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Both Brodhead and its commercial district grew steadily through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; every contributing building was completed by 1930. The district includes several examples of the Italianate and Queen Anne architectural styles, which were popular in the late nineteenth century, as well as many vernacular ...
Brodhead is a city in Green and Rock counties in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. The population was 3,274 at the 2020 census . In February 2000, the city annexed a portion of land from the Town of Spring Valley in Rock County .
The museum is located on 2.5 acres (0.010 km 2) at Broadhead Airport (FAA LID: C37), which was founded in 1946 by a returning B-24 pilot named Bill Earleywine. [10] [11]The museum is made up of the 12,000 sq ft (1,100 m 2) Bill & Sue Knight Memorial Vintage Airplane and Automobile Hangar and the Kent Joranlien Memorial Fellowship Hall. [12]
This is a list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Wisconsin. There are over 2,500 listed sites in Wisconsin . Each of the state's 72 counties has at least one listing on the National Register .
Brodhead: 2-story cream brick Italianate-styled house with delicate scroll-sawn brackets built in 1877, with a 2-story brick carriage house. Francis was a New Yorker who arrived in Brodhead in 1865 and operated a grocery store near the house. [43] [44] 26: John C. and Barbara Steinman House: John C. and Barbara Steinman House: November 26, 2003
The Francis West Smith House is a historic house at 1002 W. 2nd Avenue in Brodhead, Wisconsin. The house was built in 1877 for Francis W. Smith, a local grocer who moved to Wisconsin from New York . Smith wanted his house to be near his grocery store, and the house is still only a block away from Brodhead's commercial core.
Library of Congress, Wisconsin: Local History & Genealogy Resource Guide, Research Guides, Washington DC "Wisconsin Societies", familysearch.org, Utah: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. (Mostly related to genealogy but includes links to historical societies).
The Sugar River State Trail is a 24-mile (39 km) long, 265-acre (107 ha), recreation rail trail in Wisconsin. [1] This trail connects four communities: New Glarus, Monticello, Albany and Brodhead. The limestone-surfaced trail is on an abandoned railroad bed, and is used for bicycling, hiking, and snowmobiling.