National Register of Historic Places listings in Detroit
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Detroit, Michigan.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Detroit, Michigan, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in Google Maps.[1]
There are 339 properties and districts listed on the National Register in Wayne County, including 14 National Historic Landmarks. The city of Detroit is the location of 258 of these properties and districts, including 10 National Historic Landmarks; they are listed here, while the remaining 82 properties and districts, including 4 National Historic Landmarks, are listed separately. A single property straddles the city limits and thus appears on both lists.
- This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted December 2, 2016.[2]
Geographical areas
The properties on this list are within the city of Detroit but outside of the Downtown/Midtown area bounded by the Lodge Freeway (M-10) to the west, the Edsel Ford Freeway (I-94) on the north, the Chrysler Freeway (I-75) and Interstate 375 on the east, and the Detroit River to the south. Properties on this list are further divided into geographical areas:
- New Center Area: North of Midtown and bounded by the Lodge Freeway on the west, I-94 on the south, I-75 on the east, and Virginia Park on the north.
- North End: North of the New Center and bounded by the Lodge Freeway on the west, Virginia Park on the south, I-75 on the east, and Highland Park on the north.
- Palmer Park Area: Bounded by Highland Park and McNichols Rd. on the south, Livernois on the west, Eight Mile on the north, and I-75 on the east.
- Corktown – Woodbridge: West of Downtown and bounded by I-96 to the east, I-94 on the south, the Lodge Freeway to the east, and the Detroit River to the south.
- Southwest Detroit: The section of Detroit west of Corktown – Woodbridge and south of Michigan Avenue.
- Eastern Market Area: The section of Detroit east of Downtown/Midtown and immediately adjacent to Eastern Market.
- Jefferson Corridor: The section of Detroit east of Downtown and Eastern Market and south of Kercheval.
- West Side: The remainder of Detroit not already delineated west of Woodward Avenue.
- East Side: The remainder of Detroit not already delineated east of Woodward Avenue.
There are 133 properties and districts listed on the National Register in Detroit outside of Downtown and Midtown, including five National Historic Landmarks and one property straddling the border with River Rouge, Michigan. There are 125 more properties and districts listed on the National Register in Downtown and Midtown Detroit, including four National Historic Landmarks. These other properties are listed at National Register of Historic Places listings in Downtown and Midtown Detroit, Michigan.
All together there are 255 properties and districts listed on the National Register in Detroit proper. Nine additional properties and districts, including one National Historic Landmark, are located in the Detroit enclave of Highland Park. Three properties are located in the Detroit enclave of Hamtramck. The properties and districts in these two Detroit enclaves, plus 70 others, are listed in this list of non-Detroit NRHP listings in Wayne County.
District | # of Sites | |
---|---|---|
1 | Downtown and Midtown Detroit | 125 |
2 | Remainder of Detroit | 133 |
3 | Outer Wayne County, Hamtramck, & Highland Park | 82 |
(Duplicates): | (1)[3] | |
Total: | 339 |
History of Detroit
Beginnings
Detroit, settled in 1701, is one of the oldest cities in the Midwest. It experienced a disastrous fire in 1805 which nearly destroyed the city, leaving little present-day evidence of old Detroit save a few east-side streets named for early French settlers, their ancestors, and some pear trees which were believed to have been planted by early missionaries. After the fire, Judge Augustus B. Woodward designed a plan of evenly spaced public parks with interconnecting semi-circular and diagonal streets. Although Woodward's plan was not fully implemented, the basic outline in still in place today in the heart of the city. Main thoroughfares radiate outward from the center of the city like spokes in a wheel, with Jefferson Avenue running parallel to the river, Woodward Avenue running perpendicular to it, and Gratiot, Michigan, and Grand River Avenues interspersed. A sixth main street, Fort, wanders downriver from the center of the city.
After Detroit rebuilt in the early 19th century, a thriving community soon sprang up, and by the Civil War, over 45,000 people were living in the city,[4] primarily spread along Jefferson Avenue to the east and Fort Street to the west. As in many major American cities, subsequent redevelopment of the central city through the next 150 years has eliminated all but a handful of the antebellum structures in Detroit. The oldest remaining structures are those built as private residences, including a group in the Corktown neighborhood and another set of houses strung along Jefferson Avenue — notably the Charles Trowbridge House (1826, the oldest known structure in the city), the Joseph Campau House (1835), the Sibley House (1848), the Beaubien House (1851), and the Moross House (1855). Other extant pre-1860 structures include Fort Wayne (1849); Saints Peter and Paul Church (1848) and Mariner's Church (1849); and scattered commercial buildings (one in Randolph Street Commercial Buildings Historic District, for example); Unfortunately, the demolition of historic structures continues into the present day: multiple structures listed on the Register, including the Alexander Chene House (1855), have been demolished in the last decade.
Rise of industry and commerce
As Detroit grew into a thriving hub of commerce and industry, the city spread along Jefferson, with multiple manufacturing firms taking advantage of the transportation resources afforded by the river and a parallel rail line. The shipyard that eventually became the Dry Dock Engine Works-Detroit Dry Dock Company Complex opened on the Detroit River at the foot of Orleans in 1852; Parke-Davis established a center between East Jefferson Avenue and the river in the 1870s; another pharmaceutical firm, the Frederick Stearns Company, built a plant in the same area in the 1890s. Globe Tobacco built a manufacturing facility closer to downtown in 1888.
The rise of manufacturing led to a new class of wealthy industrialists, entrepreneurs, and professionals. Some of these nouveau riche built along East Jefferson, resulting in structures such as the Thomas A. Parker House (1868), the Croul-Palms House (1881), the William H. Wells House (1889), the John N. Bagley House (1889), and the Frederick K. Stearns House (1902). However, Detroit began increasingly to turn away from the river, and other citizens pushed north of downtown, building houses along Woodward in what was at the time a quiet residential area. Many of these neighborhoods have disappeared under 20th-century commercialization of the Woodward corridor, but some Victorian structures remain, notably the Elisha Taylor House (1870) and the Hudson-Evans House (1872), both near the Woodward East Historic District; and the Col. Frank J. Hecker House (1888) and the Charles Lang Freer House (1887) in the East Ferry Avenue Historic District. Near the end of the 19th century, apartment living became more acceptable for affluent middle-class families, and upscale apartments, such as the Coronado Apartments (1894), the Verona Apartments (1894), the Palms Apartments (1903), the Davenport Apartments (1905) in the Cass-Davenport Historic District, and the Garden Court Apartments (1915) were constructed to meet the new demand.
These well-to-do late-19th-century residents also funded the construction of a spate of churches, such as the Cass Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church (1883), the First Presbyterian Church (1889), the Trinity Episcopal Church (1890) (built by James E. Scripps), and the First Unitarian Church (1890).
Immigration
Detroit has long been a city of immigrants, from the early French and English settlers in the 18th century, through the Irish who settled in the Corktown neighborhood in the 1840s, to the Greeks, who settled in the Greektown neighborhood in the early 20th century and the southern whites and African-Americans who came to Detroit in the years before the Great Depression. Detroit's industrial boom in the later 19th century created yet another stream of immigrants into Detroit. Perhaps the most significant contingents during this period were the German and Polish immigrants who settled in Detroit in the 1860–1890s. Germans came first, establishing German-speaking churches, primarily on the east side of the city, including Saint John's-St. Luke's Evangelical Church (1872), St. Joseph Catholic Church (1873), and Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church (1875), as well as social clubs such as the Harmonie Club (1894) and west-side churches such as St. Boniface (1882) and Gethsemane Evangelical Lutheran Church (1891). Close behind, a wave of Polish immigrants established east-side Roman Catholic parishes such as St. Albertus (1885), Sweetest Heart Of Mary (1893), St. Josaphat's (1901), St. Stanislaus (1911), and St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church (1923). The Poles also settled on the west side, founding West Side Dom Polski (1916).
Birth of the automobile
Around the start of the 20th century, entrepreneurs in the Detroit area—notably Henry Ford—forged into production of the automobile, capitalizing on the already-existing machine tool and coach-building industry in the city. Early automotive production is recognizable by structures such as the Ford Piquette Avenue Plant (1904) (a National Historic Landmark), and multiple structures in the surrounding Piquette Avenue Industrial Historic District (including the now-destroyed E-M-F/Studebaker Plant, 1906) and the New Amsterdam Historic District (including the original Cadillac factory, 1905) and small factories such as the Crescent Brass and Pin Company Building (1905).
Automobile assembly and associated manufacturing soon dominated Detroit, and the newly minted automotive magnates built commercial and office buildings such as General Motors Building (1919), the General Motors Research Laboratory (1928), and the Fisher Building (1928).
Changes wrought by the automobile
The development of the automobile industry led to rising demands for labor, which were filled by huge numbers of newcomers from Europe and the American South. Between 1900 and 1930, the city's population soared from 265,000 to over 1.5 million, pushing the boundaries of the city outward. The population boom led to the construction of apartment buildings across the city, aimed at the middle-class auto worker. These include the Somerset Apartments (1922), the Garden Court Apartments (1915), and the Manchester Apartments (1915).
At the same time, new upscale neighborhoods farther from the center of the city sprang up, including Boston-Edison, Indian Village, and Palmer Woods. The wealthy moved into these more exclusive neighborhoods as the once-exclusive Woodward Avenue neighborhoods (such as the Warren-Prentis Historic District and the Willis-Selden Historic District) became mixed with apartments and commercial buildings. As the population spread outwards, new churches were constructed to serve the newly populated areas, notably the Roman Catholic Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament (1913), the Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church (1908), the Metropolitan United Methodist Church (1922), and the St. Theresa of Avila Roman Catholic Church (1919).
