National and State Registers of Historic Places
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Records: All Properties
Page 7 of 180 showing 10 records of 1796 total,
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Atchison Post Office
621 KansasAtchison (Atchison County)
Listed in National Register Mar 16, 1972
Architect: Willoughby J. Edbrooke
Area of Significance: post office
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
With the assistance of U. S. Senator John J. Ingalls, a native of Atchison, Congress authorized the construction of the Atchison Post Office in May 1890, and work began in 1892. This Romanesque-style building is built of coursed ashlar limestone and features a prominent round corner tower with a conical top. The building is locally significant in the area of architecture.
Atchison Santa Fe Freight Depot
200 S Tenth StAtchison (Atchison County)
Listed in National Register Oct 11, 2001
Architect: Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe Railroad Company
Area of Significance: rail-related
Architectural Style(s): Other
Thematic Nomination: Historic Railroad Resources of Kansas
The Atchison Santa Fe Freight Depot, built in 1880, is a masonry building constructed with quarry-faced ashlar stone of contrasting corner quoins and fenestration surrounds. The building has two main sections - a two-story office on the west end and a one-story freight section on the east. The building was nominated as part of the "Historic Railroad Resources of Kansas" multiple property nomination and is locally significant for its architecture and transportation history.
Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Pratt Truss Bridge
SE Pine St., 0.1 mi. S of int with E Emporia St.Melvern (Osage County)
Listed in National Register May 9, 2003
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: road-related
Architectural Style(s): Bridge
Thematic Nomination: Metal Truss Bridges in Kansas
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad Passenger Depot
781 Shawnee StLeavenworth (Leavenworth County)
Listed in National Register Jun 11, 1986
Architect: Perkins and Adams
Area of Significance: rail-related
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Depot
East Wyatt Earp Blvd.Dodge City (Ford County)
Listed in National Register Jul 14, 2000
Architect: James Holland
Area of Significance: rail-related
Architectural Style(s): Romanesque
- National Register Nomination
- Inventory Record
- Kansas Memory: Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company depot, Dodge City, Kansas
- Kansas Memory: Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company depot, Dodge City, Kansas
- Kansas Memory: Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company depot, Dodge City, Kansas
- Kansas Memory: Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company depot, Dodge City, Kansas
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Depot
111 North LincolnChanute (Neosho County)
Listed in State Register Aug 22, 1987
Architect: Not listed
Area of Significance: rail-related
Architectural Style(s): Prairie School
ATSF Motive Power Building
1001 NE AtchisonTopeka (Shawnee County)
Listed in National Register Jan 20, 2012
Architect: Santa Fe Railroad
Area of Significance: business
Architectural Style(s): Commercial
The ATSF Motive Power Building was constructed in 1910 and expanded in 1930 to serve as offices to the adjacent Santa Fe Railroad shops. The turn of the century represented a new era for Santa Fe when Topeka citizens supported the relocation of the shops to the Oakland neighborhood in 1902. When completed, the investment was nearly $400,000 and employed 3,000 men and the shops covered nearly 120 acres. Many workers lived in the surrounding area and the availability of railroad jobs is partially attributed to the influx of Mexican immigrants to Oakland. In addition to housing offices, the Motive Power Building functioned as a sort of community center for shop employees and their families. An auditorium on the top floor was used for social activities and even included performances by the Santa Fe employees' band. The shops evolved to meet the railroad's changing needs as it transitioned from steam to diesel power and terminated passenger service. The Motive Power Building closed its doors in 2002. The four-story building features an exposed concrete structure and a simplified, symmetrical facade reflective of the Commercial style with applied Classical Revival ornament. It is nominated in the area of commerce.
ATSF Steam Locomotive #3415
411 S Elm StreetAbilene (Dickinson County)
Listed in National Register Apr 16, 2012
Architect: Baldwin Locomotive Works (Eddystone, PA)
Area of Significance: museum; outdoor recreation; rail-related
Architectural Style(s): Other
The ATSF Steam Locomotive #3415 is a Class 3400 Pacific-type 4-6-2 passenger engine built by Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1919. The 4-6-2 designation refers to the engine's wheel arrangement - the first number notes the number of leading wheels, the second number notes the number of driver wheels, and the third number notes the number of trailing wheels. This engine originally burned coal, but was converted to oil burning in the 1930s. It was operated by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad for 34 years and was donated to the City of Abilene in 1955. It sat in Eisenhower Park until 1996 when it was removed from the park for restoration. The locomotive is now situated on an abandoned segment of the Rock Island Railroad track that is used by the Abilene-Smoky Valley Railroad, a not-for-profit organization that operates a railroad museum and excursion train. When not in use, the locomotive is stored in the engine house at 411 South Elm Street in Abilene. It is one of only three 4-6-2 3400 class Pacific-type steam locomotives remaining in Kansas, and the only member of the class that is operational.
Augusta Frisco Depot
618 State StreetAugusta (Butler County)
Listed in State Register Nov 20, 2010
Architect: The Saint Louis and San Francisco Railway Company
Area of Significance: rail-related
Architectural Style(s): Bungalow/Craftsman
The St. Louis and San Francisco Railway Line built its first depot in Augusta in 1880, but that building burned in 1909. Plans for a new depot were immediately drawn up, and it closely resembled one of Frisco's six standard combination depots with a passenger waiting area at one end and a freight room at the opposite end. A detached baggage building was erected immediately east of the depot in 1917, and the two buildings were joined together under a single roof in the 1930s. Passenger service ended in 1960, and Frisco abandoned the building in 1984. It was nominated for its association with local transportation history.
Augusta Theater
525 State StAugusta (Butler County)
Listed in National Register Oct 30, 1990
Architect: L.P. Larsen; Lite Craft-Neon Company
Area of Significance: theater
Architectural Style(s): Art Deco
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