date=2018-11-11}}
}}
|}
[[Pine County, Minnesota|Pine County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Pine County, Minnesota}}
[[Pipestone County, Minnesota|Pipestone County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Pipestone County, Minnesota}}
[[Polk County, Minnesota|Polk County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=98001219
|type=NRHP
|article=Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception (Crookston, Minnesota)
|name=Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception
|address=N. Ash St. at 2nd Ave.
|city=Crookston
|county=Polk County, Minnesota
|date=October 1, 1998
|image=Cathedral Crookston.JPG
|lat=47.774264
|lon=-96.604291
|description=1912 cathedral that served as the religious and administrative center of the 14-county Roman Catholic Diocese of Crookston until 1953.{{cite web |last=Hoisington |first=Daniel J. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception |url={{NRHP url|id=98001219}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1998-06-10 |access-date=2018-11-03}}
|commonscat=Former Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception (Crookston, Minnesota)
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=82002994
|type=NRHP
|article=Church of St. Peter (Gentilly Township, Minnesota)
|name=Church of St. Peter-Catholic
|address=25823 185th Ave. SW
|city=Gentilly Township
|county=Polk County, Minnesota
|date=August 19, 1982
|image=St Peters Catholic Church.jpg
|lat=47.792341
|lon=-96.448309
|description=Exemplary Gothic Revival church completed in 1915 and its 1902 rectory, anchors of a Catholic French Canadian settlement.{{cite web |last=Roth |first=Susan |author2=Charles Nelson |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: St. Peter's Church |url={{NRHP url|id=82002994}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1982-05-06 |access-date=2018-11-03}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=84001646
|type=NRHP
|article=Crookston Carnegie Public Library
|name=Crookston Carnegie Public Library
|address=120 N. Ash St.
|city=Crookston
|county=Polk County, Minnesota
|date=May 10, 1984
|image=CrookstonMnLibrary.jpg
|lat=47.773727
|lon=-96.604875
|description=Well preserved Carnegie library built 1907–08, noted for its Neoclassical design by local architect Bert Keck.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Crookston Carnegie Public Library |url={{NRHP url|id=84001646}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-12-12 |access-date=2018-10-27}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=84002709
|type=HD
|article=Crookston Commercial Historic District
|name=Crookston Commercial Historic District
|address=Roughly Main St. and Broadway between Fletcher and W. 2nd St.
|city=Crookston
|county=Polk County, Minnesota
|date=November 23, 1984
|image=Crookston Commercial Historic District.jpg
|lat=47.774044
|lon=-96.607549
|description=Largest and most intact late-19th/early-20th-century commercial district in Minnesota's Red River Valley, with 39 contributing properties mostly built 1882–1920s.{{cite web |last=Roberts |first=Norene |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Crookston Commercial Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=84002709}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=November 1983 |access-date=2018-10-27}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=84001648
|type=NRHP
|article=E. C. Davis House
|name=E. C. Davis House
|address=406 Grant St.
|city=Crookston
|county=Polk County, Minnesota
|date=May 10, 1984
|image=E.C Davis House.JPG
|lat=47.782769
|lon=-96.605459
|description=Distinctive Italianate house built 1879–80 for a railroad contractor who became one of Crookston's first settlers and leading politicians.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Thomas |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Davis, E.C., House |url={{NRHP url|id=84001648}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-12-11 |access-date=2018-10-27}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=84001651
|type=NRHP
|article=Hamm Brewing Company Beer Depot
|name=Hamm Brewing Company Beer Depot
|address=401 DeMers Ave.
|city=East Grand Forks
|county=Polk County, Minnesota
|date=September 20, 1984
|image=Hamm Beer Depot EGF Minnesota.jpg
|lat=47.930234
|lon=-97.024612
|description=1907 warehouse established by the Saint Paul-based Hamm's Brewery, a rare extant symbol of a Minnesota brewery's regional expansion.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Thomas |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Hamm Brewing Company Beer Depot |url={{NRHP url|id=84001651}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-12-13 |access-date=2018-10-27}}
}}
|}
[[Pope County, Minnesota|Pope County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Pope County, Minnesota}}
[[Ramsey County, Minnesota|Ramsey County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Ramsey County, Minnesota}}
[[Red Lake County, Minnesota|Red Lake County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=99001386
|type=NRHP
|article=Clearwater Evangelical Lutheran Church
|name=Clearwater Evangelical Lutheran Church
|address=County Highway 10
|city=Oklee vicinity
|county=Red Lake County, Minnesota
|date=November 18, 1999
|image=PeterGloriaMcLureClearwaterLutheranOkleeMN.jpg
|lat=47.928107
|lon=-95.774243
|description=1912 church and adjacent cemetery, the last surviving example built by the area's Norwegian settlers and a key venue for preserving their ethnic heritage.{{cite web |last=Anderson |first=David C. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Clearwater Evangelical Lutheran Church |url={{NRHP url|id=99001386}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1999-05-15 |access-date=2018-10-27}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=83000941
|type=NRHP
|article=Red Lake County Courthouse
|name=Red Lake County Courthouse
|address=124 Langevin
|city=Red Lake Falls
|county=Red Lake County, Minnesota
|date=May 9, 1983
|image=Red Lake County Courthouse.jpg
|lat=47.884874
|lon=-96.274249
|description=1910 courthouse noted for its central role in county affairs and the prominence of its hilltop Beaux-Arts design.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Red Lake County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=83000941}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1983-02-16 |access-date=2018-10-27}}
}}
|}
[[Redwood County, Minnesota|Redwood County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Redwood County, Minnesota}}
[[Renville County, Minnesota|Renville County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=73000995
|type=NRHP
|article=Birch Coulee Battlefield
|name=Birch Coulee
|address=Off County Highways 2 and 18
|city=Morton vicinity
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=June 4, 1973
|image=Birch Coulee Battlefield monument.JPG
|lat=44.5760
|lon=-94.9765
|description=Site of the thirty-hour Battle of Birch Coulee on September 2–3, 1862; the deadliest defeat of U.S. military forces during the Dakota War of 1862.{{cite web |last=Mitchell |first=Diana |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Birch Coulee |url={{NRHP url|id=73000995}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-03-27 |access-date=2015-05-19}} Now a Renville County park with interpretive markers.{{cite web |title=Birch Coulee Battlefield |url=http://sites.mnhs.org/historic-sites/birch-coulee-battlefield |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |access-date=2015-05-19 |archive-date=June 1, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130601065830/http://sites.mnhs.org/historic-sites/birch-coulee-battlefield |url-status=dead }}
|commonscat=Birch Coulee
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=86002838
|type=NRHP
|article=Joseph Brown House Ruins
|name=Joseph Brown House Ruins
|address=County Road 15
|city=Sacred Heart vicinity
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=August 3, 1986
|image=Joseph R. Brown House Ruins 2.JPG
|lat=44.6965
|lon=-95.3227
|description=Ruins of the 1861 house of influential Minnesota settler Joseph R. Brown (1805–1870). Also associated with native–white relations, white settlement and reservation establishment on the upper Minnesota River, and the outbreak of the Dakota War of 1862.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Joseph R. Brown House Ruins |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/86002838.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 1985 |access-date=December 7, 2013}} Now the Joseph R. Brown State Wayside.{{cite web |title=State Park Waysides: Minnesota DNR |url=http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/state_parks/waysides/index.html |publisher=Minnesota Department of Natural Resources |access-date=December 7, 2013}}
|commonscat=Joseph Brown House Ruins
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=01000842
|type=NRHP
|article=Heins Block
|name=Heins Block
|address=102-104 N. 9th St.