The rise of the automobile also required rethinking transportation within the city. The Chestnut Street-Grand Trunk Railroad bridge (1929) was a result of a grade separation that unsnarled train and automobile traffic. The Fort Street-Pleasant Street and Norfolk & Western Railroad Viaduct (1928) was a product of the same program, routing trucking traffic over the train traffic. And the West Jefferson Avenue – Rouge River Bridge (1922) allowed the Rouge River to be expanded for barge traffic.
Automobile wealth led to a boom in downtown Detroit business, and the construction of a collection of early-20th-century skyscrapers. The most notable of these is the Art Deco National Historic Landmark Guardian Building (1928), but numerous other significant office buildings such as the Vinton Building (1916), the Barlum Tower (1927), and the Lawyers Building (1922) were also constructed. The building boom was not confined to businesses. Shopping districts sprang up along Park Avenue, Broadway, and Woodward. Multiple hotels were constructed, including the Fort Shelby Hotel (1916), the Detroit-Leland Hotel (1927), the Royal Palm Hotel (1924), and many others. Extravagant movie theaters such as the Fox (1928) and the Palms (1925) were constructed. And public buildings, such as Orchestra Hall (1919), the Detroit Public Library (1921), and the Detroit Institute of Arts (1923).
African-Americans
During the early years of Detroit, the African-American population was relatively small. However, the Second Baptist Church (1857; rebuilt 1914) was founded with an African-American congregation in the 1830s; the church played an instrumental role in the Underground Railroad, due to Detroit's proximity to Canada. The auto boom of the 20th century changed the population, and in the years following World War I, the black population of Detroit soared. In 1910, fewer than 6000 blacks called the city home;[5] in 1917 more than 30,000 blacks lived in Detroit.[6] Significant African-American structures in Detroit are related to the struggle with segregation: Dunbar Hospital (founded 1914), the Ossian H. Sweet House (1925), and the Sugar Hill neighborhood. However, other structures, such as the Breitmeyer-Tobin Building (1905) are tributes to the slow integration in the latter half of the 20th century.
Architecture
A number of notable architects worked in Detroit, including D. H. Burnham & Company; Donaldson and Meier; McKim, Mead, and White; Smith, Hinchman, and Grylls (and Wirt C. Rowland); and Minoru Yamasaki. However, Albert Kahn deserves special recognition for the scope and variety of his work in the city, and the number of Kahn-buildings buildings listed in the National Register. Kahn designed large industrial buildings such as the Highland Park Ford Plant (1908) in nearby Highland Park (a National Historic Landmark), Fisher Body Plant 21 (1921) in the Piquette Avenue Industrial Historic District, and his addition to the Frederick Stearns Building (1906).
Kahn's output extended to a range of building types, notably office buildings such as the General Motors Building (1919) and the Fisher Building (1928) — both National Historic Landmarks — as well as the Edwin S. George Building (1908), the Vinton Building (1916), the S. S. Kresge World Headquarters (1928), the Griswold Building (1929), and a string of banks and highrises in the Detroit Financial District. Kahn also designed private homes (the Bernard Ginsburg House, 1898; the Albert Kahn House, 1906; and homes in Boston-Edison, Rosedale Park, and Indian Village), apartment and hotel buildings (the Palms Apartments, 1903; the Addison Hotel in the Midtown Woodward Historic District, 1905, Garden Court Apartments, 1915; and 1001 Covington in the Palmer Park Apartment Building Historic District, 1925), churches (the 1903 Temple Beth-El; the 1923 Temple Beth-El; and additions on the First Congregational Church, 1921), and theatres (the National Theatre, 1911).
Current listings
Downtown and Midtown
Other neighborhoods
[7] | Name on the Register[8] | Image | Date listed[9] | Location | Neighborhood | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alden Park Towers | (#85002933) |
8100 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°21′05″N 82°59′40″W / 42.351389°N 82.994444°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Alden Park Towers were built in 1922 south of Jefferson to take advantage of the natural beauty of the Detroit River. This structure is one of the few large apartment buildings constructed in Detroit. | |
2 | Alger Theater | (#05000719) |
16451 E. Warren Ave. 42°24′13″N 82°56′14″W / 42.403611°N 82.937222°W |
East Side | The Art Moderne Alger Theater is one of only two remaining intact and unchanged neighborhood theaters in the city of Detroit (the second being the Redford Theatre). The theater is owned by Friends of the Alger Theater, a non profit organization dedicated to refurbishing and reopening the theater. | |
3 | Amity Lodge No. 335 Temple — Spiritual Israel Church and Its Army Temple | (#14001011) |
9375 Amity St. 42°21′52″N 82°59′13″W / 42.364401°N 82.986913°W |
East Side | This building was constructed in 1911 for the Amity Lodge No. 335 of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. It was used by Odd Fellow lodges and other fraternal organizations until 1960, when it became the headquarters of the Spiritual Israel Church and Its Army, a predominantly African American denomination. | |
4 | Antietam Avenue Bridge | (#00000114) |
Antietam St. over the Grand Trunk Railroad line 42°20′43″N 83°02′05″W / 42.345278°N 83.034722°W |
Eastern Market Area | The Antietam Street bridge (along with the nearby Chestnut Street bridge) was built in the late 1920s and early 1930s as part of Detroit's program to separate railroad and street grades. It runs over what was once the Grand Trunk Railroad, and is now the Dequindre Cut. The bridge was demolished due to structural deficiencies. | |
5 | Arden Park-East Boston Historic District | (#82002891) |
Arden Park and E. Boston Aves. between Woodward and Oakland Aves. 42°23′19″N 83°04′49″W / 42.388611°N 83.080278°W |
North End | The Arden Park-East Boston Historic District was platted in the 1890s east of Woodward in what was then the far northern reaches of Detroit. The neighborhood was platted with large lots to attract wealthier residents of Detroit; some of the neighborhood's first residents included Frederick Fisher, John Dodge, and J.L. Hudson. The neighborhood, along with nearby Boston-Edison (also on the register) remained a premier address for residential living in Detroit. | |
6 | Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church | (#91001020) |
13770 Gratiot Ave. 42°25′40″N 82°58′52″W / 42.427778°N 82.981111°W |
East Side | This Roman Catholic parish was started in 1830 by German immigrants. The church is known as the Assumption Grotto Church, due to the popularity of the grotto, completed in 1881, which was built as a replica of the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Lourdes in France. The church complex includes the grotto, a 1929 church, a rectory, convent, and cemetery. | |
7 | Edmund Atkinson School | (#10000635) |
4900 E. Hildale St. 42°25′44″N 83°03′15″W / 42.428789°N 83.054067°W |
East Side | The Edmund Atkinson School was built as an elementary school in 1927. Detroit Public Schools closed the building in 2007, and in 2010 sold it to National Heritage Academy for $600,000. The building has reopened as Legacy Charter Academy. | |
8 | John N. Bagley House | (#85002934) |
2921 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′27″N 83°01′03″W / 42.340833°N 83.0175°W |
Jefferson Corridor | This two-and-one-half-story structure is still one of the finest of Detroit's Richardsonian Romanesque houses. Built of dark brick and brown stone, it has a massive gable roof and a tower with conical roof. The facade contains multiple surface and window treatments, including sculptural elements by Julius Melchers around the entrance. | |
9 | Belle Isle | (#74000999) |
Detroit River 42°20′32″N 82°58′46″W / 42.342222°N 82.979444°W |
Jefferson Corridor | Belle Isle is a 982-acre (3.97 km2) island park in the Detroit River, home to the Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory, the Detroit Yacht Club, the Detroit Boat Club, the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, a Coast Guard post, and a municipal golf course. It is the largest island park in the United States. | |
10 | Boston-Edison Historic District | (#75000965) |
Roughly bounded by Edison St., Woodward and Linwood Aves. and Glynn Ct. 42°22′54″N 83°05′50″W / 42.381667°N 83.097222°W |
North End | The Boston-Edison Historic District is a historic neighborhood consisting of over 900 homes. Historically significant residents include Henry Ford, James Couzens, Horace Rackham, Peter E. Martin, C. Harold Wills, Clarence W. Avery, Sebastian S. Kresge, and Clarence Burton. It is one of the largest residential historic districts in the nation. | |
11 | Joseph Campau House | (#85002935) |
2910 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′23″N 83°01′07″W / 42.339722°N 83.018611°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Joseph Campau House, built on land that was originally part of the Joseph Campau farm, is one of the oldest residences in Detroit. The house is a simply constructed two-story house with a symmetrical three-bay facade. | |
12 | Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament | |
(#82002894) |
9844-9854 Woodward Ave. 42°23′18″N 83°05′06″W / 42.388333°N 83.085°W |
North End | The Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament is the home of the Archdiocese of Detroit since its inception in 1938. Construction of the church started in 1913, but proceeded rather slowly. The interior was finished in 1930, and the exterior was not finished until 1951 with the construction of the towers. |
13 | Central Woodward Christian Church | (#82002896) |
9000 Woodward Ave. 42°22′54″N 83°04′50″W / 42.381667°N 83.080556°W |
North End | This church was built by the Disciples of Christ in Detroit, in the mid-1920s as their second church in Detroit. In the 1970s, the congregation migrated into the suburbs, and the church was sold to the Little Rock Missionary Baptist Church. | |
