National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Osage
Records: All Properties
Page 2 of 2 showing 8 records of 18 total,
starting on record 111 | 2
Luther Severy & Son Stock Farm
Reading (Osage County)
Listed in National Register Jan 4, 2023
Architect: Edward Sprague
Area of Significance: Agricultural District
Architectural Style(s): Italianate
Thematic Nomination: Historic Agriculture Related Resources of Kansas
The Luther Severy & Son Stock Farm is located in Osage County on a sloping hillside above the Marias de Cygnes River and floodplain. The structures and landscape are important for agriculture during the area’s settlement period and for its architecture. The 3,000 acre stock farm is an outstanding example of agricultural commerce and retains excellent integrity. The stock farm buildings and landscape have endured for one hundred and forty years.
Lyndon Carnegie Library
127 East SixthLyndon (Osage County)
Listed in National Register Jun 25, 1987
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: library
Architectural Style(s): Classical Revival
Thematic Nomination: Carnegie Libraries of Kansas
Melvern School
106 East BeckMelvern (Osage County)
Listed in State Register Aug 23, 1986
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: school
Architectural Style(s): Other
Osage City Santa Fe Depot
508 MarketOsage City (Osage County)
Listed in National Register May 11, 1989
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: rail-related
Architectural Style(s): Mission/Spanish Revival
Osage County Courthouse
717 Topeka AvenueLyndon (Osage County)
Listed in National Register Apr 18, 2007
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: correctional facility; courthouse
Architectural Style(s): Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals
Thematic Nomination: Historic County Courthouses of Kansas
The dedication of the Osage County Courthouse on April 27, 1923 marked the end of a decades-long battle over the rightful seat of Osage County government. County-seat designation was critical to growing towns in the nineteenth century when county seats were centers of community life in an agriculture-based society. In 1875, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that Lyndon was the rightful county seat. However, rival cities continued to attempt to wrest control from Lyndon. In order to secure its place as county seat, Lyndon constructed a permanent county courthouse. Osage County hired Hutchinson-based architect William E. Hulse, who specialized in Classical Revival designs, to plan the new building in 1923. The courthouse is significant as a local example of an early twentieth century revival style.
Rapp School District No. 50
US56 NW of Osage City, Osage City vicinityOsage City (Osage County)
Listed in National Register Jul 28, 1995
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: school
Architectural Style(s): Other
Schuyler Grade School
117 S. DacotahBurlingame (Osage County)
Listed in National Register Apr 15, 2011
Architect: W. F. Schrage, Draftsman, J. F. Mehl, Contractor
Area of Significance: school
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
Thematic Nomination: Historic Public Schools of Kansas
Schuyler Grade School was constructed on the site of the former Osage County Courthouse and named in honor of one of Burlingame’s founders and most important community leaders – Philip Church Schuyler. He donated the lots upon which the first courthouse was erected. After the county seat was moved to Lyndon, the school district purchased the property to construct a school at that location. The two-story Romanesque-style brick building was built by J. F. Mehl in 1902, and the first classes were held in January 1903. The school was expanded with a rear addition in 1955. Two detached buildings were added in the 1970s. The building functioned as a school until 2001 when the Burlingame Historical Preservation Society organized and acquired the building. It was nominated as part of the “Historic Public Schools of Kansas” multiple property submission for its local significance in the areas of education and architecture.
Star Block
520-522 Market StOsage City (Osage County)
Listed in National Register Dec 22, 2020
Architect: James McNames
Area of Significance: department store; professional; specialty store; domestic; hotel; theater; commerce; business
Architectural Style(s): Commercial Style; Late 19th and Early 20th Century American Movements
The Star Block is significant for its connection to and prominent role in the commercial history of Osage City. It opened as a centerpiece of commerce in the community and remained so for much of its history. It is one of the best remaining examples of the period when money from the coal boom of the late 1800s washed through Osage City and the surrounding area, fueling a surge in population and a rush to erect buildings with architecture to match the city’s newfound prosperity. Over its history, it has housed at least 80 businesses, and as many as 13 at a time in its early years, including both general and specialized stores, newspapers, medical clinics, restaurants, a vaudeville theater, and offices for many of the most important industries and prominent citizens. The building immediately became a major hub of commercial activity in Osage City when it opened in 1883 and serves as a significant example of the prosperity during the early coal mining boom.
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