|city=Olivia
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=August 8, 2001
|image=Heins Block.jpg
|lat=44.7767
|lon=-94.9897
|description=Prominent 1896 mixed-use building that provided key commercial, office, residential, and meeting space throughout Olivia's development.{{cite web |last=Sabongi |first=Margaret H. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Heins Block |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/01000842.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=April 9, 2001 |access-date=October 11, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=16000279
|type=NRHP
|article=Hotel Sacred Heart
|name=Hotel Sacred Heart
|address=112 W. Maple St.
|city=Sacred Heart
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=2016-05-23
|image=2018HotelSacredHeart.jpg
|lat=44.7869
|lon=-95.3509
|description=1914 hotel and restaurant, a prominent small-town venue offering lodging for rail-based business travelers as well as early automotive tourists on the Yellowstone Trail, plus a banquet hall for local events.{{cite web |last=Gaut |first=Greg |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Hotel Sacred Heart |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/feature/places/pdfs/16000279.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=2015-11-23 |access-date=2017-03-24}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=86001921
|type=NRHP
|article=Minneapolis and St. Louis Depot
|name=Minneapolis and St. Louis Depot
|address=Park St. and 2nd Ave., S.
|city=Fairfax
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=July 24, 1986
|image=Minneapolis and St. Louis Depot in Fairfax.jpg
|lat=44.5263
|lon=-94.7201
|description=Renville County's oldest and most intact railway station on its original site, built c. 1883. Also significant as a symbol of the local importance of railroads and as a regional example of a 19th-century frame passenger/freight depot.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Minneapolis and St. Louis Depot |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/86001921.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1985 |access-date=October 1, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=86001281
|type=NRHP
|article=Renville County Courthouse and Jail
|name=Renville County Courthouse and Jail
|address=500 E. DePue Ave.
|city=Olivia
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=June 13, 1986
|image=Renville County Courthouse MN.jpg
|lat=44.7760
|lon=-94.9834
|description=Ornate 1902 courthouse designed by Fremont D. Orff, noted for its architectural significance and—with the adjacent 1904 jail—as the outcome of a particularly involved four-way, 28-year battle for county seat status.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Renville County Courthouse and Jail |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/86001281.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1985 |access-date=October 2, 2013}}
|commonscat=Renville County Courthouse (Minnesota)
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=7
|refnum=86001924
|type=NRHP
|article=Lars Rudi House
|name=Lars Rudi House
|address=County Road 15
|city=Sacred Heart vicinity
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=1986-07-24
|image=Lars Rudi House.jpg
|lat=44.6722
|lon=-95.2937
|description=1868 cabin of prominent local pioneer Lars Rudi (1827–1913). Also Renville County's leading example of a log house, dating to the resumption of settlement after the Dakota War of 1862.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Lars Rudi House |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/86001924.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1985 |access-date=October 2, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=8
|refnum=14000869
|type=NRHP
|article=Sacred Heart Public School
|name=Sacred Heart Public School
|address=100 Elm St.
|city=Sacred Heart
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=2014-10-20
|image=SchoolSacredHeartMN.jpg
|lat=44.7833
|lon=-95.3506
|description=1901 school with several additions, reflecting the 20th-century growth and educational expansion of small-town public schools. 1929 auditorium/gymnasium also noted as Sacred Heart's primary venue for public functions.{{cite web |last=Gaut |first=Greg |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Sacred Heart Public School |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0077_sacredheartpublicschool.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=2014-07-15 |access-date=2015-05-19}} Demolished in 2023.John Lauritsen, [https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/122-year-old-sacred-heart-schoolhouse-among-states-oldest-is-being-demolished/ 122-year-old Sacred Heart schoolhouse, among state's oldest, is being demolished], WCCO News, May 25, 2023.
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=9
|refnum=100006437
|type=NRHP
|article=Tinnes-Baker House
|name=Tinnes-Baker House
|address=801 Highway Ave.
|city=Bird Island
|county=Renville County, Minnesota
|date=2021-04-26
|image=
|lat=44.7674
|lon=-94.8967
|description=
}}
|}
[[Rice County, Minnesota|Rice County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Rice County, Minnesota}}
[[Rock County, Minnesota|Rock County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Rock County, Minnesota}}
[[Roseau County, Minnesota|Roseau County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=82003034
|type=NRHP
|article=Canadian National Depot
|name=Canadian National Depot
|address=121 Main Ave. NE.
|city=Warroad
|county=Roseau County, Minnesota
|date=1982-04-06
|image=Old Warroad National Depot.JPG
|lat=48.9064
|lon=-95.3182
|description=1914 station of the Canadian National Railway on U.S. soil, used by many emigrants leaving for Canada.{{cite web |last=Skrief |first=Charles |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Warroad Canadian National Railway Depot |url={{NRHP url|id=82003034}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1980 |access-date=April 14, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=02000936
|type=NRHP
|article=Lodge Boleslav Jablonsky No. 219
|name=Lodge Boleslav Jablonsky No. 219
|address=30033 110th St.
|city=Poplar Grove Township
|county=Roseau County, Minnesota
|date=2002-09-06
|image=
|lat=48.5556
|lon=-95.9495
|description=1916 clubhouse of a Czech American fraternal organization, representative of ethnic history in the last part of Minnesota to be settled by Euro-Americans.{{cite web |last=Anderson |first=David C. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Lodge Boleslav Jablonsky No. 219 |url={{NRHP url|id=02000936}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=March 18, 2002 |access-date=April 14, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=85001763
|type=NRHP
|article=Roseau County Courthouse
|name=Roseau County Courthouse
|address=216 Center St. W.