14 | Chateau Frontenac Apartments | (#91000213) |
10410 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°21′47″N 82°58′43″W / 42.363056°N 82.978611°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Chateau Frontenac was an eight-story apartment building constructed from buff brick, with off-white terra cotta details and a hipped roof of green Spanish tile. It has been demolished. | |
15 | Alexander Chene House | (#85002936) |
2681 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′21″N 83°01′17″W / 42.339167°N 83.021389°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Chene House was one of the few examples of Federal architecture in Detroit. It was built in 1850 by Alexander Chene on land which had been granted to the Chene family by Louis XIV of France in 1707. The home was demolished in April 1991; an IHOP was built in its place. | |
16 | Chestnut Street-Grand Trunk Railroad | (#00000115) |
Chestnut St. over Grand Trunk Railroad 42°20′41″N 83°02′03″W / 42.344722°N 83.034167°W |
Eastern Market Area | The Chestnut Street bridge (along with the nearby Antietam Street bridge) was built in the late 1920s/early 1930s as part of Detroit's program to separate railroad and street grades. It runs over what was once the Grand Trunk Railroad, and is now the Dequindre Cut. | |
17 | Christ Church, Detroit | (#71000423) |
960 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°19′57″N 83°02′05″W / 42.3325°N 83.034722°W |
Jefferson Corridor | This Episcopalian church, constructed in 1863, is the oldest Protestant church in Michigan which is still located on its original site. The church is built in an American Gothic style, using limestone and sandstone; a massive belfry with a squared-off Germanic roof dominates the front facade. All interior woodwork, save the roof, is made from local butternut. There are two Tiffany windows in the church, with more windows designed by other famous glass companies. | |
18 | Elizabeth Cleveland Intermediate School | (#15000702) |
13322 Conant St. 42°24′44″N 83°03′29″W / 42.412332°N 83.058020°W |
East Side | This school, designed by Donaldson and Meier, is an excellent example of Collegiate Gothic style, with no alteration to its exterior since its construction in 1927. The building was used as a Detroit Public School until 2009, and now houses the Frontier International Academy. | |
19 | Thomas M. Cooley High School | |
(#10000651) |
15055 Hubbell St. 42°24′02″N 83°11′28″W / 42.400461°N 83.191217°W |
West Side | This three-story, Mediterranean Revival school, named for Michigan Supreme Court chief justice Thomas M. Cooley opened in 1928. It was closed in 2010. |
20 | Corktown Historic District | (#78001517) |
Roughly bounded by Lodge Freeway, Porter, Trumbull, Bagley, Rosa Parks Boulevard, and Michigan Ave. 42°19′46″N 83°04′27″W / 42.329444°N 83.074167°W |
Corktown – Woodbridge | Corktown is the oldest surviving neighborhood in Detroit, dating to the 1850s. The name comes from the Irish immigrants who settled there; they were predominantly from County Cork. The neighborhood is primarily residential, but the district does include some commercial buildings, mostly along Michigan Avenue. | |
21 | Crescent Brass and Pin Company Building | (#03000067) |
5766 Trumbull Ave. 42°21′32″N 83°04′56″W / 42.358889°N 83.082222°W |
West Side | This building was originally constructed in 1905 for a firm that made radiator chaplets, and was enlarged in several stages in 1916, 1917, 1924, and the early 1950s. The company ceased operations in Detroit in the 1980s. The building has been refurbished into lofts, and is now known as the Research Lofts on Trumbull. | |
22 | Croul-Palms House | (#83003790) |
1394 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′01″N 83°01′55″W / 42.333611°N 83.031944°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Croul-Palms House is named after its first two owners, Jerome Croul and Francis Palms. The house is an excellent example of Queen Anne architecture. | |
23 | Edwin Denby High School | |
(#04001581) |
12800 Kelly Rd. 42°25′33″N 82°57′26″W / 42.425833°N 82.957222°W |
East Side | Denby High School is named after Edwin C. Denby, an attorney, former Michigan legislator and Secretary of the Navy during the administration of Warren G. Harding. The Art Deco building features nautical themes. |
24 | Detroit Naval Armory | (#94000662) |
7600 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′55″N 82°59′51″W / 42.348611°N 82.9975°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Detroit Naval Armory, also known as the R. Thornton Brodhead Armory, was constructed as a training facility for the Michigan "naval militias", the forerunner of present-day Navy and Marine Corps Reserve units. During the Great Depression, the Works Progress Administration funded numerous artistic additions to the armory; this collection of WPA art is the largest collection of federally funded Depression-era artwork of any building in the state. | |
25 | Detroit Yacht Club | (#11000309) |
1 Riverbank Rd., Belle Isle 42°20′56″N 82°58′25″W / 42.348889°N 82.973611°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Detroit Yacht Club is the largest yacht club in the United States. Its clubhouse was designed by architect George Mason in a Mediterranean Revival style. | |
26 | Duane Doty School | (#10000654) |
10225 3rd St. 42°23′12″N 83°05′33″W / 42.386594°N 83.092406°W |
North End | The Duane Doty School, built in 1908, was named after a former Superintendent of Schools for Detroit. | |
27 | Dry Dock Engine Works-Detroit Dry Dock Company Complex | |
(#09000680) |
1801–1803 and 1900 Atwater St. 42°19′59″N 83°01′37″W / 42.333056°N 83.026944°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The complex includes a cluster of six buildings (also known as the Globe Trading Company Building) and a dry dock along the river; these structures are the remnants of a once-thriving maritime construction trade. The machine shop is significant as an early industrial building with structural steel frame and curtain walls. |
28 | East Grand Boulevard Historic District | (#99001468) |
E. Grand Boulevard, between E. Jefferson Ave. and Mack Ave. 42°21′12″N 83°00′22″W / 42.353333°N 83.006111°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The East Grand Boulevard Historic District includes a few moderate-sized apartment buildings and numerous large homes constructed primarily between 1900 and 1925. The apartment buildings in the district include the El Tovar Apartments, Saint Paul Manor Apartments, and the Kingston Arms Apartments. | |
29 | Eastern Market Historic District | |
(#78001518) |
Bounded by Gratiot Ave., Riopelle, Rivard, and Division Sts.; also roughly bounded by Gratiot Ave., Riopelle St., Wilkins St., the Grand Trunk Railroad line, and Division St. 42°20′44″N 83°02′22″W / 42.345556°N 83.039444°W |
Eastern Market Area | Eastern market, established in the 1850s, is the largest historic public market district in the United States. The district houses food wholesaling and processing businesses as well as public market sheds. The second set of boundaries represents an increase added on 2007-02-01. |
30 | Eastside Historic Cemetery District | (#82000550) |
Bounded by Elmwood and Mt. Elliot Aves., Lafayette and Waterloo Sts. 42°20′59″N 83°01′05″W / 42.349722°N 83.018056°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Eastside Historic Cemetery District consists of three separate cemeteries: Mount Elliott Cemetery (Catholic, established 1841), Elmwood Cemetery (Protestant, established 1846), and the Lafayette Street Cemetery (Jewish, established 1850), spreading over 150 acres (0.61 km2) in total. The cemeteries are notable for the monuments, landscaping, and notable individuals interred there. | |
31 | Eighth Precinct Police Station | (#74001001) |
4150 Grand River 42°20′42″N 83°04′46″W / 42.345°N 83.0795°W |
Corktown – Woodbridge | The Eighth Precinct Police Station is the second-oldest police building in Detroit. The station is made up of two, two-story structures with a single-story arcade between. The main building was used as office space while the other building was used as a garage. The building currently houses Phoenix Group Consultants. | |
32 | El Tovar Apartments | (#91000214) |
320 E. Grand Boulevard 42°21′12″N 83°00′20″W / 42.353333°N 83.005556°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The 73-apartment El Tovar Apartment building is an excellent example of Spanish Moorish/Art Deco style. It is located within the East Grand Boulevard Historic District. | |
33 | Engine House No. 11 | (#78001519) |
2737 Gratiot Ave. 42°21′16″N 83°01′53″W / 42.354444°N 83.031389°W |
East Side | Engine House No. 11 is the oldest remaining fire house in the city of Detroit. It was organized in 1884 with horse-drawn equipment, and converted to motorized equipment in 1911. The building was used as a fire house until 1972. | |
34 | Engine House No. 18 | (#95001368) |
3812 Mt. Elliott Ave. 42°21′47″N 83°01′21″W / 42.363056°N 83.0225°W |
East Side | Engine House No. 18 is the third oldest existing (and the oldest operating) fire station in Detroit. It was built in 1892 with two first-floor engine bays. | |
35 | First Baptist Church of Detroit | (#82002898) |
8601 Woodward Ave. 42°22′44″N 83°04′47″W / 42.378889°N 83.079722°W |
North End | The First Baptist Church congregation was founded in 1827. This building was constructed in 1910 as congregants moved out of the downtown area. In 1957, with the congregation again on the move, First Baptist sold the building to the Peoples Community Church, who remain in the building. | |
36 | Fisher and New Center Buildings | |
(#80001922) |
7430 2nd Ave. and 3011 W. Grand Boulevard 42°22′11″N 83°04′39″W / 42.369722°N 83.0775°W |
New Center Area | The Fisher and New Center Buildings as a pair are an architecturally significant complex demonstrating some of the finest craftsmanship and artistry in Art Deco–style buildings. Both were funded by the Fisher brothers (of Fisher Body) and designed by Albert Kahn. The New Center building is now known as the Albert Kahn Building. |
37 | Fisher Building | (#07000847) |
3011 West Grand Boulevard 42°22′09″N 83°04′37″W / 42.369028°N 83.076922°W |
