National Register of Historic Places listings in Adams County, Illinois
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Adams County, Illinois.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Adams County, Illinois, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map.[1]
There are 27 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted September 5, 2024.[2]
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap
Download coordinates as:
- KML
- GPX (all coordinates)
- GPX (primary coordinates)
- GPX (secondary coordinates)
Current listings
[3] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[4] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Coca-Cola Bottling Company Building | February 7, 1997 (#97000032) | 616 N. 24th St. 39°56′18″N 91°22′37″W / 39.938333°N 91.376944°W / 39.938333; -91.376944 (Coca-Cola Bottling Company Building) | Quincy | ||
2 | Downtown Quincy Historic District | More images | April 7, 1983 (#83000298) | Roughly bounded by Hampshire, Jersey, 4th and 8th Sts. 39°55′57″N 91°24′28″W / 39.9325°N 91.407778°W / 39.9325; -91.407778 (Downtown Quincy Historic District) | Quincy | |
3 | Ebenezer Methodist Episcopal Chapel and Cemetery | More images | June 4, 1984 (#84000921) | Northwest of Golden 40°09′32″N 91°06′10″W / 40.158889°N 91.102778°W / 40.158889; -91.102778 (Ebenezer Methodist Episcopal Chapel and Cemetery) | Golden | |
4 | Exchange Bank | February 12, 1987 (#86003714) | Quincy St. 40°06′26″N 91°04′15″W / 40.107222°N 91.070833°W / 40.107222; -91.070833 (Exchange Bank) | Golden | ||
5 | Fall Creek Stone Arch Bridge | More images | November 7, 1996 (#96001282) | 1.2 miles northeast of Fall Creek-Payson Rd., across Fall Creek 39°47′28″N 91°17′30″W / 39.791111°N 91.291667°W / 39.791111; -91.291667 (Fall Creek Stone Arch Bridge) | Payson | |
6 | Robert W. Gardner House | June 20, 1979 (#79000812) | 613 Broadway St. 39°56′09″N 91°24′21″W / 39.935833°N 91.405833°W / 39.935833; -91.405833 (Robert W. Gardner House) | Quincy | ||
7 | S.J. Lesem Building | November 22, 1999 (#99001377) | 135-137 N. 3rd St. 39°56′06″N 91°24′43″W / 39.935°N 91.411944°W / 39.935; -91.411944 (S.J. Lesem Building) | Quincy | ||
8 | Lewis Round Barn | January 29, 2003 (#02001750) | 2007 E. 1250th St. 40°03′06″N 91°16′19″W / 40.051667°N 91.271944°W / 40.051667; -91.271944 (Lewis Round Barn) | Mendon | Originally listed in 1984 at its original site NW of Clayton, Iowa, reference #84000916. Was removed from the Register in March 2002 due to a pending relocation. The site was recertified with a new reference number in 2003 after successful relocation. | |
9 | Lock and Dam No. 20 Historic District | More images | March 10, 2004 (#04000180) | Mississippi River southwest of Meyer 40°08′38″N 91°30′41″W / 40.143889°N 91.511389°W / 40.143889; -91.511389 (Lock and Dam No. 20 Historic District) | Meyer | Extends into Lewis County, Missouri |
10 | Lock and Dam No. 21 Historic District | More images | March 10, 2004 (#04000181) | 0.5 miles west of Illinois Route 57 39°54′22″N 91°25′56″W / 39.906111°N 91.432194°W / 39.906111; -91.432194 (Lock and Dam No. 21 Historic District) | Quincy | Extends into Marion County, Missouri |
11 | Morgan-Wells House | November 16, 1977 (#77000471) | 421 Jersey St. 39°55′52″N 91°24′32″W / 39.931111°N 91.408889°W / 39.931111; -91.408889 (Morgan-Wells House) | Quincy | Demolished by the local newspaper for office expansion in 2017. | |
12 | Richard F. Newcomb House | June 3, 1982 (#82002516) | 1601 Maine St. 39°55′56″N 91°23′24″W / 39.932222°N 91.39°W / 39.932222; -91.39 (Richard F. Newcomb House) | Quincy | ||
13 | One Thirty North Eighth Building | February 9, 1984 (#84000918) | 130 N. 8th St. 39°55′58″N 91°24′10″W / 39.932778°N 91.402778°W / 39.932778; -91.402778 (One Thirty North Eighth Building) | Quincy | ||
14 | Quincy East End Historic District | November 14, 1985 (#85002791) | Roughly bounded by Hampshire, 24th, State, and 12th Sts. 39°55′51″N 91°23′11″W / 39.930833°N 91.386389°W / 39.930833; -91.386389 (Quincy East End Historic District) | Quincy | ||
15 | Quincy National Cemetery | May 6, 2011 (#11000242) | 36th and Maine Sts. 39°55′58″N 91°21′25″W / 39.932778°N 91.356944°W / 39.932778; -91.356944 (Quincy National Cemetery) | Quincy | Civil War Era National Cemeteries MPS | |
