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National and State Registers of Historic Places

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County: Wyandotte
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Page 4 of 6 showing 10 records of 52 total, starting on record 31
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Shawnee Street Overpass

Picture of property northwest of I-35
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in National Register Mar 8, 1984

Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: road-related



Simmons Funeral Home

Picture of property 1404 S 37th Street
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in National Register Jan 8, 2014

Architect: Wilson, Fred S.
Area of Significance: other
Architectural Style(s): Bungalow/Craftsman; Mission

The Simmons Funeral Home in Kansas City was constructed in 1927 to serve as Dr. David E. Clopper's 20-room hospital. Clopper was an instrumental figure in Argentine, serving as mayor, president of the Argentine State Bank, and worked for many years as a surgeon for the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad. Upon his death in 1935, George Simmons and his son Gib purchased and refurbished the building for use as a mortuary. They had been in business since 1895 and would eventually expand the funeral home to adapt to business and industry changes. Five generations of the Simmons family worked in this building until the business was sold in 2007. The building was designed by Kansas City architect Fred S. Wilson in the Mission and Craftsman styles. Elements of these styles exhibited on this building include the low-pitched clay tile roof, terra cotta and cast concrete ornamentation, tall casement windows, and decorative iron ornamentation. The building was nominated for its local significance in the areas of architecture and commerce.



Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Building

Picture of property 600 North 7th Street
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in National Register Sep 5, 1985

Architect: Rose and Peterson
Area of Significance: auditorium; monument/marker
Architectural Style(s): Georgian



St. Augustine Hall

Picture of property 3301 Parallel Avenue
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in National Register Feb 24, 1971

Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: college
Architectural Style(s): Other; Late Victorian



St. John's Orphanage

Picture of property 720 North 4th Street
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in State Register Feb 25, 1995

Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: church-related residence
Architectural Style(s): Queen Anne



St. John the Divine Catholic Church

Picture of property 2511 Metropolitan Avenue
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in National Register Oct 9, 2013

Architect: Unknown
Area of Significance: religious facility
Architectural Style(s): Gothic Revival

St. John the Divine Catholic Church is located in the Argentine neighborhood of Kansas City, Kansas, and is nominated for its local significance in the area of ethnic history. For more than 50 years, St. John the Divine served as the centerpiece of religious life for the Mexican-American Catholic community of Argentine. The building was built in 1887 as a frame Methodist church, but was severely damaged during a 1903 flood, which led to a major renovation from 1909 to 1913. The building was expanded, a brick veneer was added to the exterior, and a bell tower was constructed. The Catholic Diocese acquired the building in 1937 as a mission. The parishes of St. John the Divine and Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Armourdale were consolidated following the collapse of the Mount Carmel church after the 1951 flood. St. John was again expanded to add office and residential space. The building was maintained and adorned by its parishioners, reflecting vernacular Mexican and Spanish art and culture. The property played a significant role in the religious and social community of Argentine.



St. Margaret's Hospital

Picture of property 263 S 8th Street / 759 Vermont Avenue
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in National Register Jan 2, 2013

Architect: Smiley, S. C.
Area of Significance: hospital
Architectural Style(s): Modern Movement

Saint Margaret's Hospital sits atop a hill in a residential neighborhood approximately two miles south of the downtown commercial center and about three blocks west of Interstate 70. The board of Saint Margaret's Hospital, founded in 1886, constructed this building in 1954 to replace their older sprawling hospital complex. The Sisters of the Poor of Saint Francis managed the private hospital for more than 75 years, helping it to grow into one of the largest modern hospitals in the area. Designed by Minneapolis architect S. C. Smiley and built in 1954, Saint Margaret's Hospital exhibits Modern Movement architectural treatments, including masonry banding and rectangular massing. The concrete building has buff brick walls with limestone and dark brown brick accents. The building was constructed during a period of extensive hospital improvement projects throughout the country and reflects the design changes adopted nationwide following medical advancements made during World War II. It was nominated for its significance in the areas of health and medicine.



St. Mary's Church

Picture of property 800 North 5th Street
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in State Register Feb 13, 1982

Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: religious facility
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque



Sumner High School and Athletic Field

Picture of property 1610 N. 8th St.
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in National Register Sep 6, 2005

Architect: Joseph Radotinsky
Area of Significance: school; education related
Architectural Style(s): Art Deco
Thematic Nomination: Historic Public Schools of Kansas



Town House Hotel

Picture of property 1021 N 7th Street Trafficway
Kansas City (Wyandotte County)
Listed in National Register Jun 27, 2014

Architect: Stern, Eugene John
Area of Significance: hotel
Architectural Style(s): Modern Movement

Constructed in 1951 in the heart of downtown Kansas City, Kansas, the Town House Hotel illustrates the community's intense desire for a convention hotel, which was believed to be a key component of a thriving metropolis. City officials, businessmen, and local citizens were involved in the decades-long pursuit of this hotel that was finally realized with the building's completion in August 1951. Architect Eugene John Stern began designing the hotel in 1929 with a wide array of amenities and luxurious decorative materials, modifying the drawings when construction actually began more than a decade later. It reflects the Modern Movement design aesthetic popular at the time of construction, particularly the use of corner windows, although the massing, streamlined exterior, and interior ornament evoke the grand high-rise hotels of the 1920s and 1930s. The fifteen-story building was designed with all of the amenities commonly provided in a city hotel of this status, including a grand lobby, numerous ballrooms and gathering spaces, and double-loaded corridors lined with guest rooms (now apartment units). The building operated as Kansas City's largest downtown hotel from 1951 until it was converted to residential apartments in 1978. It was nominated for its local significance in the areas of commerce and architecture.



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