National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Sedgwick
Records: All Properties
Page 16 of 16 showing 2 records of 152 total,
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Woodburn House

Wichita (Sedgwick County)
Listed in National Register Sep 2, 2009
Architect: Caton, William Newton
Area of Significance: domestic
Designed by Winfield-based architect William Caton, the Ranch-style Woodburn House is located in east Wichita north of Central Avenue in a subdivision developed in the late 1950s. Caton designed over 60 residences in Wichita ranging from high-end, single-family houses to rental and speculative housing. The house is nominated for its architectural significance as an architect-designed Ranch house reflective of post-World War II residential design. Known for its single story, low roofline, large picture windows, open and simple floor plans, and attached garages, the Ranch style was popular in Wichita from the 1940s through the 1960s.
Woolf Brothers Clothing Company Building

Wichita (Sedgwick County)
Listed in National Register May 1, 2013
Architect: Schmidt, Lorentz
Area of Significance: specialty store
Architectural Style(s): Chicago
The Woolf Brothers Clothing Company building opened in 1923 as the newest addition to the Woolf Brothers chain of stores, owned by Kansas City, Missouri businessman Herbert Woolf, who had taken over the family business after his father's death in 1915. The Woolf Brothers business began in 1866 when Samuel Woolf, a former Union Army soldier from New York, and his brother Alfred opened the Woolf Brothers' Shirt Depot in Leavenworth. The two men moved their business to Kansas City by 1879. By 1920, Herbert was looking to expand the business into other markets like Wichita, and within a decade branches were located in Missouri, Kansas, and Oklahoma. The Wichita business was located in the heart of downtown in a three-story building designed by Wichita architect Lorentz Schmidt and built by George Siedhoff. It exemplifies the hallmarks of the Chicago School of Architecture, with its exterior grid, prominent tripartite fenestration configuration, and overall exterior composition with base, shaft, and highly ornamented cornice. The building was nominated for its local significance in the areas of commerce and architecture.
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