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International-style home with a Wright-influenced floor plan, designed by William Deknatel and Geraldine Eager Deknatel and built in 1937 as the home of Walter J. Kohler, industrialist and governor of Wisconsin. [124] [125] 64: Wolff-Jung Company Shoe Factory: Wolff-Jung Company Shoe Factory
1874 2-story home of railroad man and leading Catholic John Baasen, designed by Charles Gombert. Housed offices of German YMCA from 1888 to 1893. Used by Mt. Sinai Hospital starting in 1905, Wisconsin House Hotel in 1919, and Joe Kerscher's tavern in 1933. 13. Lloyd A. Barbee House. Lloyd A. Barbee House. May 7, 2019.
410 Cass Street. 43°48′30″N 91°15′05″W / 43.808333°N 91.251389°W / 43.808333; -91.251389 (Mons Anderson House) La Crosse. Gothic Revival-styled home with large square turret built from 1861 to 1877 for Anderson, a Norwegian immigrant who ran a store in La Crosse and later shifted into wholesale dry goods.
John Alexander Wheat Warehouse. September 13, 1978. (#78003383) 304 S. Janesville St. 42°46′29″N 88°56′11″W / 42.774722°N 88.936389°W / 42.774722; -88.936389 (John Alexander Wheat Warehouse) Milton. Italianate-styled warehouse with poured grout walls a foot thick, built about 1850 when wheat was king.
Ramshackle 1-story wooden cheese factory built in 1891. [17] A leader in the dairy industry, Kasper attended the UW dairy school in 1894, switched early to pay for milk based on butterfat rather than volume, helped organize the Wisconsin Cheesemakers' Association, and supposedly won more prizes than any other cheesemaker. [18] 13
3-story utilitarian-styled factory built of wood in 1912, and clad in brick in 1943, where locally-grown peas and corn were graded, picked, canned, and many shipped out on the nearby Milwaukee Road. Operated until 2000.
651 W. Doty St. 43°03′57″N 89°23′30″W / 43.065833°N 89.391667°W / 43.065833; -89.391667 (American Tobacco Company Warehouses Complex) Madison. Pair of brick warehouses built 1899-1901 for storing and processing leaf tobacco, when it was an important crop around Madison.
Possibly the oldest extant building in Wisconsin. [a] Voyageur Joseph Roi built the cottage using the pièce-sur-pièce à coulisse method, which was once common in French-Canadian architecture. Originally located on the Fox River in Green Bay, the cottage was moved to Heritage Hill State Historical Park in 1976.
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