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The land the district sits on was once owned by former Madison Mayor Breese J. Stevens. [3] In 1893, Stevens sold the land to the University Heights Company for $53,000. Buildings in the district began being constructed the following year. The Harold C. Bradley House and the Eugene A. Gilmore House are located inside the district.
Seven commercial buildings built from 1845 to 1887 in Italianate and Romanesque Revival styles. Simeon Mills built a log store and saloon in this area in 1837 - the first store in Madison. That log store is gone, but the structure at 121-123 E. Main still probably contains framing from 1847 - the oldest in Madison. 119: Hiram Smith Hall and Annex
Madison is the capital city of the U.S. state of Wisconsin.The population was 269,840 as of the 2020 United States census, making it the second-most populous city in Wisconsin, after Milwaukee, and the 77th-most populous in the United States.
The Madison Municipal Building, also known as the United States Post Office and Federal Courthouse, is a historic government building at 215 Martin Luther King Junior Boulevard in Madison, Wisconsin.
State Trunk Highway 19 (often called Highway 19, STH-19 or WIS 19) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Wisconsin.It provides a more direct route from U.S. Highway 14 near Mazomanie east to Highway 16 at Watertown, passing around the north side of Madison.
The settlement of Madison began in the 1830s with the early town taking shape on the isthmus around the capitol. Two miles to the southwest, the land that would eventually become the Nakoma district developed into farms in those early years. [3] By 1854 the Madison-Monroe road
The Town of Madison was located in Dane County, Wisconsin, United States. The town ceased to exist on October 31, 2022. The town ceased to exist on October 31, 2022. Its final population was 6,236 at the 2020 United States census .
The Langdon Street Historic District is a historic neighborhood east of the UW campus in Madison, Wisconsin - home to some of Madison's most prominent residents like John B. Winslow, Chief Justice of the state Supreme Court, and nationally recognized historian Frederick Jackson Turner.