National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Graham
Records: All Properties
Page 1 of 1 showing 4 records of 4 total,
starting on record 1
Antelope Lake Park

Morland Vicinity (Graham County)
Listed in National Register 2008-07-10
Architect: Federal Emergency Relief Administration
Category: outdoor recreation; irrigation facility
Thematic Nomination: New Deal-era Resources of Kansas
Antelope Lake Park is a district consisting of a lake constructed in 1935 by the federal Emergency Relief Administration, an earth-filled dam, two Rustic-style stone shelter houses, five stone privies, a stone fireplace, and a steel truss bridge. The park was nominated under the "New Deal-era Resources of Kansas Multiple Property Submission."
Harry Keith Barn

Penokee (Graham County)
Listed in National Register 2013-04-09
Architect: Builder: Harry Keith (& his brothers & neighbors)
Category: agricultural outbuilding; animal facility
Thematic Nomination: Historic Agriculture Related Resources of Kansas
The Harry Keith Barn is located south of Penokee in Graham County and was built in October 1940 by farmer Harry Keith with the help of his brothers and neighbors. Situated within a landscape of rolling agricultural fields and century-old cottonwood trees along nearby Brush Creek, the barn is built into a hillside and features an iconic gambrel roof. The barn's lower level functioned as a place to house and feed livestock and milk cattle, and the upper level served as hay and grain storage. The surrounding farmstead includes a few remaining outbuildings. Adjacent to the barn is an Aermotor windmill, likely the 702 model, which was first manufactured by the Aermotor Company of Chicago in 1933, along with a reservoir that holds 4,000 gallons of water. The Keith Barn was nominated to the National Register as part of the "Agriculture-Related Resources of Kansas" multiple property nomination for its local significance in the areas of agriculture and architecture.
Nicodemus Historic District

Nicodemus (Graham County)
Listed in National Register 1976-01-07
National Historic Landmark, 1/7/1976
Architect: Not listed
Category: commercial district
In the years after the Civil War, African Americans moved from the South to pursue better lives. With the assistance of a former slave, Benjamin "Pap" Singleton, freed African Americans began moving north and west to establish communities. Nicodemus was such a community established in September 1877 with the assistance of Singleton and a white Tennessee minister, W. T. Hill. By 1880, the population of the settlement was 260 with 35 residential and commercial buildings being constructed by 1881. Throughout the 1880s, the township thrived establishing such community activities as a baseball team, literary societies, and lodges. In 1887, the town's first bank was in operation. By the 1950s, the population began to decrease with the town losing its post office in 1953. The nationally significant Nicodemus Historic District includes eight buildings within the original townsite.
Penokee Stone Figure

Penokee (Graham County)
Listed in National Register 1982-06-23
Architect: Not listed
Category: work of art