New Center Area | Built in 1927 by the Fisher brothers, this skyscraper is one of the greatest works by architect Albert Kahn. The Fishers spent lavishly to make this Art Deco masterpiece a monumental gift to Detroit and one of the most finely detailed major commercial buildings in the United States.[10] | |
38 | Henry Ford Hospital | (#13000671) |
2799 West Grand Boulevard 42°22′02″N 83°05′03″W / 42.367120°N 83.084204°W |
West Side | Henry Ford Hospital was opened in 1915 primarily through the efforts of Henry Ford. The main hospital dates from 1917. | |
39 | Ford Piquette Avenue Plant | |
(#02000041) |
461 Piquette Ave. 42°22′07″N 83°03′56″W / 42.368611°N 83.065556°W |
New Center Area | The Ford Piquette Avenue Plant is a New England mill-style building, built by the Ford Motor Company in 1904. The building is where the Model T was designed and first built. Ford moved out in 1910, selling the building to Studebaker the following year. It is currently operated as a museum, the Model T Automotive Heritage Complex. |
40 | Fort Street–Pleasant Street and Norfolk & Western Railroad Viaduct | (#00000116) |
Fort St. over Pleasant St. and the Norfolk Southern railroad line 42°17′04″N 83°08′54″W / 42.284444°N 83.148333°W |
Southwest Detroit | This Fort Street bridge was by far the largest and most ambitious structure included in the 1920s grade separation plan, where major streets and rail lines were separated with a series of bridges and subways. Fort Street was, at the time, designated a "superhighway", requiring the bridge to be 80 feet (24 m) in width; the tracks underneath required a 2,800 feet (850 m) span. | |
41 | Fort Wayne | |
(#71000425) |
6053 W. Jefferson Ave. 42°17′49″N 83°05′45″W / 42.296944°N 83.095833°W |
Southwest Detroit | Fort Wayne is Detroit's third fort, after Fort Detroit and Fort Lernoult. The original star fort and barracks at Fort Wayne was constructed in 1845-48. It served as a mustering center and garrison post from the Civil War though the Vietnam War. Later buildings were added outside the star fort, including officer's homes, a guard post, hospital, additional barracks, and other buildings. |
42 | Garden Court Apartments | (#85002937) |
2900 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′22″N 83°01′09″W / 42.339444°N 83.019167°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Garden Court Apartments were constructed for J. Harrington Walker (of Hiram Walker & Sons) in 1915. Walker lived across the street from the Garden Court; when the building was completed, he moved into one of the apartments. The nine-story building originally housed 32 very large luxury apartments. | |
43 | James A. Garfield School | (#84001857) |
840 Waterman St. 42°18′23″N 83°06′33″W / 42.306389°N 83.109167°W |
Southwest Detroit | The James A. Garfield School is one of the oldest existing schools in the city of Detroit, as well as one of the least altered. The school, named for president James A. Garfield, was designed in 1896; in 1907, the name of the building was changed to honor Frank H. Beard, the director of the Springwells school board for 17 years. | |
44 | General Motors Building | (#78001520) |
3044 W. Grand Boulevard 42°22′07″N 83°04′32″W / 42.368611°N 83.075556°W |
New Center Area | The 15-story General Motors Building was designed in 1919 by Albert Kahn, and used until 1996 as the headquarters of General Motors Corporation. The building, currently known as Cadillac Place, is now leased by the State of Michigan. | |
45 | General Motors Research Laboratory | (#05000713) |
485-495 Milwaukee 42°22′05″N 83°04′30″W / 42.368056°N 83.075°W |
New Center Area | This building, designed by Albert Kahn, was a former laboratory building for General Motors, which operated from the General Motors Building across West Milwaukee Street. General Motors recently donated it to Detroit's College for Creative Studies. The building is also known as the Argonaut Building. | |
46 | Gethsemane Evangelical Lutheran Church | (#82002900) |
4461 28th St. 42°20′16″N 83°06′36″W / 42.337778°N 83.11°W |
West Side | The Gethsemane Lutheran Church is a wooden, High Victorian Gothic chapel, built in 1891 by the Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church. The congregation used the building until 1976, when they went defunct. The building was purchased by the Motor City Missionary Baptist Church in 1978. | |
47 | Grand Riviera Theater | |
(#82002901) |
9222 Grand River Ave. 42°21′58″N 83°07′51″W / 42.366111°N 83.130833°W |
West Side | The Grand Riviera was built in 1925, at a cost of over one million dollars. It seated over three thousand patrons, and was the first "atmospheric" theater in Detroit, using lighting, special effects, and interior design to make the audience feel like they were sitting outdoors in a garden. Due to structural deterioration, the Grand Riviera Theater was demolished in 1997. |
48 | Greenfield Union School | (#10000662) |
420 W. 7 Mile Rd. 42°25′57″N 83°06′28″W / 42.4325°N 83.107778°W |
Palmer Park Area | The Greenfield Union School was built for $40,000 in 1914 in what was then Greenfield Township. In 1916, the area was annexed by the city of Detroit. The school was nominated to the NRHP as part of the Public Schools of Detroit MPS. | |
49 | Hibbard Apartment Building | (#85002938) |
8905 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°21′26″N 82°59′14″W / 42.357222°N 82.987222°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Hibbard Apartment Building is a nine-story structure with 40 units, designed in a handsome Renaissance Revival style by Robert O. Derrick, who also designed the National Historic Landmark Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. | |
50 | Hook and Ladder House No. 5-Detroit Fire Department Repair Shop | (#97001481) |
3400-3434 Russell 42°21′04″N 83°02′35″W / 42.351111°N 83.043056°W |
Eastern Market Area | The Hook and Ladder House No. 5 and the Detroit Fire Department Repair Shop are two conjoined structures originally built for the Detroit Fire Department. The Hook and Ladder House was built in 1888, the Repair Shop in 1917. The two are now the Sala Thai Restaurant and the FD Lofts. | |
51 | Hunter House | (#74001002) |
3985 Trumbull Ave. 42°20′43″N 83°04′30″W / 42.345278°N 83.0750°W |
Corktown – Woodbridge | In 1890, William Northwood, the co-founder of the Howard-Northwood Malt Manufacturing Company, commissioned architect George F. Depew to design this home. The structure was completed in 1891 at a cost of $13,500. In the 1960s, the house was converted into a church. In the early 1970s, the home was purchased by the Hunter family, who converted it back to a private residence. This house is also known as the Northwood House or the Northwood-Hunter House. It is currently operated as the Woodbridge Star, a bed and breakfast. | |
52 | Hurlbut Memorial Gate | |
(#75000967) |
E. Jefferson at Cadillac Boulevard 42°21′39″N 82°58′53″W / 42.360833°N 82.981389°W |
Jefferson Corridor | Hurlbut Memorial Gate, named for Detroit grocer and Water Commissioner Chauncey Hurlbut (1803–1885), marks the entrance to Waterworks Park, the main site of Detroit's municipal water system. The gate is a handsome limestone Beaux Arts design. |
53 | Indian Village Historic District | |
(#72000667) |
Bounded by Mack, Burns, Jefferson, and Seminole Aves. 42°21′40″N 82°59′48″W / 42.361111°N 82.996667°W |
Jefferson Corridor | Indian Village has a number of architecturally significant homes built in the early 20th century. Many of the homes were built by prominent architects such as Albert Kahn, Louis Kamper and William Stratton for some of the area's most prominent citizens such as Edsel Ford. |
54 | Jefferson Hall | (#85002939) |
1404 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′06″N 83°01′50″W / 42.335°N 83.030556°W |
Jefferson Corridor | Jefferson Hall was a four-story "garden court" style apartment, where apartments are arranged in a U-shape around a central courtyard. It has been demolished. | |
55 | Jefferson-Chalmers Historic Business District | (#04000598) |
E. Jefferson between Eastlawn and Alter 42°22′26″N 82°56′34″W / 42.373889°N 82.942778°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Historic Jefferson-Chalmers Business District, running eight blocks along Jefferson Avenue, is one of a few early 20th-century neighborhood commercial districts that still survive in Detroit. | |
56 | The Kean | (#85002940) |
8925 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°21′27″N 82°59′12″W / 42.3575°N 82.986667°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Kean is a strikingly Art Deco apartment building designed by Charles Noble in 1931. The building is sixteen stories high, containing four apartments per floor. It was the last of the large apartment building built along East Jefferson before the Great Depression depressed development. | |
57 | Kingston Arms Apartments | (#99000433) |
296 E. Grand Boulevard 42°21′16″N 83°00′28″W / 42.354444°N 83.007778°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Kingston Arms is a 4 1⁄2-story apartment building with 24 apartments, and is a representative example of the rise of middle-class apartment buildings in pre-Depression era Detroit. It is located in the East Grand Boulevard Historic District. | |
58 | Lee Plaza Hotel | (#81000319) |
2240 W. Grand Boulevard 42°21′34″N 83°06′06″W / 42.359444°N 83.101667°W |
West Side | First built as an ornate high rise hotel along West Grand Boulevard, Lee Plaza was an upscale apartment with hotel services. Decorated with sculpture and tile outside, the structure rivaled the Book-Cadillac Hotel and Statler Hotel for architectural notice in Detroit during the 1920s. The structure is currently vacant. | |
59 | Nellie Leland School | (#02000044) |
1395 Antietam St. 42°20′28″N 83°02′15″W / 42.341111°N 83.0375°W |
Eastern Market Area | The Nellie Leland School is a school building, originally built to serve handicapped children. It is named after the wife of Henry M. Leland, a Detroit automotive pioneer who founded both the Cadillac and Lincoln automotive companies and a philanthropist who focused on helping those sick with tuberculosis. | |
60 | Manchester Apartments | (#85002941) |