|city=Roseau
|county=Roseau County, Minnesota
|date=1985-08-15
|image=CourthouseRoseauMN.gif
|lat=48.8459
|lon=-95.7656
|description=1913 courthouse symbolic of Roseau County's governmental development.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis A. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Roseau County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=85001763}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=August 29, 1983 |access-date=April 14, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=100011014
|type=NRHP
|article=Roseau Memorial Arena
|name=Roseau Memorial Arena
|address=321 2nd Ave. NW
|city=Roseau
|county=Roseau County, Minnesota
|date=2024-11-05
|image=
|lat=48.8490
|lon=-95.7645
|description=1949 ice hockey arena expanded in 1955; a long-serving center of community activity and identity.{{cite report |last=Hoisington |first=Daniel J. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Roseau Memorial Arena |url=https://mn.gov/admin/assets/SRB_Roseau%20Memorial%20Arena_form%20web_tcm36-630627.pdf |publisher=Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office |date=2024-03-01 |access-date=2025-01-05 |type=none}}
}}
|}
[[St. Louis County, Minnesota|St. Louis County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in St. Louis County, Minnesota}}
[[Scott County, Minnesota|Scott County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Scott County, Minnesota}}
[[Sherburne County, Minnesota|Sherburne County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=12000284
|type=NRHP
|article=Elk River Water Tower
|name=Elk River Water Tower
|address=Jackson Ave. & 4th St. NW
|city=Elk River
|county=Sherburne County, Minnesota
|date=May 23, 2012
|image=2013-0326-ElkRiverWaterTower.jpg
|lat=45.306059
|lon=-93.56647
|description=1920 water tower prompted by a need for firefighting infrastructure, noted for its impact on community development and as a representative of a once-common but vanishing design.{{cite web |last=McDowell |first=Alexa |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Elk River Water Tower |url={{NRHP url|id=12000284}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 21, 2011 |access-date=May 9, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=04000540
|type=NRHP
|article=Elkhi Stadium
|name=Elkhi Stadium
|address=1133 4th St. NW
|city=Elk River
|county=Sherburne County, Minnesota
|date=May 26, 2004
|image=Elkhi Stadium.jpg
|lat=45.304722
|lon=-93.575278
|description=School/city athletic field begun with community labor in 1922 and improved by the National Youth Administration in 1940.{{cite web |last=Anderson |first=David C. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Elkhi Stadium |url={{NRHP url|id=04000540}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=August 15, 2003 |access-date=May 10, 2013}} Also known as Handke Stadium.
|commonscat=Elkhi Stadium
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=80002175
|type=NRHP
|article=Herbert M. Fox House
|name=Herbert M. Fox House
|address=10775 27th Ave. SE
|city=Becker
|county=Sherburne County, Minnesota
|date=April 10, 1980
|image=Herbert M. Fox House.jpg
|lat=45.415618
|lon=-93.88927
|description=1876 pioneer farmhouse, uniquely constructed of load-bearing vertical planks rather than wall studs.{{cite web |last=Harris |first=Stefanija |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Fox, Herbert Maximilian House |url={{NRHP url|id=80002175}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=December 20, 1979 |access-date=May 10, 2013}} Moved in 2006 to the grounds of the Sherburne History Center.{{cite web |title=Legacy Trail Guide |url=http://www.sherburnehistorycenter.org/trailbrochure41707.pdf |publisher=Sherburne History Center |access-date=May 29, 2013 |archive-date=December 18, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151218084220/http://www.sherburnehistorycenter.org/trailbrochure41707.pdf |url-status=dead }}
|commonscat=Herbert M. Fox House
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=66000406
|type=NHLD
|article=Oliver Kelley Farm
|name=Oliver H. Kelley Homestead
|address=15788 Kelley Farm Rd.
|city=Elk River
|county=Sherburne County, Minnesota
|date=October 15, 1966
|image=Kelley Farm.jpg
|lat=45.257579
|lon=-93.537802
|description=Farm occupied 1850–1870 by Oliver H. Kelley, founder of The National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry.{{cite web |last=Lissandrello |first=Stephen |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Oliver H. Kelley Homestead |url={{NHLS url|id=66000406}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=December 30, 1975 |access-date=May 10, 2013}} Now a Minnesota Historical Society living history site.{{cite web |title=Oliver H. Kelley Farm |url=http://www.mnhs.org/places/sites/ohkf |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |access-date=May 10, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=86001671
|type=HD
|article=Minnesota Correctional Facility – St. Cloud
|name=Minnesota State Reformatory for Men Historic District
|address=2305 Minnesota Blvd. SE
|city=St. Cloud
|county=Sherburne County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1986
|image=2013-0408-MNCorrectionalFacility–StCloud.jpg
|lat=45.543056
|lon=-94.116667
|description=Prison complex of 23 contributing properties built 1887–1933 with granite quarried by inmates; noted for its architectural cohesion and association with penal reform and Minnesota's quarrying industry.{{cite web |last=Mack |first=Robert C. |author2=Barbara E. Hightower |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Minnesota State Reformatory for Men Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=86001671}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 25, 1985 |access-date=May 10, 2013}}{{cite web |title=State Reformatory for Men Historic District |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/DistrictProperties.cfm?NPSNum=86001671|work=Minnesota National Register Properties Database |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |year=2009 |access-date=May 10, 2013}}
}}
|}
=Former listing=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=86000120
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Sherburne County Courthouse
|name=Sherburne County Courthouse
|address=326 Lowell Avenue
|city=Elk River
|county=Sherburne County, Minnesota
|date=January 23, 1986
|delisted_date=1995-10-06
|image=SherburneCC.jpg
|lat=
|lon=
|description=County courthouse in service 1877–1980. Demolished by the county in 1995 for real estate sale.
}}
|}
[[Sibley County, Minnesota|Sibley County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=88003085
|type=NRHP
|article=Church of St. Thomas (Jessenland Township, Minnesota)
|name=Church of St. Thomas
|address=31624 Scenic Byway Rd.
|city=Jessenland Township
|county=Sibley County, Minnesota
|date=September 16, 1991
|image=2013-0415-ChurchofStThomas.jpg
|lat=44.598946
|lon=-93.900195
|description=1870 church, 1878 rectory, and cemetery of Minnesota's first Irish American farming settlement, established in 1852.{{cite report |last=Johnson |first=Liz Holum |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Church of St. Thomas (Catholic) |url={{NRHP url|id=88003085}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=June 1987 |access-date=2020-04-25 |type=none}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=11001085
|type=NRHP
|article=Gaylord City Park
|name=Gaylord City Park
|address=Veterans Dr. & Park St.
