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August 16, 2000 (415 Main St. Rapid City: 7: Cassidy House: Cassidy House: December 2, 1998 (4121 Canyon Lake Rd. Rapid City: All-steel, Lustron Newport 2-Bedroom home built in 1950.
1923 – L.D. Miller Funeral Home, [a] 507 S Main Ave, Sioux Falls, South Dakota [13] 1923 – Rapid City High School, [a] 601 Columbus St, Rapid City, South Dakota [14] 1925 – Deadwood High School (former), 716 Main St, Deadwood, South Dakota [15] 1925 – Lyman County Courthouse, 300 Main St, Kennebec, South Dakota [16]
The Rapid City Historic Commercial District, sometimes called the Rapid City Downtown Historic District, is a 21-acre (8.5 ha), multi-block historic district in downtown Rapid City, South Dakota, United States. It includes 47 commercial buildings dating from the late 19th to early 20th centuries that formed the core of Rapid City's early economy.
The Chapel in the Hills was dedicated on July 6, 1969, as the home for the radio ministry of Lutheran Vespers. Lutheran Vespers hosts such as, Richard A. Jensen were broadcast nationwide from this location in the Black Hills. The church is a special ministry of the South Dakota Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. [2]
The First Congregational Church in Rapid City, South Dakota, also known as The Lord's Chapel, is a historic church at 715 Kansas City Street.It was built in 1914 and was added to the National Register in 1984.
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Immaculate Conception is considered significant as the best example of the Romanesque Revival style in Rapid City, and one of only a few of this style that still exists there. [4] It is the last known cut stone building constructed in the city, and one of two buildings with rock-faced facades that remain.
The Gambrill Storage Building is a historic two-story building in Rapid City, South Dakota. It was designed in the Renaissance Revival style, and built in 1910 by Horace C. Gambrill. [2] It was reported in the Rapid City Journal in 1910 that it was then the only storage building/warehouse in town. [2]