Mid-North District
Historic district in Chicago
The Mid-North District or Midtown-North is a historic district in the Lincoln Park community area of Chicago, Illinois. The district was built from 1865 to 1900 by various architects. It is bounded by Fullerton Avenue to the north, Armitage Avenue to the south, Lincoln Avenue to the west and Clark Street to the east. It was designated a Chicago Landmark on August 31, 1977.[1]
References
- ^ "Mid-North District". Commission on Chicago Landmarks. Retrieved 2013-12-29.
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Chicago Landmark districts
National Register of Historic Places,
Chicago Landmark districts
- Printing House Row
- Pullman
Chicago Landmark districts
- Black Metropolis–Bronzeville
- Logan Square Boulevards
- Old Chicago Water Tower
- Old Town Triangle
- Prairie Avenue
- Schoenhofen Brewery
- Villa
- Alta Vista Terrace
- Arlington and Roslyn Place
- Arlington-Deming
- Armitage-Halsted
- Astor Street
- Beverly/Morgan Railroad
- Bissell Street
- Burling Row House
- Calumet/Giles Prairie
- Cermak Road Bridge
- Chatham-Greater Grand Crossing Commercial
- Dover Street
- East Lake Shore Drive
- East Village
- Five Houses on Avers
- Fremont Row House
- Fulton Market
- Greenwood Row House
- Walter Burley Griffin Place
- Hawthorne Place
- Jackson Boulevard
- Jackson Park Highlands
- Jewelers Row
- Kenwood
- Longwood Drive
- McCormick Row House
- Michigan Boulevard
- Mid-North
- Milwaukee-Diversey-Kimball
- Newport Avenue
- North Kenwood
- Oakdale Avenue
- Oakland
- Old Edgebrook
- Seven Houses on Lake Shore Drive
- Surf-Pine Grove
- Terra Cotta Row
- Ukrainian Village
- Washington Park Court
- Wicker Park
41°55′20″N 87°38′29″W / 41.92222°N 87.64139°W / 41.92222; -87.64139
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