|city=Gaylord
|county=Sibley County, Minnesota
|date=February 6, 2012
|image=2013-0415-GaylordCityPark-Bridge.jpg
|lat=44.560508
|lon=-94.221497
|description=City park established in 1897, a longtime recreational venue featuring a 1916 pavilion, 1940 bandshell, and a 1940 bridge built by the Works Progress Administration.{{cite web |last=Hoisington |first=Daniel J. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Gaylord City Park |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0019_gaylordcitypark.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |access-date=May 11, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131224084142/http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0019_gaylordcitypark.pdf |archive-date=December 24, 2013 |url-status=dead }}
|commonscat=Gaylord City Park
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=82003036
|type=NRHP
|article=Gibbon Village Hall
|name=Gibbon Village Hall
|address=First Ave. and 12th St.
|city=Gibbon
|county=Sibley County, Minnesota
|date=August 19, 1982
|image=2013-0415-GibbonVillageHall.jpg
|lat=44.534424
|lon=-94.526316
|description=Unusual 1895 municipal hall with medieval-themed Romanesque Revival architecture.{{cite report |last=Nelson |first=Charles |author2=Susan Roth |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Gibbon City Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=82003036}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=April 27, 1982 |access-date=2020-04-25 |type=none}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=88002834
|type=HD
|article=Henderson Commercial Historic District (Henderson, Minnesota)
|name=Henderson Commercial Historic District
|address=Roughly Main St. between 5th and 6th Sts.
|city=Henderson
|county=Sibley County, Minnesota
|date=December 20, 1988
|image=Henderson, Minnesota 6.jpg
|lat=44.528258
|lon=-93.907013
|description=Well-preserved commercial center of an early river town and original county seat, with 12 contributing properties built 1874–circa-1905.{{cite report |last=Johnson |first=Liz Holum |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Henderson Commercial Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=88002834}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=June 1987 |access-date=2020-04-25 |type=none}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=82003037
|type=NRHP
|article=August F. Poehler House
|name=August F. Poehler House
|address=700 Main St.
|city=Henderson
|county=Sibley County, Minnesota
|date=February 4, 1982
|image=August F. Poehler House.jpg
|lat=44.528082
|lon=-93.910443
|description=1884 Queen Anne house of an influential local settler and businessman.{{cite report |last=Bloomberg |first=Britta |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Poehler, August F., House |url={{NRHP url|id=82003037}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=November 1980 |access-date=2020-04-25 |type=none}} Now houses the Sibley County Historical Society Museum.{{cite web |title=The Sibley County Historical Museum |url=https://www.sibleycountyhistoricalsociety.com/museum-home-page |publisher=Sibley County Historical Society and Museum |year=2018 |access-date=2020-04-25}}
|commonscat=Sibley County Historical Society Museum
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=88003071
|type=NRHP
|article=Sibley County Courthouse and Sheriff's Residence and Jail
|name=Sibley County Courthouse and Sheriff's Residence and Jail
|address=400 Court St. and 319 Park Ave.
|city=Gaylord
|county=Sibley County, Minnesota
|date=December 29, 1988
|image=2013-0415-SibleyCtyCourthouse.jpg
|lat=44.556148
|lon=-94.220613
|description=1916 Neoclassical and Spanish Colonial Revival public buildings reflective of Gaylord's growth leading to and continuing after achieving county seat status in 1915.{{cite report |last=Johnson |first=Liz Holum |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Sibley County Courthouse and Sheriff's Residence and Jail |url={{NRHP url|id=88003071}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=June 1987 |access-date=2020-04-25 |type=none}}
|commonscat=Sibley County Courthouse and Sheriff's Residence and Jail
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=7
|refnum=79001255
|type=NRHP
|article=Henderson Community Building
|name=Sibley County Courthouse-1879
|address=600 Main St.
|city=Henderson
|county=Sibley County, Minnesota
|date=July 2, 1979
|image=Henderson Community Building SE.jpg
|lat=44.528395
|lon=-93.909143
|description=Sibley County's first purpose-built courthouse, in use 1879–1915 and embodying the era's fashion for Italianate public buildings.{{cite report |last=Nelson |first=Charles W. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Old Sibley County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=79001255}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=October 11, 1978 |access-date=2020-04-25 |type=none}} Now the Henderson Community Building.{{cite web |title=Visitors |url=http://www.henderson-mn.com/visitors.html |publisher=City of Henderson and Henderson Area Chamber |year=2021 |accessdate=2022-01-01}}
}}
|}
[[Stearns County, Minnesota|Stearns County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Stearns County, Minnesota}}
[[Steele County, Minnesota|Steele County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Steele County, Minnesota}}
[[Stevens County, Minnesota|Stevens County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=83000942
|type=NRHP
|article=Alberta Teachers House
|name=Alberta Teachers House
|address=Main St.
|city=Alberta
|county=Stevens County, Minnesota
|date=February 11, 1983
|image=Alberta Teachers House.jpg
|lat=45.575927
|lon=-96.048274
|description=1917 faculty housing associated with a key period of modernization in Minnesota's rural education system.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Alberta Teachers House |url={{NRHP url|id=83000942}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1982-11-05 |access-date=2018-03-03}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=83000943
|type=NRHP
|article=Morris Carnegie Library
|name=Morris Carnegie Library
|address=116 W. 6th St.
|city=Morris
|county=Stevens County, Minnesota
|date=January 27, 1983
|image=Morris Carnegie Library.jpg
|lat=45.585751
|lon=-95.917803
|description=Well preserved and locally distinctive 1905 Carnegie library, a longstanding focus of education in Morris. Now the Stevens County Historical Society Museum.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Morris Carnegie Library |url={{NRHP url|id=83000943}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1982-11-05 |access-date=2018-03-11}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=04000532
|type=NRHP
|article=Morris High School (Morris, Minnesota)
|name=Morris High School
|address=600 Columbia Ave.
|city=Morris
|county=Stevens County, Minnesota
|date=May 25, 2004
|image=Old Morris High School.jpg
|lat=45.590197
|lon=-95.908107
|description=Building and grounds of a public school established in 1914 and expanded twice by 1950, reflecting the development and growth of public schools in Minnesota towns.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |author2=Scott Kelly |author3=Kay Grossman |author4=Sue Dieter |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Morris High School |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/04000532.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 15, 2003 |access-date=June 28, 2013}} Demolished in 2013 after no viable reuse plan could be found.{{cite web |last=Vogel |first=Jennifer |title=Sometimes they can't be saved: Morris to tear down elementary school |publisher=Minnesota Public Radio |date=July 5, 2013|url=https://www.mprnews.org/story/2013/06/28/ground-level-reviving-minnesota-relics-fail }}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=84001696
|type=NRHP
|article=Morris Industrial School for Indians
|name=Morris Industrial School for Indians Dormitory
|address=Off 4th St.
