National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Marion
Records: All Properties
Page 3 of 4 showing 10 records of 34 total,
starting on record 211 | 2 | 3 | 4
Marion Archeological District

Marion (Marion County)
Listed in National Register Apr 21, 1976
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: archaeological site
Marion County Courthouse

Marion (Marion County)
Listed in National Register May 28, 1976
Architect: James Holland & Frank Squires
Area of Significance: courthouse
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
Marion County Park and Lake

Marion (Marion County)
Listed in National Register Jun 6, 2002
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: natural feature; park
Thematic Nomination: New Deal-era Resources of Kansas
Marion County Poor Farm

Marion vicinity (Marion County)
Listed in State Register Nov 18, 2017
Architect: Unknown
Area of Significance: institutional housing
Architectural Style(s): Vernacular
Marion County purchased 160 acres of land for its poor farm in 1887 from settler William Glover. Between 1889 and 1890, a large two-story stone building was erected to house the county’s indigent. During its peak years at the turn of the century, the poor farm was self-sustaining through the work done on the property by its inmates. The poor farm continued to house the county’s most vulnerable citizens until 1964 when it was converted into a rest home. The 2.72 acres remaining of the original farm are significant for their association with the social history of Marion County between 1890 and 1964.
Meehan, P. H., House (Vogt House)

Tampa (Marion County)
Listed in National Register Nov 28, 2008
Architect: Kelso, Mann & Gerow, Hutchinson
Area of Significance: single dwelling
Architectural Style(s): Late 19th and Early 20th Century American Movements
Designed by Kelso, Mann and Gerow Architects of Hutchinson, the P. H. Meehan House was built in 1910. The building was nominated as an excellent example of the American Foursquare style, which is a common domestic adaptation of the Prairie style that was popular between 1900 and 1925. The two-story house features a low-pitched hipped roof with four hipped dormers. As is typical with Foursquares, the house features a narrow wood siding, double-hung windows and Craftsman-influenced stained glass windows.
Morgan, W.H., House

Peabody (Marion County)
Listed in National Register Jan 22, 1996
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: single dwelling
Architectural Style(s): Italianate
Old Peabody Library

Peabody (Marion County)
Listed in National Register Jul 2, 1973
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: library
Architectural Style(s): Stick/Eastlake
Peabody City Park

Peabody (Marion County)
Listed in National Register Jan 20, 2012
Architect: Stewart, Aaron K.
Area of Significance: outdoor recreation
Architectural Style(s): Other
Thematic Nomination: New Deal-era Resources of Kansas
The 23-acre Peabody City Park has a long and colorful history that began in the 1870s with its use as a fairground owned by the Marion County Agricultural Society and its later use as a community park. This property on the west edge of town has hosted all kinds of community events including county fairs, a statewide fair in 1885, numerous chautauquas in the early 1900s, and sporting events. Old issues of the Peabody Gazette provide much of the history of the property's development and reveal the names of those hired to erect buildings and plant trees, such as builder A. K. Steward and landscape gardener E. W. Stephens. New Deal-era labor enhanced the park in the 1930s with the construction of picnic facilities and athletic field bleachers. Today, the park is a layered landscape that retains components of its development from fairground to New Deal-era park to a modern city park including a late 19th century horse racetrack, octagonal floral exhibition hall, stone entranceway, athletic field with stone bleachers, picnic tables and stoves, and plantings. The park is nominated for its local significance in the areas of recreation, entertainment, and architecture.
Peabody Downtown Historic District

Peabody (Marion County)
Listed in National Register May 29, 1998
Architect: Charles Squires, Boller Brothers, A. A. Crowell
Area of Significance: commercial district
Peabody Township Carnegie Library

Peabody (Marion 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
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