2016 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′10″N 83°01′37″W / 42.336111°N 83.026944°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Manchester Apartments is typical of medium-scale middle-class apartment buildings built in Detroit in general and along East Jefferson in particular in the first decade of the 20th century. The details of the exterior, including corner blocks around window groupings, brick quoins, and patterns above the cornice demonstrate the rise of modernism. | |
61 | Metropolitan United Methodist Church | (#82002904) |
8000 Woodward Ave. 42°22′29″N 83°04′32″W / 42.374722°N 83.075556°W |
New Center Area | The Metropolitan United Methodist Church congregation was founded in 1901 with the merger of two earlier congregations. The church building was constructed in 1922 on land donated by one of the congregants, Sebastian S. Kresge. By the mid-1930s, the congregation was the largest local church in the Methodist world. | |
62 | Michigan Bell and Western Electric Warehouse | (#09001069) |
882 Oakman Boulevard 42°24′10″N 83°06′48″W / 42.402692°N 83.113256°W |
North End | This structure was built in 1929-30 as a warehouse, garage, and office space for Western Electric. Western Electric used the building as its Michigan headquarters until 1958, after which it was used by Michigan Bell and its Yellow Pages operation until 1999. | |
63 | Michigan State Fair Riding Coliseum, Dairy Cattle Building, and Agricultural Building | |
(#80001925) |
Michigan State Fairgrounds 42°26′36″N 83°07′03″W / 42.443333°N 83.1175°W |
Palmer Park Area | The Michigan State Fair Riding Coliseum, Dairy Cattle Building, and Agricultural Building are three buildings located on the grounds of the Michigan State Fair. They were built two years apart in 1922, 1924, and 1926. All three are similar in appearance, being Neo-Classical Revival, white stuccoed buildings sitting on high red brick foundations. |
64 | Mies van der Rohe Residential District, Lafayette Park | |
(#96000809) |
Roughly bounded by Lafayette Ave., Rivard, Antietam, and Orleans Sts. 42°20′31″N 83°02′08″W / 42.341944°N 83.035556°W |
Jefferson Corridor | This 78-acre (320,000 m2) urban renewal project was planned by Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig Hilberseimer and Alfred Caldwell. It is the largest collection of his work in the world, centered around a landscaped, 19-acre (7.7 ha) park with no through traffic, in which these and other low-rise apartment buildings are sited. The apartment buildings are classic examples of Mies' International Style, with their simplicity, clean proportions, and cladding of tinted glass and aluminum. |
65 | Sidney D. Miller Junior High and High School | (#10000689) |
2322 DuBois St. 42°20′54″N 83°01′54″W / 42.348272°N 83.031711°W |
East Side | Miller Middle School opened in 1921 as a Junior High. However, as the percentage of African-Americans in the Black Bottom neighborhood increased, white parents of students at nearby Eastern High School complained. In response the Detroit School Board converted Miller to a senior high school in 1933. A liberal school transfer policy allowed White students zoned to Miller to attend Eastern, which effectively segregated students, leaving Miller as the de facto African-American High school. In 1955, steps were taken to end segregation in Detroit schools, and in 1957 the building was converted back into a middle school. It remained a middle school for 50 years, and was closed in 2007. | |
66 | Moross House | (#72000669) |
1460 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′05″N 83°01′53″W / 42.334722°N 83.031389°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Moross House was built in the 1840s by brickmaker Christopher Moross; it was one of two built by Moross on the site. It is the oldest surviving brick house in the city. | |
67 | Nacirema Club | (#11000867) |
6118 30th St. 42°20′59″N 83°06′58″W / 42.349722°N 83.116111°W |
West Side | The Nacirema Club, founded in 1922, is the first African-American social club in Michigan. During its heyday, this men's club was the social center of the surrounding neighborhood. The name is "American" spelled backwards. | |
68 | New Amsterdam Historic District | (#01000570) |
435, 450 Amsterdam;440, 41-47 Burroughs; 5911-5919, 6050-6160 Cass; 6100-6200 Second; 425 York 42°21′56″N 83°04′21″W / 42.365556°N 83.0725°W |
New Center Area | The New Amsterdam Historic District contains a mix of industrial, commercial, and government/utility buildings constructed primarily near the start of the 20th century. Industry in the district was enabled by the construction of major railroad infrastructure, known as the Milwaukee Junction, in the 1890s. The district includes the original Cadillac assembly plant. | |
69 | New Center Commercial Historic District | (#16000218) |
Woodward Ave.-Baltimore St. to Grand Blvd. 42°22′10″N 83°04′22″W / 42.369322°N 83.072658°W |
New Center Area | This district contains fourteen contributing structures, built the late 1880s to 1942. The structures are one to three-story commercial masonry buildings, constructed in a range of architectural styles, including Commercial style, Neoclassical, Art Deco and Moderne. The district is representative of many of the local commercial districts in Detroit which sprang up at the intersections of major streets. However, the New Center area has retained more commercial vitality than many other neighborhood commercial districts, and the buildings within the district maintain a higher degree of integrity. | |
70 | Philetus W. Norris House | (#91001982) |
17815 Mt. Elliott Ave. 42°25′30″N 83°02′19″W / 42.425°N 83.038611°W |
East Side | The Philetus W. Norris House was built in 1873 by Philetus W. Norris, who went on to become the second superintendent of Yellowstone National Park. Norris founded the town of "Norris" (later "North Detroit") and built his house there. The town was later subsumed into the city of Detroit; Norris's house is one of the few original structures left in the area. | |
71 | North Woodward Congregational Church | (#82002905) |
8715 Woodward Ave. 42°22′47″N 83°04′49″W / 42.379722°N 83.080278°W |
North End | The North Woodward Congregational Church was built in stages, with a small chapel on the site of the present church constructed as early as 1907; the main sanctuary was built in 1911–1912 and additional sections were added later, with the most recent, the church house, being added in 1929. By the 1950s, the congregation had substantially moved out of Detroit, and the building was sold to St. John's Christian Methodist Episcopal Church. | |
72 | Palmer Park Apartment Building Historic District | (#83000895) |
Roughly bounded by Pontchartrain Boulevard, McNichols Rd. and Covington Dr.; also approximately bounded by Covington Dr., Pontchartrain Boulevard, Woodward Ave., and W. McNichols Rd. 42°25′11″N 83°06′37″W / 42.419722°N 83.110278°W |
Palmer Park Area | The land that this historic district sits on was once the estate of Thomas Palmer. In 1925, Walter Briggs hired Albert Kahn to design an apartment building in the area (this building, at 1001 Covington, was converted to condos in 2005). Forty buildings total were constructed in the district by multiple architects, including Weidmaier and Gay, Robert West, and William Kapp. Most of the buildings were constructed in the 1920s and 1930s, but development continued until 1965. The second set of boundaries is from the boundary increase of February 11, 2005. | |
73 | Palmer Woods Historic District | |
(#83000896) |
Roughly bounded by Seven Mile Rd., Woodward Ave., and Strathcona Dr. 42°26′05″N 83°07′28″W / 42.434722°N 83.124444°W |
Palmer Park Area | Palmer Woods Historic District is named after Thomas W. Palmer, a prominent citizen of 19th-century Detroit and a United States Senator; the district sits on land originally owned by Palmer. The neighborhood was platted in the mid-1910s, and most of the homes were constructed between about 1917 and 1929. The developer hired landscape architect Ossian Cole Simonds to design the layout. Cole laid out a subdivision with gently curving streets, capitalizing on the natural beauty of the area and creating a parklike atmosphere in the neighborhood. Curbs are nonexistent, minimizing the transition from street to lawn and discouraging pedestrian traffic, and every lot in the neighborhood had a unique shape. |
74 | The Palms | |
(#85002942) |
1001 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′00″N 83°02′04″W / 42.333333°N 83.034444°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Palms was one of the first buildings in the US to use reinforced concrete as one of its major construction materials. The building was named after Francis Palms, a major investor, who lived close by (in the Croul-Palms House). The original floor plans called for apartments that occupied an entire wing of the building, consisting of a double parlor in the front and a dining room with fireplace to the back separated by bedrooms, libraries, baths and more. |
75 | Parke-Davis and Company Pharmaceutical Company Plant | (#85002445) |
Bounded by Joseph Campau Ave., Wight St., and McDougal Ave. 42°20′13″N 83°00′59″W / 42.336944°N 83.016389°W |
Jefferson Corridor | In the 1870s, Parke-Davis moved to the riverfront property this complex now occupies. Between 1891 and 1955, the company expanded the complex to cover over 14 acres (57,000 m2), building the 26 buildings that still stand (including the National Historic Landmark Parke-Davis Research Laboratory). These buildings range from brick mill buildings built around the start of the 20th century to reinforced concrete buildings constructed after 1920 and range from one to six stories in height. It is also known as Stroh River Place. | |
76 | Parke-Davis Research Laboratory | (#76001039) |
Joseph Campau St. at Detroit River 42°20′13″N 83°00′52″W / 42.336944°N 83.014444°W |
Jefferson Corridor | Also known as Building 55-Detroit Research. Built in 1902, this was the first industrial research laboratory in the U.S. established for the specific purpose of conducting pharmacological research, inaugurating the commercial pure science approach which has driven the rapid development of pharmaceutical products. Now known as the Omni Detroit Hotel at River Place. | |
77 | Arthur M. Parker House | (#85002943) |