|city=Morris
|county=Stevens County, Minnesota
|date=May 10, 1984
|image=UMM Multi-Ethnic Resource Center.jpg
|lat=45.589131
|lon=-95.901284
|description=1899 dormitory, sole remaining campus building of a Native American boarding school active 1887–1909.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Morris Industrial School for Indians Dormitory |url={{NRHP url|id=84001696}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=March 1984 |access-date=2018-03-01}} Also a contributing property to the West Central School of Agriculture and Experiment Station Historic District.{{cite web |title=West Central School of Agriculture and Experiment Station Historic District |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/DistrictProperties.cfm?NPSNum=02001707 |work=Minnesota National Register Properties Database |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |year=2009 |access-date=July 1, 2013}} Now the University of Minnesota Morris's Multi-Ethnic Resource Center.{{cite web |title=Multi-Ethnic Resource Center |url=http://www.morris.umn.edu/map/multiEthnic/ |publisher=University of Minnesota Morris |access-date=June 28, 2013}}
|commonscat=Morris Industrial School for Indians Dormitory
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=82003060
|type=NRHP
|article=Lewis H. Stanton House
|name=Lewis H. Stanton House
|address=907 Park St.
|city=Morris
|county=Stevens County, Minnesota
|date=August 19, 1982
|image=Lewis H Stanton House (Morris, Minnesota).jpg
|lat=45.587365
|lon=-95.923927
|description=1881 house nicknamed "The Chimneys", noted for its Stick–Eastlake architecture and prominence among the housing stock of Morris.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Stanton, Lewis H., House ("The Chimneys") |url={{NRHP url|id=82003060}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1982-04-27 |access-date=2018-02-28}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=02001707
|type=HD
|article=University of Minnesota Morris
|name=West Central School of Agriculture and Experiment Station Historic District
|address=600 E. 4th St.
|city=Morris
|county=Stevens County, Minnesota
|date=January 15, 2003
|image=UMM Camden Hall.jpg
|lat=45.590156
|lon=-95.900087
|description=One of the country's longest-running and most intact residential agricultural high schools, operated 1910–1963 by the University of Minnesota's nationally influential agricultural education system. The 11 contributing properties built 1899–1929 are now part of the University of Minnesota Morris campus.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |author2=Scott Kelly |author3=Kay Grossman |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: West Central School of Agriculture and Experiment Station Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=02001707}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=2002-09-13 |access-date=2018-02-28}}
|commonscat=University of Minnesota Morris
}}
|}
[[Swift County, Minnesota|Swift County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Swift County, Minnesota}}
[[Todd County, Minnesota|Todd County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Todd County, Minnesota}}
[[Traverse County, Minnesota|Traverse County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=85001762
|type=NRHP
|article=Browns Valley Carnegie Library
|name=Browns Valley Carnegie Public Library
|address=Broadway Ave. and 2nd St.
|city=Browns Valley
|county=Traverse County, Minnesota
|date=August 15, 1985
|image=Browns Valley Carnegie Library.jpg
|lat=45.595027
|lon=-96.830846
|description=Carnegie library built 1915–16, Browns Valley's most architecturally significant early-20th-century building and an example of the libraries provided to small Minnesota communities by Andrew Carnegie's philanthropy.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Browns Valley Carnegie Public Library |url={{NRHP url|id=85001762}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=December 1984 |access-date=2016-07-31}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=85001818
|type=NRHP
|article=Wheaton Depot
|name=Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Depot
|address=1201 Broadway Ave.
|city=Wheaton
|county=Traverse County, Minnesota
|date=August 23, 1985
|image=Wheaton Depot.jpg
|lat=45.804666
|lon=-96.500183
|description=Circa-1906 railway station, a well-preserved example of its type and a symbol of the importance of the railroad to Wheaton. Now houses the Traverse County Historical Society Museum.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Depot |url={{NRHP url|id=85001818}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=October 1984 |access-date=2013-07-12}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=11000470
|type=NRHP
|article=District No. 44 School
|name=District No. 44 School
|address=U.S. Route 75
|city=Taylor Township
|county=Traverse County, Minnesota
|date=July 20, 2011
|image=District No. 44 School.jpg
|lat=46.000597
|lon=-96.49314
|description=Well-preserved example—active 1891–1954—of the one-room schoolhouses once common in rural Traverse County.{{cite web |last=Gardner |first=Denis P. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: District No. 44 School |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0008_school44.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=March 2011 |access-date=2013-07-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141210180218/http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0008_school44.pdf |archive-date=December 10, 2014 |url-status=dead }}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=86001672
|type=NRHP
|article=Sam Brown Memorial State Wayside
|name=Fort Wadsworth Agency and Scout Headquarters Building
|address=796 W. Broadway Ave.
|city=Browns Valley
|county=Traverse County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1986
|image=Fort Wadsworth Agency & Scout Headquarters Building.JPG
|lat=45.595796
|lon=-96.840848
|description=Only surviving log building of Fort Wadsworth, built in 1864; later a residence of Indian agent Joseph R. Brown and his son Sam Brown. Also a rare example of post-and-plank construction.{{cite web |last=Gertz |first=John S. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Fort Wadsworth Agency and Scout Headquarters Building |url={{NRHP url|id=86001672}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=January 1986 |access-date=July 13, 2013}} Now preserved in Sam Brown Memorial State Wayside.{{cite web |title=State Park Waysides |url=http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/state_parks/waysides/index.html |publisher=Minnesota Department of Natural Resources |access-date=2013-07-13}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=85001774
|type=HD
|article=Larson's Hunters Resort
|name=Larson's Hunters Resort
|address=County Highway 76
|city=Wheaton vicinity
|county=Traverse County, Minnesota
|date=August 15, 1985
|image=Larson's Hunters Resort.jpg
|lat=45.824829
|lon=-96.572501
|description=Hunting resort complex with a prominent 1901 lodge/house, associated with western Minnesota's recreational hunting industry and the phenomenon of farmer/resort owners.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Larson's Hunters' Resort/Andrew and Bertha Larson Farm |url={{NRHP url|id=85001774}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=November 1984 |access-date=2013-07-13}}
}}
|}
[[Wabasha County, Minnesota|Wabasha County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Wabasha County, Minnesota}}
[[Wadena County, Minnesota|Wadena County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=73000996
|type=NRHP
|article=Blueberry Lake Village Site
|name=Blueberry Lake Village Site
|address={{Address Restricted}}
|city=Menahga vicinity
|county=Wadena County, Minnesota
|date=October 2, 1973
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=One of the few surviving precontact archaeological sites in the Shell River basin of northwestern Wadena County, the region's most conducive zone for prehistoric human habitation.{{cite document |last=Zeik |first=Susan |author2=Douglas George |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Blueberry Lake Village Site |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-04-12}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=88003010
|type=NRHP
|article=Commercial Hotel (Wadena, Minnesota)
|name=Commercial Hotel
|address=218 Jefferson St., S.
