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June 19, 1985 (420 Henry Mall, University of Wisconsin campus: Madison: Georgian revival-style building designed by Paul Cret and Warren Laird, built in 1912, where Elmer McCollum discovered vitamins A and B, Harry Steenbock found that vitamin D could be concentrated by irradiating food, Conrad Elvehjem isolated niacin, and Karl Link isolated the anticoagulant dicoumarol.
The American Tobacco Company Warehouses Complex is a pair of brick warehouses built around 1900 in Madison, Wisconsin. They are now the two most intact remnants of Madison's tobacco industry, and were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2003. [2]
Block-long brick store built by Andrew Hoff 1916-17. 40: Hornung Mound Group: Hornung Mound Group: April 26, 1996 : Address Restricted: Roxbury: Group of effigy mounds including a bird, a bear, and water spirits - unusual because not near a large body of water. [34] [35] 41: Samuel Hunt House: Samuel Hunt House: September 30, 1982 : 632 Center Rd.
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Madison Brass Works was founded in 1907 by Henry Vogts and Edward Schwenn. Vogts was a German immigrant and Schwenn a son of German immigrants who worked in foundries in Beloit and Milwaukee. The pair first built an 18x24 foot wooden building on the site of the current building to house three coke -burning furnaces.
West Towne Mall is a shopping mall located in Madison, Wisconsin, U.S., owned by CBL Properties.It was the first enclosed shopping center within 70 miles (110 km) of Madison with its grand opening on October 15, 1970.
Part of the Madison skyline as seen from Lake Monona, with Monona Terrace in the middle and the capitol directly behind it. Monona Terrace (view from Lake Monona) Monona Terrace (officially the Monona Terrace Community and Convention Center) is a convention center on the shores of Lake Monona in Madison, Wisconsin.
The field is named in honor of Breese J. Stevens (1834–1903), a mayor of Madison and a University of Wisconsin–Madison regent, on the wishes of his widow, who sold the land to the city. The complex was designated as a Madison Landmark in 1995 and was accepted for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places and the Wisconsin State ...