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Your search returned 11 results. Bankers Loan and Trust Company
Concordia (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 11/9/1977
Architect: W. H. Parsons & C. Howard Parsons
Brown Grand Opera House
Concordia (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 7/26/1973
Architect: Carl Boller
Building T-9
Concordia (Cloud County) Listed in State Register 11/7/2009
Architect: US Army Corps of Engineers
Building T-9 is the only remaining warehouse at the site of the former World War II-era Prisoner of War Camp Concordia. Construction on Building T-9 began during or immediately after February 1943. All new construction at the camp was given a "T" designation for "temporary." T-9 is 48' x 160', consists of 7680 square feet of floor space, and was the largest among five warehouses built near the southern boundary of the camp. Like the other camp warehouses, T-9 was a one-story, wood-frame building, with a concrete foundation and floor. The cost of the building was $7,648. Construction was officially complete May 1, 1943 when the camp was turned over to the U. S. Army. T-9 functioned as an engineering shop and warehouse until the camp closed on November 5, 1945. T-9 was subsequently used as a skating rink, hog farm, canoe factory, and during the l960s, a horse racetrack, Thundercloud Park, and for hay storage. In 2009, the building was purchased by the POW Camp Concordia Preservation Society, which plans to open a museum in the building. The building was nominated for its mid-twentieth century military history. Clyde School
Clyde (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 01/22/2009
Architect: Schmidt, Lorentz (1884-1952)
Built beginning in 1917-1918 and completed in 1923-1924, Clyde School originated from plans of Wichita-based architect Lorentz Schmidt, who was widely known for his designs of public schools. Schmidt was born and raised in Clyde and his design of this school came early in his career, which spanned 1915-1952. The need for a new school building in Clyde came about as a result of a fire in 1916 that destroyed the previous building. Cost constraints and economic uncertainties brought about by the country's entry into World War I led the town's school board to take a cautious approach to the building project. As a result, the building was erected in two phases. Current plans call for the building to be rehabilitated for use as low-income housing. The building is an example of the Town Graded School subtype designed in the Collegiate Gothic Revival style. It is nominated as part of the "Historic Public Schools of Kansas" Multiple Property Submission for its architectural significance. County Line Bowstring Bridge
Hollis (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 1/04/1990
Architect: Phoenix Bridge Company
Glasco Downtown Historic District
Glasco (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 11/17/2002
Architect: Isaac Biggs, M.L. Hare, O.A. Campbell, J.W. Studt
Nazareth Convent and Academy
Concordia (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 1/18/1973
Architect: William P Feth, Wilson W. Hunt,
Pott's Ford Bridge
Glasco (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 1/04/1990
Architect: Wrought Iron Bridge Builders
Republican River Pegram Truss Bridge
Hollis (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 1/04/1990
Architect: Edge Moor Bridge Works
Union Pacific Railroad Depot
Concordia (Cloud County) Listed in National Register 01/21/2004
Architect: Not listed
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