|city=Wadena
|county=Wadena County, Minnesota
|date=December 22, 1988
|image=Commercial Hotel Wadena.jpg
|lat=46.439559
|lon=-95.137577
|description=Circa-1885 hotel exemplifying the lodging facilities built in anticipation of Wadena's late-19th-century commercial growth.{{cite web |last=Koop |first=Michael |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Commercial Hotel |url={{NRHP url|id=88003010}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 1987 |access-date=2016-02-07}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=88003012
|type=NRHP
|article=Wadena Depot
|name=Northern Pacific Passenger Depot
|address=100 SW. Aldrich Ave.
|city=Wadena
|county=Wadena County, Minnesota
|date=January 3, 1989
|image=Wadena Depot.jpg
|lat=46.442074
|lon=-95.138032
|description=1915 railway station symbolizing the impact of the Northern Pacific Railway on Wadena's establishment and development.{{cite web |last=Koop |first=Michael |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Northern Pacific Passenger Depot |url={{NRHP url|id=88003012}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 1987 |access-date=2013-07-22}} Now a museum and event venue.{{cite web |title=The Depot |url=http://www.thedepotwadena.org/ |publisher=Partners for a Healthy Wadena Region |year=2014 |access-date=2016-01-26}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=73000997
|type=HD
|article=Old Wadena Historic District
|name=Old Wadena Historic District
|address=Old Wadena County ParkAddress derived from {{cite web |title=Sebeka Recreation & Tourism |url=http://cityofsebeka.com/rec_tour.htm |publisher=City of Sebeka, Minnesota |access-date=2013-07-22}}. NRIS database lists site as "Address restricted."
|city=Staples vicinity
|county=Wadena County, Minnesota
|date=October 9, 1973
|image=Old Wadena County Park.jpg
|lat=46.421721
|lon=-94.829661
|description=Seminal site of Euro-American activity in Wadena County, from three successive trading posts established in 1782, 1792, and 1825, to a town founded in 1856 and the county's first farm.{{cite document |last=Zeik |first=Susan |author2=Douglas George |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Old Wadena Site |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-04-20}} Now a county park.{{cite web |title=Old Wadena Park Campground |url=http://www.co.wadena.mn.us/225/Old-Wadena-Park-Campground |publisher=Wadena County |access-date=2016-01-27}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=74001042
|type=NRHP
|article=Réaume's Trading Post
|name=Reaume's Trading Post
|address={{Address Restricted}}
|city=Wadena vicinity
|county=Wadena County, Minnesota
|date=December 24, 1974
|image=Address restricted.PNG
|lat=
|lon=
|description=Site of a trading post established in 1792, significant for its role in and research potential on the opening of the fur trade in north-central Minnesota.{{cite document |last=Zeik |first=Susan |author2=Douglas George |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Reaume's Trading Post |publisher=National Park Service |date=1973-04-13}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=88003228
|type=NRHP
|article=Wadena Fire and City Hall
|name=Wadena Fire and City Hall
|address=10 SE. Bryant Ave.
|city=Wadena
|county=Wadena County, Minnesota
|date=January 19, 1989
|image=Wadena Fire & City Hall.jpg
|lat=46.440164
|lon=-95.136821
|description=1912 multipurpose municipal hall representative of early-20th-century civic development and of a type of public building common to many small Minnesota cities.{{cite web |last=Koop |first=Michael |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Wadena Fire and City Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=88003228}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 1987 |access-date=2016-01-17}}
}}
|}
Former listings
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=88003227
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Peterson-Biddick Seed and Feed Company
|name=Peterson-Biddick Seed and Feed Company
|address=102 SE. Aldrich Ave.
|city=Wadena
|county=Wadena County, Minnesota
|date=1989-01-30
|delisted_date=2023-10-23
|image=Peterson-Biddick Seed & Feed Company.jpg
|lat=46.440032
|lon=-95.134744
|description=Complex built 1916–1936 of a small wholesaling business that grew into one of Minnesota's largest independent agricultural companies.{{cite web |last=Koop |first=Michael |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Peterson-Biddick Seed and Feed Company |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/88003227.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=July 1987 |access-date=2013-07-22}} Demolished except for a c. 1935 warehouse addition.Location, verified from nomination form, appears as a large empty lot in Google and Bing aerial photography as of July 23, 2013.
}}
|}
[[Waseca County, Minnesota|Waseca County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Waseca County, Minnesota}}
[[Washington County, Minnesota|Washington County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Washington County, Minnesota}}
[[Watonwan County, Minnesota|Watonwan County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=84001714
|type=NRHP
|article=Flanders' Block
|name=Flanders' Block
|address=30 W. Main St.
|city=Madelia
|county=Watonwan County, Minnesota
|date=March 8, 1984
|image=Flanders' Block.jpg
|lat=44.050661
|lon=-94.417735
|description=Commercial building used to house the county offices, courthouse, and jail 1872–1878.{{cite web |last=Gimmestad |first=Dennis |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Flanders' Block |url={{NRHP url|id=84001714}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=August 30, 1983 |access-date=2013-08-01}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=09001152
|type=NRHP
|article=Grand Opera House (St. James, Minnesota)
|name=Grand Opera House
|address=502 1st Ave., S.
|city=St. James
|county=Watonwan County, Minnesota
|date=December 23, 2009
|image=StJamesGrandOperaHouse.jpg
|lat=43.981408
|lon=-94.629176
|description=St. James' principal venue 1892–1921 for fine performing arts as well as lectures, community events, and graduation ceremonies.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |author2=Scott Kelly |author3=Kay Grossman |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Grand Opera House |url={{NRHP url|id=09001152}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=August 1997 |access-date=2013-08-01}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=86003599
|type=NRHP
|article=Godahl Store
|name=Nelson and Albin Cooperative Mercantile Association Store
|address=County Highway 6
|city=Godahl
|county=Watonwan County, Minnesota
|date=January 7, 1987
|image=NelsonAlbinCooperative.jpg
|lat=44.108665
|lon=-94.639724
|description=General store established in 1894, Minnesota's oldest consumer cooperative still in operation. Better known as the Godahl Store.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Nelson and Albin Cooperative Mercantile Association Store |url={{NRHP url|id=86003599}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=February 1986 |access-date=2015-08-13}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=88002054
|type=NRHP
|article=Alfred R. Voss Farmstead
|name=Alfred R. Voss Farmstead
|address=County Highway 27
|city=St. James vicinity
|county=Watonwan County, Minnesota
|date=October 27, 1988
|image=VossAlfredRFarmstead.jpg
|lat=43.955833
|lon=-94.613333
|description=Southern Minnesota's largest private 19th-century farm, established by prominent local Alfred R. Voss (1860–1952) in 1893. Also noted for two unusually large, elaborate buildings among the 13 contributing properties.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Voss, Alfred R., Farmstead |url={{NRHP url|id=88002054}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=February 1986 |access-date=2013-08-01}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=86003591
|type=NRHP
|article=Watonwan County Courthouse
|name=Watonwan County Courthouse
|address=7th St., S. and 2nd Ave., S.
