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Concentration of 75 commercial and civic buildings [16] including the 1872 Italianate Draper Brothers Meat Market, [17] the 1873 Moeller Wagon Shop, [18] the 1885 Ewing Livery, [19] the 1888 Miller Saloon, [20] the 1896 Civil War Memorial, [21] the 1896 Romanesque Revival First Methodist Episcopal Church, [22] the 1900 Romanesque Wellington ...
John Durward, a Roman Catholic priest and the son of Durward's Glen founder Bernard Durward, bought the house in 1911; after his death in 1918, local district attorney and county judge Henry Jay Bohn lived in the house until 1929. [2] The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 20, 1978. [1]
Development in the district began in the 1840s; at the time, the courthouse district was considered the wealthy part of Baraboo by comparison to the more industrial areas by the Baraboo River and the railroad. The oldest contributing buildings in the district date to the 1870s, when economic growth in Baraboo and a series of fires that ...
Baraboo is a town in Sauk County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 1,816 at the 2020 census . The City of Baraboo is located mostly within the town.
Sauk County is a county in Wisconsin.It is named after a large village of the Sauk people. [1] As of the 2020 census, the population was 65,763. [2] Its county seat and largest city is Baraboo. [3]
The two-and-a-half story mansion has a Richardsonian Romanesque design and was built using brownstone quarried at Port Wing, Wisconsin. The house's design features a wraparound front porch topped by a square tower at the northeast corner, a porte-cochere on one side, and a hip roof interrupted by multiple gables. The interior decoration ...
The William Clark House is a historic house at 320 Walnut Street in Baraboo, Wisconsin. The house was built between 1883 and 1886 for William Clark, an engineer for the Chicago and North Western Railroad. Clark built his house in a neighborhood near the railroad where many other railroad workers lived at the time; most of the other railroad ...
It has an American Craftsman design, a style popularized in the early twentieth century which emphasized simplicity and harmony with nature; the architect who designed the house is unknown. The two-and-a-half story brick house features a wide front porch supported by wooden posts, exposed rafter tails at the edges of the roof, and a hip roof ...