8115 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°21′10″N 82°59′36″W / 42.352778°N 82.993333°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Arthur M. Parker House is a two-and-one-half-story house, faced with brick on the first story and stucco and half-timbering above. The house has a medieval character reinforced by irregular bays, though more restrained than the next-door Frederick K. Stearns House. | |
78 | Thomas A. Parker House | (#82000552) |
975 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°19′59″N 83°02′06″W / 42.333056°N 83.035°W |
Jefferson Corridor | Thomas Parker was a grocer and real estate speculator who commissioned Gorden W. Lloyd in 1868 to build what is now a rare example of a Gothic Revival house in Detroit. | |
79 | Pasadena Apartments | (#85002944) |
2170 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′12″N 83°01′34″W / 42.336667°N 83.026111°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The building is an early example of upper-class, multi-unit housing, and is one of the earliest of these structures to be built with reinforced concrete. The building was constructed at a time when newly wealthy families associated with Detroit's industrial boom were appearing, yet financing requirements for private homes were substantial enough that renting was a preferred option. | |
80 | Penn Central Station | |
(#75000969) |
2405 W. Vernor St. 42°19′42″N 83°04′41″W / 42.328333°N 83.078056°W |
Corktown – Woodbridge | The unfinished building began operating as Detroit's main passenger depot in 1913; it was constructed as part of a much larger project that involved the Michigan Central Railway Tunnel below the Detroit River for freight and passengers. The building was used for rail service until 1988, and is now abandoned. |
81 | Pewabic Pottery | (#71000430) |
10125 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°21′41″N 82°58′54″W / 42.361389°N 82.981667°W |
Jefferson Corridor | This 1907 building, designed by William Stratton, is the home of ceramic artist Mary Chase Perry Stratton's studio and production facilities. Her work in the Arts and Crafts movement raised the artistic standard of American pottery, and is featured in numerous prominent buildings and distinguished institutions. | |
82 | Pilgrim and Puritan Apartment Complex | (#14000514) |
9303–9333 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°21′34″N 82°59′04″W / 42.359492°N 82.984420°W |
Jefferson Corridor | Designed by Charles N. Agree in 1924, these two apartments provided housing for Detroit's growing professional and middle-class during a time when the surrounding area was being developed with luxury apartment buildings. | |
83 | Piquette Avenue Industrial Historic District | (#04000601) |
Roughly bounded by Woodward, Harper, Hastings and the Grand Trunk Western Railroad Line 42°22′05″N 83°03′57″W / 42.368056°N 83.065833°W |
New Center Area | The area along Piquette was an important center for automobile production in the early 20th century. Ford Motor Company, Studebaker, Cadillac, Dodge, and Regal Motor Car had plants in the area, as well as suppliers such as Fisher Body. In 1911, the two largest automobile producers in the world, Studebaker and Ford, were located next door to each other on Piquette. The district includes the National Historic Landmark Ford Piquette Avenue Plant. | |
84 | The Players | (#87000920) |
3321 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′32″N 83°00′51″W / 42.342222°N 83.014167°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1910 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. In 1925, Players Club member William E. Kapp designed a building to permanently house the club at a cost of $75,000. The building was two stories, elaborately decorated, and constructed of what was, at the time, a novel material: cinder blocks. The bed of Bloody Run Creek, where the Battle of Bloody Run took place between Chief Pontiac and British forces, lies underneath one corner of the building. | |
85 | Ponchartrain Apartments | (#85002945) |
1350 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′02″N 83°01′55″W / 42.333889°N 83.031944°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Ponchartrain Apartment building was a four-story red brick structure sitting atop a limestone foundation. The building has been demolished. | |
86 | Redford Theatre Building | (#85000171) |
17354 Lahser Ave. 42°25′02″N 83°15′27″W / 42.417222°N 83.2575°W |
West Side | The Redford Theatre opened in 1928 and has continuously operated since. The theatre's original 3 manual, 10 rank Barton theatre organ is still in place and operational. | |
87 | Louis G. Redstone Residential Historic District | (#14000024) |
19303, 19309, and 19315 Appoline St. 42°26′00″N 83°10′20″W / 42.433285°N 83.172159°W |
West Side | This district consists of three houses located in a row on Appoline Street, designed by architect Louis G. Redstone for himself, his brother, and his business partner. The houses exhibit fundamental characteristics of the International Style, including low hip roofs, corner windows, and curved walls. The design is distinctive in the use of reclaimed common red brick for the exterior, rather than the white stucco usually associated with the International style. | |
88 | River Terrace Apartments | (#09000204) |
7700 E. Jefferson St. 42°20′59″N 82°59′49″W / 42.34959°N 82.99695°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The River Terrace Apartments was built in 1939 and designed for middle-class tenants. It was one of the first two garden apartment complexes built in Michigan which used loan guarantees from the Federal Housing Administration, and the architectural style exemplifies the FHA standards at the time. | |
89 | Rosedale Park Historic District | (#06000587) |
Roughly bounded by Fenkell, Outer Dr. W, Grand River Ave., the Southfield Freeway, Glastonbury, Lyndon, Westwood Dr., 42°24′01″N 83°13′37″W / 42.400278°N 83.226944°W |
West Side | Construction in Rosedale Park was accomplished primarily in the 1920s and the late 1930s/early 1940s. houses were built in a multitude of styles, including English Tudor revival, Arts and Crafts, Bungalow, Colonial Revival, Dutch Colonial, American Foursquare, Prairie, but an English country esthetic seems to have been encouraged, and many homes have English Tudor details. | |
90 | Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church, Convent and Rectory | (#80001926) |
1000 Eliot St. 42°21′03″N 83°02′47″W / 42.350833°N 83.046389°W |
Eastern Market Area | Sacred Heart, built in 1875, was the third German Roman Catholic church constructed in Detroit. After World War I, the German population slowly moved from the area. In 1938, Sacred Heart was converted from a German parish to an African American parish. The congregation at this time measured approximately 1500 members, and they quickly utilized the school at Sacred Heart, graduating the first high school class in 1945. | |
91 | Sacred Heart Seminary | |
(#82000553) |
2701 W. Chicago Boulevard 42°22′28″N 83°06′41″W / 42.374444°N 83.111389°W |
West Side | Sacred Heart Major Seminary is a Catholic institution of higher learning associated with the Archdiocese of Detroit. The seminary building was built in 1923 in the English Tudor Gothic architectural style, with stained glass windows designed by Margaret Bouchez Cavanaugh. |
92 | St. Albertus Roman Catholic Church | |
(#78001522) |
4231 St. Aubin St. 42°21′36″N 83°02′31″W / 42.36°N 83.041944°W |
East Side | In 1871, St. Albertus Parish was organized with three hundred or so Polish families. A frame church was built in 1872. The parish grew enormously, and in 1882, construction was started on the present building. |
93 | Ste. Anne Roman Catholic Church Complex | |
(#76001040) |
Howard and Ste. Anne Sts. 42°19′15″N 83°04′36″W / 42.320833°N 83.076667°W |
Southwest Detroit | Ste. Anne de Detroit, founded July 26, 1701, is the second oldest continuously operating Roman Catholic parish in the United States. The current church was built in 1886, and contains some pieces from an earlier 1818 version of Ste. Anne's. The parish today has a largely Hispanic congregation. |
94 | St. Bonaventure Monastery | (#82000554) |
1740 Mt. Elliott Ave 42°21′04″N 83°00′52″W / 42.351111°N 83.014444°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The St. Bonaventure Monastery is a complex of religious buildings, built for the Capuchin Order of Franciscan monks. The friars operate a soup kitchen which, during the Great Depression, provided as many as 3,500 free meals per day. Father Solanus Casey, a Capuchin friar who acted as a porter at St. Bonaventure's, introduced as a candidate for sainthood in 1966. | |
95 | St. Boniface Roman Catholic Church | |
(#89000487) |
2356 Vermont Ave. 42°19′57″N 83°04′26″W / 42.3325°N 83.073889°W |
Corktown – Woodbridge | St. Boniface was built in 1873 to serve the German Roman Catholic church residing on the west side of Detroit. The parish was closed in 1989, and the building demolished a few years later. |
96 | St. Catherine of Siena Roman Catholic Church | (#91000389) |
4151 Seminole 42°22′17″N 83°00′23″W / 42.371389°N 83.006389°W |
East Side | The St. Catherine of Siena Parish complex consists of four architecturally significant buildings: the parish school (1913), convent (1926), rectory (1926), and the church itself (1929). All buildings are basically Romanesque in style, with some Byzantine elements. The church is now the Augustine and St. Monica Roman Catholic Church. | |
97 | St. Charles Borromeo Roman Catholic Parish Complex | (#89000488) |
Baldwin Ave. at St. Paul Ave. 42°21′18″N 83°00′07″W / 42.355°N 83.001944°W |
Jefferson Corridor | In 1886, a parish dedicated to St. Charles Borromeo was established to minister to the eastside area where an influx of Belgians had settled. As Detroit grew, the parish grew along with it, with French, German, Irish, Scotch, and English congregants in addition to the original Belgians. By 1920, the congregation numbered over 3000. | |
98 | St. John's-St. Luke's Evangelical Church | (#82002907) |
2120 Russell St. 42°20′36″N 83°02′17″W / 42.343333°N 83.038056°W |