|city=St. James
|county=Watonwan County, Minnesota
|date=January 7, 1987
|image=WatonwonCountyCourthouse.jpg
|lat=43.981237
|lon=-94.625693
|description=Exemplary Romanesque Revival courthouse built 1895–96; also significant as Watonwan County's long-serving seat of government.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Watonwan County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=86003591}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=February 1986 |access-date=2013-08-01}}
|commonscat=Watonwan County Courthouse
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=13000883
|type=NRHP
|article=West Bridge (Madelia, Minnesota)
|name=West Bridge
|address=Adj. to Cty. Rd. 116 over Watonwan River
|city=Madelia
|county=Watonwan County, Minnesota
|date=December 3, 2013
|image=Madelia West Bridge.jpg
|lat=44.044433
|lon=-94.431788
|description=1908 steel truss bridge, the only surviving work of seminal Minnesota bridge builder Commodore P. Jones. Also noted for its early use of riveted joints.{{cite web |last=Ganzel |first=Emily F. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: West Bridge |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0056_westbridge.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=2013-04-11 |access-date=2014-01-11}}
|commonscat=Madelia West Bridge
}}
|}
[[Wilkin County, Minnesota|Wilkin County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=80002184
|type=NRHP
|article=Femco Farms
|name=Femco Farm No. 2
|address=County Road 153
|city=Kent vicinity
|county=Wilkin County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1980
|image=Femco.jpg
|lat=46.4575
|lon=-96.659444
|description=1922 farm with nine contributing properties, the best preserved of five Femco Farms established by newspaper publisher Frederick E. Murphy (d. 1940) in Wilkin County to experiment with diversified farming and stock breeding.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Tom |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Femco Farm #2 |url={{NRHP url|id=80002184}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 1979 |access-date=2015-07-30}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=96000174
|type=NRHP
|article=J. A. Johnson Blacksmith Shop
|name=J. A. Johnson Blacksmith Shop
|address=Junction of Main Ave., W. and 2nd St., W.
|city=Rothsay
|county=Wilkin County, Minnesota
|date=February 23, 1996
|image=J. A. Johnson Blacksmith Shop2 NRHP 96000174 Wilkin County, MN.jpg
|lat=46.475183
|lon=-96.283096
|description=1903 blacksmith shop with many of its original tools, a rare intact example of a type once common in Midwestern agricultural communities.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |author2=Kay Grossman |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: J. A. Johnson Blacksmith Shop |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/96000174.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 25, 1995 |access-date=August 2, 2013}}
|commonscat=J. A. Johnson Blacksmith Shop
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=80002187
|type=NRHP
|article=David N. Peet Farmstead
|name=David N. Peet Farmstead
|address=County Road 32
|city=Wolverton vicinity
|county=Wilkin County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1980
|image=
|lat=46.617003
|lon=-96.645574
|description=Farmstead of a prosperous late-19th-century farmer, with four contributing properties built 1901–1920.{{cite web|last=Harvey |first=Tom |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: David N. Peet Farm |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/80002187.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 1979 |access-date=August 2, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=80002183
|type=NRHP
|article=Stiklestad United Lutheran Church
|name=Stiklestad United Lutheran Church
|address=County Road 17
|city=Doran vicinity
|county=Wilkin County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1980
|image=Stiklestad United Lutheran Church.jpg
|lat=46.177266
|lon=-96.409543
|description=Church built 1897–8, significant for its Carpenter Gothic architecture and association with the area's Norwegian immigrants.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Tom |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Stiklestad Church |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/80002183.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 1979 |access-date=August 2, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=80002182
|type=NRHP
|article=Wilkin County Courthouse
|name=Wilkin County Courthouse
|address=316 S. 5th
|city=Breckenridge
|county=Wilkin County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1980
|image=Wilkin County Courthouse.jpg
|lat=46.260427
|lon=-96.587253
|description=1928 courthouse significant for its Beaux-Arts architecture and as the seat of county government.{{cite web|last=Harvey |first=Tom |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Wilkin County Courthouse |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/80002182.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 1979 |access-date=August 2, 2013}}
|commonscat=Wilkin County Courthouse
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=80002188
|type=NRHP
|article=Wolverton Public School
|name=Wolverton Public School
|address=N. 1st St.
|city=Wolverton
|county=Wilkin County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1980
|image=Wolverton Public School.jpg
|lat=46.565341
|lon=-96.735496
|description=Long-serving school built in 1906 and expanded in 1917.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Tom |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Wolverton Public School |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/nomination/80002188.pdf |publisher=National Park Service |date=September 1979 |access-date=August 2, 2013}}
}}
|}
=Former listings=
{{NRHP former header|splitdate=yes}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=80002185
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=IOOF Hall (Rothsay, Minnesota)
|name=IOOF Hall
|address=1st Ave, SW and 1st St.
|city=Rothsay
|county=Wilkin County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1980
|delisted_date=1990-05-07
|image=
|lat=
|lon=
|description=1899 Independent Order of Odd Fellows hall.{{cite web |title=IOOF Hall (removed) |url=http://nrhp.mnhs.org/NRDetails.cfm?NPSNum=80002185 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130714073959/http://nrhp.mnhs.org/NRDetails.cfm?NPSNum=80002185 |url-status=dead |archive-date=July 14, 2013 |work=Minnesota National Register Properties Database |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |year=2009 |access-date=August 2, 2013 }} Demolished in 1988.
