National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
Architect: Haskell
Records: All Properties
Page 1 of 2 showing 10 records of 13 total,
starting on record 11 | 2
Arvonia School

Lebo (Osage County)
Listed in National Register Jul 3, 2012
Architect: Haskell, John
Area of Significance: school
Architectural Style(s): Other
Thematic Nomination: Historic Public Schools of Kansas
The Arvonia School served as the only school for the Welsh community of Arvonia from the time of its construction in 1872 until the school closed due to consolidation in 1949. Arvonia was platted in the late 1860s on land purchased for speculation by John Mather Jones, owner of a Welsh-language newspaper in Utica, New York and his associate James A. Whitaker of Chicago. To entice Welsh colonists to buy land in Kansas, Jones published a pamphlet entitled "Arvonia: That Is, The Welsh Settlement in Osage County." Although the town did not meet the expectations of early spectators, many Welsh families remained for generations. The school was designed by pioneer Kansas architect John G. Haskell, and is one of the earliest-known architect-designed schools in Kansas. However, because the stone building was heavily modified in about 1900 with the removal of the second story, it is not being nominated for its architecture but rather for its local significance in the areas of education and Welsh ethnic heritage.
Bailey Hall

Lawrence (Douglas County)
Listed in National Register Oct 22, 2001
Architect: John Haskell
Area of Significance: college
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
Chase County Courthouse

Cottonwood Falls (Chase County)
Listed in National Register Feb 24, 1971
Architect: John G. Haskell
Area of Significance: courthouse
Architectural Style(s): Renaissance
Christian and Congregational Church

Eureka (Greenwood County)
Listed in State Register May 26, 1989
Architect: John Haskell
Area of Significance: religious facility
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
Douglas County Courthouse

Lawrence (Douglas County)
Listed in National Register Apr 14, 1975
Architect: John Haskell
Area of Significance: courthouse
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
English Lutheran Church

Lawrence (Douglas County)
Listed in National Register Jul 28, 1995
Architect: John Haskell
Area of Significance: religious facility
Architectural Style(s): Late Gothic Revival
First Methodist Episcopal Church
Lawrence (Douglas County)
Listed in National Register Mar 14, 2019
Architect: John G. Haskell
Area of Significance: religious facility
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque; Modern Movement; Late Victorian
The First Methodist Episcopal Church has been continually used as a religious facility since 1891 and is in downtown Lawrence, Kansas, adjacent to the city’s Original Townsite plat. The oldest portion of the building was designed by John G. Haskell in the Romanesque Revival architectural style in 1888 and built between 1889 and 1891. The building was expanded in 1962 with an L-shaped, Modern addition designed by Robert & Ericson to be used as an education wing. A third addition was added in 1987 to the east of the 1962 addition. The church building retains good historic integrity of location, setting, design, materials, and workmanship that allow the building to convey its architectural significance from its original construction through to the 1960s addition.
McPherson County Courthouse

McPherson (McPherson County)
Listed in National Register Nov 21, 1976
Architect: John Haskell
Area of Significance: courthouse
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
Plymouth Congregational Church

Lawrence (Douglas County)
Listed in National Register Sep 2, 2009
Architect: Haskell, John G.
Area of Significance: religious facility
Architectural Style(s): Gothic Revival; Romanesque; Late Victorian
Built in 1870, the Plymouth Congregational Church was designed by prominent Kansas architect John G. Haskell, who is known for his contributions to the design of the Kansas Statehouse and area schools, churches, courthouses, and commercial buildings. The congregation dates back to Lawrence’s earliest pre-Civil War days. The first church service was held on October 1, 1854, in a mud brick boarding house, just weeks after the first groups of New England settlers arrived. Work began on this building in 1868 and was completed in May of 1870. Church services have occurred in this building continuously since 1870. It is nominated for its architectural significance as an eclectic Victorian-era church building with Gothic and Romanesque Revival characteristics.
Roberts, John N., House "Tea Castle"

Lawrence (Douglas County)
Listed in National Register Sep 6, 1974
Architect: John Haskell
Area of Significance: single dwelling
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
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