Eastern Market Area | St. John's – St. Luke's is the oldest German Protestant church in Detroit, and was the base from which twelve other German Protestant churches in the city were formed. The church was originally constructed in 1874 from brick, but in 1915 the exterior was completely covered in Formstone, a cast concrete made to resemble limestone. | |
99 | St. Joseph's Episcopal Church | (#82002908) |
5930 Woodward Ave. 42°21′53″N 83°04′09″W / 42.364722°N 83.069167°W |
New Center Area | The church, built from 1893 to 1896 and originally named St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, is a massive rock-faced, cross-gable-roofed, sandstone, Romanesque Revival structure. In 1907, it was sold to a Catholic congregation. | |
100 | St. Joseph's Episcopal Church | (#82002909) |
8850 Woodward Ave. 42°22′52″N 83°04′47″W / 42.381111°N 83.079722°W |
North End | The church building is a typical Gothic structure with a narrow gabled nave and projecting side aisles. A large rose window faces Woodward, and a tall bell tower is to the south. The structure is now St. Matthew's-St. Joseph's Episcopal Church. | |
101 | St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church | |
(#72000670) |
1828 Jay St. 42°20′43″N 83°02′08″W / 42.345278°N 83.035556°W |
Eastern Market Area | St. Joseph's is a historic German Catholic parish; the current church was constructed in 1870-73. It is still in full operation today. |
102 | Saint Paul Manor Apartments | (#99000435) |
356 E. Grand Boulevard 42°21′13″N 83°00′21″W / 42.353611°N 83.005833°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Saint Paul Manor, situated in the East Grand Boulevard Historic District, was built as an upper-middle-class apartment building in 1925. | |
103 | St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Roman Catholic Church | (#89000788) |
5818 Dubois St. 42°22′19″N 83°02′49″W / 42.371944°N 83.046944°W |
East Side | In 1898, the parish of St. Stanislaus was established to relieve the overcrowding in the Polish congregation of at St. Albertus. In 1911, work was begun on a magnificent Baroque church with a lavish Beaux Arts interior, which was completed in 1913. The church is now used by the Promise Land Missionary Baptist Church. | |
104 | St. Theresa of Avila Roman Catholic Church | (#89000786) |
8666 Quincy Ave. 42°21′49″N 83°07′11″W / 42.363611°N 83.119722°W |
West Side | The St. Theresa of Avila Roman Catholic Parish Complex consists of the church, rectory, school, and convent. All of the buildings are essentially Neo-Romanesque in character, with Byzantine and Art Deco influences. They are constructed of dark red brick trimmed with Indiana limestone. | |
105 | St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church | (#89000785) |
8363-8383 Townsend Ave. 42°23′24″N 83°01′28″W / 42.39°N 83.024444°W |
East Side | St. Thomas the Apostle Parish was a Polish-American Roman Catholic parish founded in 1914, at the eastern edge of the predominantly Polish sections of Detroit. A church was constructed in 1923, and the parish had both a grade school and a high school. The church has been demolished, and the school currently serves as the St. Thomas Assessment Center for troubled youths. | |
106 | Ste. Claire (passenger steamboat) | |
(#79001177) |
Detroit 42°17′45″N 83°09′02″W / 42.295833°N 83.150556°W |
Wayne County, Michigan | Designed by naval architect Frank E. Kirby. Between 1910 and 1991, the Ste. Claire ferried passengers to Bois Blanc Island for the Detroit & Windsor Ferry Company.[11] The Ste. Claire and her sister ship, the Columbia were docked at downtown Detroit in 1979 when they were listed in the National Register. She was moved to Toledo, Ohio in 2003, but returned to Michigan a few years later and in 2016 is docked in the Rouge River in Detroit.[12] |
107 | Sibley House | (#71000432) |
976 Jefferson Ave. 42°19′59″N 83°02′06″W / 42.333°N 83.035°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Sibley house is a clapboard, side-gabled Greek Revival-style home, and is one of the oldest structures in Detroit. It was built by Sarah Sproat Sibley, widow of Solomon Sibley, in 1848. | |
108 | Frederic M. Sibley Lumber Company Office Building | (#91000329) |
6460 Kercheval Ave. 42°21′11″N 83°00′49″W / 42.353056°N 83.013611°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Frederic M. Sibley Lumber Company Office Building was built in a Neo-Classical style in 1925. At the time, the Sibley Lumber Company employed 400 people and was the second largest lumber firm in Detroit. | |
109 | Somerset Apartments | (#85002946) |
1523 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′07″N 83°01′47″W / 42.335278°N 83.029722°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Somerset Apartments were five interconnected rectangular buildings, each four stories, built in a row running rearward from Jefferson. It was an excellent example of high-quality middle-class residential architecture from the 1920s. It burned in late 2013 and was demolished in 2014. | |
110 | Frederick K. Stearns House | (#85002947) |
8109 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°21′07″N 82°59′42″W / 42.351944°N 82.995°W |
Jefferson Corridor | This house is a two-and-one-half-story house constructed from hollow tile for Frederick K. Stearns, founder of a pharmaceutical company. It is significant because of its fine medieval and Arts and Crafts design. | |
111 | Frederick Stearns Building | (#80001927) |
6533 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′45″N 83°00′24″W / 42.345833°N 83.006667°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Frederick Stearns Building is a pharmaceutical manufacturing plant, originally containing Stearns's production facilities as well as warehouses and white-collar offices. The first three stories of this building were constructed in 1899, the fourth floor was added later. A taller concrete addition, designed by Albert Kahn, was built around 1910. | |
112 | Ossian H. Sweet House | (#85000696) |
2905 Garland 42°22′13″N 82°59′03″W / 42.370278°N 82.984167°W |
East Side | In 1925, African-American physician Ossian Sweet moved into this house in what was then an all-white neighborhood. A hostile mob confronted Sweet and his friends, and after a standoff, someone in the house shot and killed one of the whites outside. A landmark trial, where attorney Clarence Darrow argued self-defense, resulted in a hung jury and no further prosecution of Sweet. | |
113 | Sweetest Heart of Mary Roman Catholic Church | |
(#78001523) |
4440 Russell St. 42°21′30″N 83°02′52″W / 42.358333°N 83.047778°W |
East Side | Sweetest Heart Of Mary is the largest Roman Catholic Church in Detroit. At the time of construction, Sweetest Heart was a Polish parish, which had split from St. Albertus parish, and established a new parish outside the jurisdiction of the mother church. The parish was later reconciled, and this impressive Gothic Revival church returned to the Roman Catholic fold. |
114 | Temple Baptist Church – King Solomon Baptist Church | (#15000159) |
6102 and 6125 14th St. 42°21′35″N 83°05′33″W / 42.359624°N 83.092633°W |
West Side | The church consists of two buildings: the original church, a Tudor Revival structure built in 1917, and the later church, an Art Deco building constructed in 1937. In 1934 Rev. J. Frank Norris began his tenure as pastor there. Sold in 1951 to King Solomon Baptist Church, it served as an important venue for Civil Rights leaders. | |
115 | Temple Beth-El | (#82002912) |
8801 Woodward Ave. 42°22′50″N 83°04′52″W / 42.380556°N 83.081111°W |
North End | This Albert Kahn-designed building was home to Detroit's Temple Beth El from 1922–1974. The building is now known as the Lighthouse Cathedral. | |
116 | Third Precinct Police Station | (#80001928) |
2200 Hunt St. 42°21′02″N 83°01′58″W / 42.350556°N 83.032778°W |
East Side | This police station is a well-preserved example of a late-19th-century Beaux Arts public building, and is significant for its role in the history of the Detroit police force. It was in use as a police station from 1896 until 1959. It is currently used as office space and is known as the Sun Center Building. | |
117 | Tiger Stadium | |
(#88003236) |
2121 Trumbull Ave. 42°19′57″N 83°04′08″W / 42.3325°N 83.068889°W |
Corktown – Woodbridge | The original site of Detroit Tigers baseball opened at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull in 1895 when owner George Vanderbeck opened Bennett Park. Successive owners enlarged the park, with Frank Navin increasing seating to 23,000 (renaming the park Navin Field) and Walter Briggs increasing it to 53,000 (renaming the park Briggs Stadium). In 1951, the name was changed to Tiger Stadium. The city demolished the original stadium on June 30, 2008. In 2000, a replacement debuted at Comerica Park. |
118 | Trinity Episcopal Church | |
(#80001929) |
1519 Martin Luther King Boulevard 42°20′29″N 83°04′22″W / 42.341389°N 83.072778°W |
Corktown – Woodbridge | Trinity Episcopal Church was built in 1893 by James E. Scripps, owner of the Detroit News. Scripps was born in London and developed a fascination with historic English churches; he commissioned Trinity to be in the English Gothic style. The exterior of the building boasts over two hundred carvings, including gargoyles that serve as water drains. In 2006, Trinity's congregation merged with Faith Memorial Lutheran to become Spirit of Hope. |
119 | Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church Complex | (#83000897) |
1345 Gratiot Ave. 42°20′34″N 83°02′23″W / 42.342778°N 83.039722°W |
Eastern Market Area | The Trinity congregation was originally a German-speaking congregation, formed in 1850 when members of St. Matthew's Lutheran Church broke away from the main body following the excommunication of another member. As the flow of German-speaking immigrants dried up, Trinity began offering English-language services. The current building was dedicated in 1931. | |
120 | Charles Trowbridge House | (#76001042) |
1380 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′01″N 83°01′58″W / 42.333611°N 83.032778°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Charles Trowbridge House, built in 1826, is the oldest known structure in the city of Detroit. Charles Christopher Trowbridge built the house and lived there until his death in 1883. It was originally built in a Greek Revival style, and later updated with Victorian elements. | |