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=80002186
|type=NRHP-delisted
|article=Tenney Fire Hall
|name=Tenney Fire Hall
|address=Concord Ave.
|city=Tenney
|county=Wilkin County, Minnesota
|date=July 17, 1980
|delisted_date=2017-11-27
|image=Tenney Fire Hall.jpg
|lat=46.044413
|lon=-96.453314
|description=1904 fire station representative of municipal services in Minnesota's smallest towns.{{cite web |last=Harvey |first=Tom |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Tenney Fire Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=80002186}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=October 1979 |access-date=2015-07-26}} Destroyed by a fire in 2010.{{cite web |last=Feldman |first=Josh |title=This Exists: Town Consisting of Three People Votes to Dissolve |url=http://www.mediaite.com/online/this-exists-town-consisting-of-three-people-votes-to-dissolve/ |publisher=Mediaite |date=June 22, 2011 |access-date=August 2, 2013}}
|commonscat=Tenney Fire Hall
}}
|}
[[Winona County, Minnesota|Winona County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Winona County, Minnesota}}
[[Wright County, Minnesota|Wright County]]
{{main|National Register of Historic Places listings in Wright County, Minnesota}}
[[Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota|Yellow Medicine County]]
{{NRHP header|state_iso=us-mn}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=1
|refnum=80002189
|type=HD
|article=Canby Commercial Historic District
|name=Canby Commercial Historic District
|address=Roughly 1st and 2nd Sts. and St. Olaf Ave.
|city=Canby
|county=Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota
|date=November 25, 1980
|image=Canby Commercial Historic District.jpg
|lat=44.709167
|lon=-96.276111
|description=Regional trade center and well-preserved example of western Minnesota's commercial districts rebuilt after disastrous fires, with 24 contributing properties built 1892–1930s.{{cite web |last=Skrief |first=Charles |author2=Charles Nelson |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Canby Commercial District |url={{NRHP url|id=80002189}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1980 |access-date=2015-06-17}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=2
|refnum=78001575
|type=NRHP
|article=Lund–Hoel House
|name=John G. Lund House
|address=101 W. 4th St.
|city=Canby
|county=Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota
|date=October 2, 1978
|image=John G. Lund House.jpg
|lat=44.71159
|lon=-96.27281
|description=1891 house and carriage barn of an influential local land speculator, banker, and politician. Also noted for the house's 1900 Queen Anne remodeling.{{cite web |last=Spaeth |first=Lynne |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Lund, John G., House |url={{NRHP url|id=78001575}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=1977-10-07 |access-date=2015-06-17}} Now the Lund–Hoel House museum.{{cite web|title=Lund-Hoel House |url=http://www.canbymuseums.org/ |publisher=MECCA, Inc. |year=2014 |access-date=2015-06-17}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=3
|refnum=86001356
|type=NRHP
|article=Lundring Service Station
|name=Lundring Service Station
|address=201 1st St., E.
|city=Canby
|county=Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota
|date=June 20, 1986
|image=Lundring Service Station.jpg
|lat=44.707843
|lon=-96.274893
|description=1926 example of the small, period revival gas stations built in the United States in the 1920s and '30s, and a distinctive use of English Cottage Revival architecture.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Lundring Service Station |url={{NRHP url|id=86001356}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=June 1985 |access-date=2015-06-16}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=4
|refnum=86001331
|type=NRHP
|article=Swede Prairie Progressive Farmers' Club
|name=Swede Prairie Progressive Farmers' Club
|address=County Highway 9
|city=Clarkfield vicinity
|county=Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota
|date=June 13, 1986
|image=
|lat=44.659444
|lon=-95.903333
|description=1915 meeting hall of a local farmers' organization, a rare physical reminder of the grassroots agricultural movements of the early 20th century.{{cite web |last=Granger |first=Susan |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Swede Prairie Progressive Farmers' Club |url={{NRHP url|id=86001331}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=May 1985 |access-date=2015-06-16}} Likely demolished.{{cite web |author=mnragnar |title=Swede Prairie Progressive Farmers' Club (Roberg Hall) - Swede Prairie, MN - September 9th, 2011 |url=https://ssl.panoramio.com/photo/59692149 |publisher=Panoramio |date=September 28, 2011 |access-date=August 11, 2013}}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=5
|refnum=70000315
|type=HD
|article=Upper Sioux Agency State Park
|name=Upper Sioux Agency
|address=Upper Sioux Agency State ParkLocation derived from {{cite web |title=Upper Sioux Agency State Park |url=http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/state_parks/upper_sioux_agency/index.html |publisher=Minnesota Department of Natural Resources |year=2015 |access-date=2015-11-23}} NRIS lists site as "address restricted".
|city=Granite Falls vicinity
|county=Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota
|date=October 15, 1970
|image=Upper Sioux Agency Duplex.jpg
|lat=44.734452
|lon=-95.451842
|description=Site of a federal indian agency active 1854–1862, with one standing building. Significant for its precontact archaeology, rare physical evidence of the agency period, and association with the nation's disastrous mid-19th-century Federal Indian Policy.{{cite document |last=Grossman |first=John |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Upper Sioux Agency |publisher=National Park Service |date=1970-04-08}}
|commonscat=Upper Sioux Agency State Park
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=6
|refnum=74001046
|type=NHL
|article=Andrew John Volstead House
|name=Andrew John Volstead House
|address=163 9th Ave.
|city=Granite Falls
|county=Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota
|date=December 30, 1974
|image=Andrew John Volstead House.jpg
|lat=44.809224
|lon=-95.540008
|description=House from 1894 to 1930 of 10-term Congressman Andrew Volstead (1860–1947), author of the Volstead Act that enabled Prohibition in the United States, and the Capper–Volstead Act that legalized agricultural cooperatives.{{cite web |last=Adams |first=George R. |author2=Ralph Christian |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Andrew J. Volstead House |url={{NRHP url|id=74001046}} |publisher=National Park Service |date=August 1976 |access-date=2015-06-12}} Now a museum.{{cite web |title=The Granite Falls Historical Society |url=http://gfhistoricalsociety.weebly.com/ |publisher=Granite Falls Historical Society |access-date=2015-06-12 |archive-date=May 2, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150502123919/http://gfhistoricalsociety.weebly.com/ |url-status=dead }}
}}
{{NRHP row
|pos=7
|refnum=10000517
|type=HD
|article=Battle of Wood Lake
|name=Wood Lake Battlefield Historic District
|address=Intersection of 218 Ave. and 600 St.
|city=Sioux Agency Township
|county=Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota
|date=July 30, 2010
|image=Wood Lake Battlefield 2012.JPG
|lat=44.707123
|lon=-95.438935
|description=Site of the Battle of Wood Lake, final engagement of the Dakota War of 1862, a watershed period for the state of Minnesota and the Dakota people. District encompasses the late-September 1862 staging and battle sites and a 1910 monument that embodies early-20th-century commemoration efforts.{{cite document |last=Terrell |first=Michelle M. |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Wood Lake Battlefield Historic District |publisher=National Park Service |date=2010-05-26}}
}}
|}
See also
{{Commons category|National Register of Historic Places in Minnesota}}
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Minnesota
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Voyageurs National Park
- List of historical societies in Minnesota
{{clear}}