New Glarus Public School and High School | |
Location | 413 Sixth Ave., New Glarus, Wisconsin |
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Coordinates | 42°48′51″N89°38′17″W / 42.81417°N 89.63806°W |
Area | 2 acres (0.81 ha) |
Architect | Lew Porter/Alan Conover/Bradley and Bradley |
Architectural style | Richardsonian Romanesque, Art Deco |
NRHP reference No. | 98000284 [1] |
Added to NRHP | March 26, 1998 |
The New Glarus Public School and High School building is located in New Glarus, Wisconsin.
The school was first constructed in the 1890s, with several addition made over the decades. Since then, it has been converted into an apartment building. It was added to the State Register of Historic Places in 1997 and to the National Register of Historic Places the following year. [2]
New Glarus is a village in Green County, Wisconsin, United States at the intersection of Wisconsin Highways 69 and 39. It has a population of 2,266 according to the 2020 census. The village, and the town that surrounds it, were named after the canton of Glarus in eastern Switzerland. The community was founded in 1845 by immigrants from that canton and was incorporated in 1901.
New Glarus may refer to:
Prairie School is a late 19th and early 20th-century architectural style, most common in the Midwestern United States. The style is usually marked by horizontal lines, flat or hipped roofs with broad overhanging eaves, windows grouped in horizontal bands, integration with the landscape, solid construction, craftsmanship, and discipline in the use of ornament. Horizontal lines were thought to evoke and relate to the wide, flat, treeless expanses of America's native prairie landscape.
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