121 | United States Immigration Station | (#13000322) |
333 Mount Elliott St. 42°20′36″N 83°00′37″W / 42.343232°N 83.010352°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The United States Immigration Station, now the Rosa Parks Federal Building, was originally constructed as nurse's housing for the Detroit Marine Hospital. When the Marine Hospital was moved, the Detroit Border Patrol Station was installed in the building. | |
122 | Vanity Ballroom Building | (#82000556) |
1024 Newport St. 42°22′42″N 82°57′01″W / 42.378333°N 82.950278°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Vanity Ballroom Building contains the last remaining intact ballroom of the multiple Detroit dance halls that hosted big bands in the 1930s-50s. It is built in a flamboyant Art Deco style with an Aztec theme. The 5,600-square-foot (520 m2) dance floor was built on springs, giving the dancers a "bounce" and they moved. | |
123 | Virginia Park Historic District | (#82000557) |
Both sides of Virginia Park From Woodward Ave. to John Lodge Service Dr. 42°22′29″N 83°04′54″W / 42.374722°N 83.081667°W |
New Center Area | In 1893, Virginia Park was platted with 92 relatively small lots. Requirements ensured that only well-to-do businessmen and professionals could afford to erect a home in the neighborhood. Most of the homes were built between 1893 and 1915, in Tudor, Neo-Georgian, Bungalow and Arts and Crafts architectural styles. | |
124 | WJBK-TV Studios Building | (#16000180) |
7441 Second Ave. 42°22′16″N 83°04′39″W / 42.371053°N 83.077637°W |
New Center Area | This building was constructed in 1956 by Storer Broadcasting Inc to house studios for WJBK television. The station produced news and programming here until 1971, when it was sold to Detroit's public television station WTVS. | |
125 | Franklin H. Walker House | (#85002948) |
2730 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′21″N 83°01′11″W / 42.339167°N 83.019722°W |
Jefferson Corridor | This home was built in 1896 for Franklin H. Walker, a son of Hiram Walker and president of the Hiram Walker Distillery. The house was notable for its immense size, diverse building materials, and medieval motif. The house was used until 1980 as Doctor's Hospital. It has since been demolished. | |
126 | William H. Wells House | |
(#85002949) |
2931 E. Jefferson Ave. 42°20′28″N 83°01′00″W / 42.341111°N 83.016667°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The William H. Wells House, designed by architect William Henry Miller, is an outstanding example of Romanesque revival residential architecture in Detroit. |
127 | West Jefferson Avenue–Rouge River Bridge | (#00000079) |
W. Jefferson Ave. over the River Rouge 42°16′50″N 83°07′44″W / 42.280556°N 83.128889°W |
Southwest Detroit | Built in 1922, this "Chicago city type of single trunnion, double-leaf bascule bridge" replaced a narrow swing bridge, allowing the Rouge River to be widened to provide freighter access to the Ford River Rouge Complex. The Rouge River marks the boundary between the cities of River Rouge and Detroit, and this listing is also included in the List of Registered Historic Places in Wayne County, Michigan. | |
128 | West Side Dom Polski | (#06001332) |
3426 Junction Ave. 42°19′50″N 83°06′38″W / 42.330556°N 83.110556°W |
Southwest Detroit | This Dom Polski, or Polish home, was established on the west side of the city as a meeting hall and social club for the Polish-Americans that had established a community in the area. The structure's first cornerstone was laid in 1917, but financial difficulties delayed building completion until 1925. | |
129 | West Vernor-Junction Historic District | (#02001503) |
W. Vernor Highway between Lansing and Cavalry 42°19′02″N 83°06′07″W / 42.317222°N 83.101944°W |
Southwest Detroit | The West Vernor-Junction Historic District is a commercial district located along West Vernor Highway. The district encompasses 160 acres (0.65 km2) and 44 buildings, including the Most Holy Redeemer Church, which was once estimated as the largest Catholic parish in North America. | |
130 | West Vernor-Lawndale Historic District | (#02001501) |
W. Vernor Highway between Cabot and Ferris 42°18′33″N 83°07′57″W / 42.309167°N 83.1325°W |
Southwest Detroit | The West Vernor-Lawndale Historic District is a commercial district located along West Vernor Highway between. The district encompasses 30 acres (120,000 m2) and 10 buildings. | |
131 | West Vernor-Springwells Historic District | (#02001502) |
W. Vernor Highway between Honorah and Norman 42°18′44″N 83°07′35″W / 42.312222°N 83.126389°W |
Southwest Detroit | The West Vernor-Springwells Historic District is a commercial district located along West Vernor Highway. The district encompasses 80 acres (320,000 m2) and 28 buildings. | |
132 | West Village Historic District | (#80001930) |
Roughly bounded by Jefferson, Kercheval, Parker and Seyburn Aves. 42°21′16″N 82°59′53″W / 42.354444°N 82.998056°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The West Village Historic District is a neighborhood just west of Indian Village Historic District. It is a primarily residential neighborhoods containing 275 single and two-family houses, thirty apartment buildings, and about twenty commercial structures of a wide range of architectural styles spread over 20 square blocks. | |
133 | Whittier Hotel | (#85002950) |
415 Burns Dr. 42°21′17″N 82°59′23″W / 42.354722°N 82.989722°W |
Jefferson Corridor | The Whittier Hotel was constructed as an apartment hotel, meaning that tenants could rent an apartment, yet have access to services typically provided by a hotel. The hotel actually consists of two separate structures: an eight-story building to the north and a larger fifteen-story Italian Renaissance style hotel to the south (closer to the river). The northern building has been turned into a senior citizen's living center, known as the Whittier Manor. | |
134 | Woodbridge Historic District | (#80001931) |
Bounded by Trumbull, Calumet, Gibson, Grand River, 12th W. Warren and Wabash Sts., railroad tracks, and Edsel Ford Expressway; also 4304-14 Trumbull Ave. and 3800 Grand River; also the southeastern corner of Trumbull and Warren 42°20′50″N 83°04′42″W / 42.347222°N 83.078333°W |
Corktown – Woodbridge | The Woodbridge neighborhood was primarily developed between 1870 and 1920 with single and two family residences built in Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, Georgian Revival, and 'cottage' style architecture. Commercial districts in the neighborhood were located along Grand River, Trumbull, Twelfth and Fourteenth. The boundaries of the District were increased twice: first on 1997-12-01, and 2008-03-20; these are distinguished in the boundary listings with "also" descriptions. | |
135 | Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church | (#82002916) |
8501 Woodward Ave. 42°22′41″N 83°04′46″W / 42.378056°N 83.079444°W |
North End | The Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church was built in 1911 in the Gothic revival style by architect Sidney Badgley. The exterior is faced with rough rock and trimmed with a contrasting limestone. The church was for some time the Abyssinia Church of God in Christ. |
Former listing
[7] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | Summary |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lincoln Motor Company Plant | (#78001521) | 6200 W Warren Ave. 42°20′54″N 83°07′52″W / 42.348328°N 83.131142°W |
Henry M. Leland acquired a factory here in 1917 and greatly expanded it in order to produce Liberty Engines as part of the World War I war effort. After the war, Leland used his long and prominent experience with Cadillac to inaugurate the Lincoln line of automobiles. Leland sold his company to Henry Ford in 1922; by 1952 this original Lincoln plant was retired from automotive production. Most of the complex was demolished in 2002/03, leading to withdrawal of its National Register listing and National Historic Landmark designation.[13] |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Detroit, Michigan. |
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Michigan
- List of Michigan State Historic Sites in Wayne County, Michigan
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. For about 1% of NRIS original coordinates, experience has shown that one or both coordinates are typos or otherwise extremely far off; some corrections may have been made. A more subtle problem causes many locations to be off by up to 150 yards, depending on location in the country: most NRIS coordinates were derived from tracing out latitude and longitudes off of USGS topographical quadrant maps created under the North American Datum of 1927, which differs from the current, highly accurate WGS84 GPS system used by most on-line maps. Chicago is about right, but NRIS longitudes in Washington are higher by about 4.5 seconds, and are lower by about 2.0 seconds in Maine. Latitudes differ by about 1.0 second in Florida. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ↑ "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on December 2, 2016.
- ↑ West Jefferson Avenue – Rouge River Bridge in both Detroit and Wayne County listings
- ↑ Gibson, Campbell (June 1998). "POPULATION OF THE 100 LARGEST CITIES AND OTHER URBAN PLACES IN THE UNITED STATES: 1790 TO 1990". Population Division, U.S. Bureau of the Census. Retrieved on 2006-04-02
- ↑ Vivian M. Baulch, "How Detroit got its first black hospital", The Detroit News, November 28, 1995.
- ↑ Dunbar Hospital from the National Park Service
- 1 2 Numbers represent an ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ↑ National Park Service (2008-04-24). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- ↑ 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.
- ↑ AIA-Detroit (2006-01-10). "Look Inside: Top 10 Detroit Interiors". Model D. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
- ↑ "Ste. Claire". National Park Service. Retrieved 2012-01-03.
- ↑ "Ste. Claire (steamer)". State of Michigan. Retrieved 2013-10-28.
- ↑ National Park Service. "National Historic Landmark Program: Withdrawal of National Historic Landmark Designation". Retrieved 2007-10-16.