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Your search returned 11 results. Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Pratt Truss Bridge
Melvern (Osage County) Listed in National Register 5/09/2003
Architect: Not listed
Banner Hereford Farm
Scranton (Osage County) Listed in National Register 6/12/1998
Architect: Not listed
Cow-Killer Archeological Site
Melvern (Osage County) Listed in National Register 6/24/1975
Architect: Not listed
Evangelical Covenant Mission Church
Osage City (Osage County) Listed in State Register 6/30/1979
Architect: Not listed
Hunt (Samuel) Grave
Burlingame (Osage County) Listed in National Register 5/11/1995
Architect: Not listed
Karnes Stone Barn
Carbondale vicinity (Osage County) Listed in National Register 01/21/2004
Architect: Not listed
Lyndon Carnegie Library
Lyndon (Osage County) Listed in National Register 6/25/1987
Architect: Not listed
Melvern School
Melvern (Osage County) Listed in State Register /
Architect: Not listed
Osage City Santa Fe Depot
Osage City (Osage County) Listed in National Register 5/11/1989
Architect: Not listed
Osage County Courthouse
Lyndon (Osage County) Listed in National Register 04/18/2007
Architect: Not listed
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. |





