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12th & R Sts., University of Nebraska–Lincoln 40°49′03″N 96°42′16″W / 40.8175°N 96.704444°W / 40.8175; -96.704444 ( Sheldon Memorial Art Lincoln
Media related to South Bottoms Historic District (Lincoln, Nebraska) at Wikimedia Commons; Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. NE-43, "South Bottoms Historic District, 701, 705, 709, 711 & 715 South First Street, Lincoln, Lancaster County, NE" HABS No. NE-43-A, "Goldstein-Kahem-Knaub House, 701 South First Street"
Roughly bounded by Pennsylvania, Nebraska, Luzerne, and Houston Sts. 40°10′44″N 96°05′42″W / 40.178889°N 96.095°W / 40.178889; -96.095 ( Table Rock Public Square Historic
The William H. Ferguson House is a historic two-and-a-half-story house in Lincoln, Nebraska. It was built in 1906-1907 for William H. Ferguson, a landholder, merchant and business owner who died in 1937. [2] It was designed in the Renaissance Revival style. [3] It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since November 29 ...
Scottsbluff Experiment Station, on Experiment Farm Road about a mile and a half west of Nebraska Highway 71, north of Scottsbluff 41°56′39″N 103°42′01″W / 41.94408°N 103.70041°W / 41.94408; -103.70041 ( Knorr-Holden Continuous Corn
The Thomas P. Kennard House, also known as the Nebraska Statehood Memorial, is the oldest remaining building in the original plat of Lincoln, Nebraska.Built in 1869, the Italianate house belonged to Thomas P. Kennard, the first Secretary of State for Nebraska, and one of three men who picked the Lincoln site for the new state's capital in 1867.
The lighthouse is a conspicuous landmark on U.S. Highway 6 between Omaha and Lincoln, Nebraska. Linoma Beach is listed in the National Register of Historic Places , as a well-preserved example of a once-common but now vanishing type of roadside architecture.
The Tifereth Israel Synagogue is a historic building in Lincoln, Nebraska.It was built by Alfred W. Woods in 1913 as an Orthodox synagogue, and designed in the Classical Revival style by architect Fred Young, Jr. [2] In the 1950s, it was repurposed as a community playhouse. [2]