Bismarck Tribune Building
Bismarck Tribune Building | |
46°48′26″N 100°47′10″W / 46.80722°N 100.78611°W / 46.80722; -100.78611 | |
Area | less than one acre |
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Built | 1920 |
Architect | Shanley, George H. |
Architectural style | Prairie School |
NRHP reference No. | 82001309[1] |
Added to NRHP | October 22, 1982 |
The Bismarck Tribune Building on N. 4th St. in Bismarck, North Dakota was designed by architect George H. Shanley and was built in 1920.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1982.[1]
According to its NRHP nomination it is a "rare application" of Prairie School architecture in North Dakota.[2]
The editor, George Douglas Mann, recruited a Great Falls, Montana, designer to plan this flame resistant structure with substantial casing and floors, primary mud tile dividers, and Hebron pressed block outside. The famous Prairie Style configuration accentuates flat extents and joins enhancing brickwork with applied earthenware decoration with themes of adapted lights, blossoms, leaves, and lotus buds. Block header courses emphasize the pilasters that help rectangular spandrels between the first-and second-floor windows. A particular polychrome earthenware bas-help board over the fundamental passage recreates a work of art of priests rehearsing the printer's art on a hand press. The Bismarck Tribune Building has filled in as office space since the newspaper relocated its operations in 1981.
Location
The building is located in a great central area and is within walking distance from many places. Nearby the estate you can find various places:
- The Downtown Historic District
- The US post office and the Municipal courthouse
- The Burleigh county courthouse
- The Patterson place ( The Patterson hotel & The Mackenzie hotel )
- The Northern Pacific (NP) Railway Depot
See also
- Link to photograph at State Historical Society of North Dakota
References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ Bonnie J. Halda (June 1982). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Bismarck Tribune Building". National Park Service. and accompanying photos
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Landmark
districts
- Bismarck Cathedral Area Historic District
- Downtown Bismarck Historic District
- Highland Acres Historic District
properties
- Bismarck Civic Auditorium
- Bismarck Tribune Building
- Burleigh County Courthouse
- Camp Hancock Site
- Chief Looking's Village site
- Depression Era Work Relief Construction Features at Double Ditch Indian Village Site State Historic Site
- Depression Era Work Relief Construction Features at Menoken State Historic Site
- Double Ditch Earth Lodge Village Site
- Dr. Albert M. and Evelyn M. Brandt House
- E. G. Patterson Building
- Florence Lake School No. 3
- Former North Dakota Executive Mansion
- Fred and Gladys Grady House
- Northern Pacific Railway Depot
- Oliver and Gertrude Lundquist House
- Our Lady of the Annunciation Chapel at Annunciation Priory
- Patterson Hotel
- Soo Hotel
- St. George's Episcopal Memorial Church
- Towne–Williams House
- U.S. Post Office and Courthouse
- Van Horn Hotel
- Webb Brothers Block
listings
- Bismarck Public Library
- Fire Hall
- James W. Foley House
- Liberty Memorial Bridge
- Yegen House and Pioneer Grocery
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