National and State Registers of Historic Places
Results of Query:
County: Linn
Records: All Properties
Page 1 of 1 showing 9 records of 9 total,
starting on record 1
Battle of Mine Creek Site
Pleasanton (Linn County)
Listed in National Register 1973-12-12
Architect: Not listed
Category: battle site
On October 25, 1864, approximately 2,800 Union troops attacked and defeated about 8,000 Confederates along the banks of Mine Creek. This was one of the largest cavalry battles in the Civil War and a major battle fought in Kansas. The Union brigades were commanded by Colonels Frederick W. Benteen and John F. Philips. After this battle, federal forces pursued and defeated additional Confederates in Missouri as they attempted to return to Arkansas, Indian Territory (Oklahoma), and eventually Texas.
Lander's Creek Bridge
Goodrich (Linn County)
Listed in National Register 1985-07-02
Architect: Not listed
Category: road-related
Thematic Nomination: Masonry Arch Bridges of Kansas
Linn County Courthouse

Mound City (Linn County)
Listed in National Register 1974-07-15
Architect: George Ropes
Category: courthouse
Marais des Cygnes Massacre Site

Trading Post (Linn County)
Listed in National Register 1971-06-21
National Historic Landmark, 5/30/1974
Architect: Not listed
Category: battle site
On May 19, 1858, proslavery men killed five free state men and wounded five others in a ravine that is now known as the Marais Des Cygnes Massacre Site. The shootings shocked the nation and became a pivotal event in the "Bleeding Kansas" era. A few months later, abolitionist John Brown came to the site and constructed a fortified cabin, where he remained during the summer of 1858. The site is owned by the State of Kansas and managed by the Kansas Historical Society.
Mine Creek Bridge

Mound City (Linn County)
Listed in National Register 1983-03-10
Architect: Not listed
Category: road-related
Thematic Nomination: Rainbow Arch Bridges of Kansas
Old Linn County Jail

Mound City (Linn County)
Listed in National Register 1978-11-30
Architect: Not listed
Category: correctional facility
Prescott Rural High School

Prescott (Linn County)
Listed in National Register 2008-07-03
Architect: Gamble, Ray
Category: school
Thematic Nomination: Historic Public Schools of Kansas
Architect Ray Gamble, who served as Kansas' state architect from 1917 to 1923, designed the Prescott Rural High School in the Commercial style with popular Mission and Spanish Revival architectural details. Built in 1924, the one-story brick building includes a two-story gymnasium and two mid-20th century additions. The stone accents and the Mission-shaped parapet at the building's entrance are key character-defining features.
Prescott School

Prescott (Linn County)
Listed in National Register 1982-05-06
Architect: Not listed
Category: school
Trading Post School

Trading Post (Linn County)
Listed in State Register 1987-08-22
Architect: Not listed
Category: school