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St. Charles Historic District: St. Charles Historic District: September 22, 1970 June 4, 1987 May 1, 1991 October 10, 1996 87000903 91000504 96001087: Roughly, Main St. from Adams St. on the north to Boone's Lick Rd. on the south, east to the Missouri river, west to 2nd St.
St. Charles has a historic shopping district on Main Street. Numerous restored buildings house such tourist destinations as restaurants and various specialty stores. Since 2015, walking food tours on Historic Main Street can be taken through the company Dishing Up America. These tours take customers to the locally famous restaurants in the city.
The St. Charles Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970, including 63 contributing buildings over a 47-acre (19 ha) area. The district was later increased three times. [1] The original listing included the separately NRHP-listed First Missouri State Capitol Buildings and the Newbill-McElhiney House.
The historic district on the banks of the Missouri River looks much the way it did 200 years ago when St. Charles was considered the edge of the frontier, right down to the gas street lamps.
Other notable buildings include the St. Charles County Courthouse, Benton School (1896), St. John's A.M.E. Church (1872), Immanuel Lutheran Church (1867), Jefferson Street Presbyterian Church, Fourth Street Market Grocery (1926-1927), West End Grocery and Meat Market (c. 1900), Dr. Ludwell Powell House (1838), Rogers-Ehrhard House (1856, 1866 ...
Nixa Hardware, established in 1899, is also in the city. In 2011, B&B Theatres built a cinema between Ozark and Nixa along Route 14. [18] Nixa has a bowling alley named Century Lanes, a go cart track, named 160 Grand Prix, and Southwest Missouri's first food court, 14 Mill Market.
Pages in category "National Register of Historic Places in St. Charles County, Missouri" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Location: 5000 Main St. (multiple locations) Best known for : It used to be the BLTs but the huge chicken wings have become equally popular. The Peanut professes to be “Kansas City’s oldest ...