16 | Quincy Northwest Historic District | May 11, 2000 (#00000414) | Roughly bounded by Broadway, N. 2nd, Locust, and N. 12th Sts. 39°56′43″N 91°24′18″W / 39.945278°N 91.405°W / 39.945278; -91.405 (Quincy Northwest Historic District) | Quincy | ||
17 | John Roy Site | May 22, 1978 (#78001109) | Southwest of the junction of 1700th Ave. and 2950th St.[5] 39°59′56″N 90°56′59″W / 39.99888°N 90.94972°W / 39.99888; -90.94972 (John Roy Site) | Clayton | ||
18 | South Side German Historic District | More images | May 22, 1992 (#92000484) | Roughly bounded by 6th, 12th, Washington, Jersey and York Sts.; also roughly bounded by Jefferson, S. 12th, Jackson and S. 5th Sts. 39°55′33″N 91°24′07″W / 39.925833°N 91.401944°W / 39.925833; -91.401944 (South Side German Historic District) | Quincy | Second set of boundaries represents a boundary increase of April 20, 1995 |
19 | State Savings Loan and Trust | March 23, 1979 (#79000813) | 428 Maine St. 39°55′55″N 91°24′32″W / 39.931944°N 91.408889°W / 39.931944; -91.408889 (State Savings Loan and Trust) | Quincy | ||
20 | F. D. Thomas House | July 28, 1983 (#83000299) | 331 N. Ohio St. 40°02′50″N 91°03′51″W / 40.047361°N 91.064167°W / 40.047361; -91.064167 (F. D. Thomas House) | Camp Point | ||
21 | U.S. Post Office and Courthouse | December 2, 1977 (#77000472) | 200 N. 8th St. 39°56′01″N 91°24′10″W / 39.933611°N 91.402778°W / 39.933611; -91.402778 (U.S. Post Office and Courthouse) | Quincy | ||
22 | Ursa Town Hall | March 1, 2002 (#02000095) | 109 S. Warsaw St. 40°04′25″N 91°22′00″W / 40.073611°N 91.366667°W / 40.073611; -91.366667 (Ursa Town Hall) | Ursa | ||
23 | Villa Kathrine | December 8, 1978 (#78001110) | 532 S. 3rd 39°55′33″N 91°24′46″W / 39.925833°N 91.412778°W / 39.925833; -91.412778 (Villa Kathrine) | Quincy | ||
24 | William S. Warfield House | March 21, 1979 (#79000814) | 1624 Maine St. 39°55′53″N 91°23′23″W / 39.931389°N 91.389722°W / 39.931389; -91.389722 (William S. Warfield House) | Quincy | ||
25 | Ernest M. Wood Office and Studio | August 12, 1982 (#82002517) | 126 N. 8th St. 39°55′57″N 91°24′10″W / 39.9325°N 91.402778°W / 39.9325; -91.402778 (Ernest M. Wood Office and Studio) | Quincy | ||
26 | John Wood Mansion | More images | April 17, 1970 (#70000228) | 425 S. 12th St. 39°55′39″N 91°23′45″W / 39.9275°N 91.395833°W / 39.9275; -91.395833 (John Wood Mansion) | Quincy | |
27 | Woodland Cemetery | March 1, 2002 (#02000096) | 1020 S. 5th St. 39°55′01″N 91°12′55″W / 39.916944°N 91.215278°W / 39.916944; -91.215278 (Woodland Cemetery) | Quincy |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Adams County, Illinois.
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Illinois
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Illinois
- List of attractions in Quincy, Illinois
References
- ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved September 5, 2024.
- ^ Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ Maruszak, Kathleen. National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: John Roy Site. National Park Service, 1977-02, 3.
- v
- t
- e
- Adams
- Alexander
- Bond
- Boone
- Brown
- Bureau
- Calhoun
- Carroll
- Cass
- Champaign
- Christian
- Clark
- Clay
- Clinton
- Coles
- Cook
- Crawford
- Cumberland
- DeKalb
- DeWitt
- Douglas
- DuPage
- Edgar
- Edwards
- Effingham
- Fayette
- Ford
- Franklin
- Fulton
- Gallatin
- Greene
- Grundy
- Hamilton
- Hancock
- Hardin
- Henderson
- Henry
- Iroquois
- Jackson
- Jasper
- Jefferson
- Jersey
- Jo Daviess
- Johnson
- Kane
- Kankakee
- Kendall
- Knox
- LaSalle
- Lake
- Lawrence
- Lee
- Livingston
- Logan
- Macon
- Macoupin
- Madison
- Marion
- Marshall
- Mason
- Massac
- McDonough
- McHenry
- McLean
- Menard
- Mercer
- Monroe
- Montgomery
- Morgan
- Moultrie
- Ogle
- Peoria
- Perry
- Piatt
- Pike
- Pope
- Pulaski
- Putnam
- Randolph
- Richland
- Rock Island
- St. Clair
- Saline
- Sangamon
- Schuyler
- Scott
- Shelby
- Stark
- Stephenson
- Tazewell
- Union
- Vermilion
- Wabash
- Warren
- Washington
- Wayne
- White
- Whiteside
- Will
- Williamson
- Winnebago
- Woodford
- Bridges
- Houses
- National Historic Landmarks
- Properties of religious function
- Railway stations