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National Historic Landmarks in Indiana represent Indiana's history from the Native American era to its early European settlers and motor racing. There are 43 National Historic Landmarks (NHLs) in the state, which are located in 23 of its 92 counties. They illustrate the state's industrial and architectural heritage, as well as battles, circuses, education, and several other topics. One of the NHLs in the state has military significance, fourteen are significant examples of different architectural styles, nine are associated with significant historical figures, and one is an archaeological site. Two NHL properties, both ships that were formerly located in Indiana, were later moved to another state.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Die Liste der National Historic Landmarks in Indiana ist eine Denkmalliste von derzeit 42 vom US-Innenministerium als National Historic Landmark (NHL) anerkannten Stätten und Denkmälern von nationaler Bedeutung im Bundesstaat Indiana. Sie werden vom National Park Service verwaltet. Die 42 Stätten sind in 23 der 92 Countys in Indiana zu finden. Sie repräsentieren die Geschichte dieses Bundesstaates von der Ära der Indianer bis hin zu den frühen Siedlern und zum Motorsport. Sie erinnern an Schlachten, die Geschichte des Zirkus und der Bildung sowie einige weitere Themen. Eine National Historic Landmark ist von militärhistorischer Bedeutung, vierzehn sind wichtige Beispiele unterschiedlicher Architekturstile, neun dieser Landmarks stehen in Beziehung zu wichtigen historischen Personen, und eine Stätte ist ein archäologischer Fundort. Ein Objekt, ein Schiff, befand sich ursprünglich in Indiana, wurde aber später in einen anderen Bundesstaat gebracht. (de)
  • National Historic Landmarks in Indiana represent Indiana's history from the Native American era to its early European settlers and motor racing. There are 43 National Historic Landmarks (NHLs) in the state, which are located in 23 of its 92 counties. They illustrate the state's industrial and architectural heritage, as well as battles, circuses, education, and several other topics. One of the NHLs in the state has military significance, fourteen are significant examples of different architectural styles, nine are associated with significant historical figures, and one is an archaeological site. Two NHL properties, both ships that were formerly located in Indiana, were later moved to another state. The National Historic Landmark Program is administered by the National Park Service, a branch of the Department of the Interior. The National Park Service determines which properties meet NHL criteria and makes nomination recommendations after an owner notification process. The Secretary of the Interior reviews nominations and, based on a set of predetermined criteria, makes a decision on NHL designation or a determination of eligibility for designation. Both public and privately owned properties can be designated as NHLs. This designation provides indirect, partial protection of the historic integrity of the properties via tax incentives, grants, monitoring of threats, and other means. Owners may object to the nomination of the property as a NHL. When this is the case the Secretary of the Interior can only designate a site as eligible for designation. All NHLs are also included on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP), a list of historic properties that the National Park Service deems to be worthy of preservation. The primary difference between a NHL and a NRHP listing is that the NHLs are determined to have national significance, while other NRHP properties are deemed significant at the local or state level. The NHLs in Indiana comprise approximately 2% of the 1,656 properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Indiana as of December 2009. The landmarks are among the most important nationally recognized historic sites in the state; the George Rogers Clark National Historical Park is one other site that has high designation by the Federal government. Marion County, the location of the state capital Indianapolis, has the most NHLs, with ten, followed by Bartholomew County with seven and Jefferson County with four. Twenty counties have one, while the other 69 counties of Indiana have none. Indiana's first NHL was designated on October 9, 1960. Architects who designed multiple Indiana NHLs are Francis Costigan, William Dentzel, and Eero Saarinen. Eight Historic Landmarks in Indiana are more specifically designated National Historic Landmark Districts, meaning that they cover a large area rather than a single building. The Lanier Mansion and Charles L. Shrewsbury House are within the boundaries of the Madison Historic District. (en)
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  • Covered Bridge (en)
  • A two-story and a three-story red brick house by a street (en)
  • Aerial view of a rounded rectangular raceway that is partially surrounded by grandstands; within the racetrack is a pagoda and golf course (en)
  • A brick house with a pillared entrance highlighted by the sun (en)
  • Brightly lit carousel with animals (en)
  • Front and side of the Athenæum (en)
  • House with dormer windows and two brick chimneys (en)
  • Large old four-story building that is gray-brown with double chimney on left (en)
  • Red courthouse with white columns and a tall cupola (en)
  • Photograph of the front of the house (en)
  • Hexagonal gray-roofed building with a spire about twice as tall as the building itself (en)
  • White mansion with four chimneys, trees lining the front, and many windows (en)
  • Samara Entrance (en)
  • Two white wooden barns and a red wooden rail car (en)
  • White monumental obelisk in the trees (en)
  • Red brick home with ornate white overhang supports, red-white-blue banners, and columned white porch (en)
  • Three story gray rectangular building on a grassy hill (en)
  • Small red brick building with a green domed roof and flags of the US and Indiana in the foreground (en)
  • Free-standing white house with porch on left and red chimney (en)
  • Flatiron-shaped brick building with "Walker Theatre" in large red letters (en)
  • Earthy mud square building sitting atop an earthen mound (en)
  • Interior of a domed atrium surrounded by hotel rooms and tall columns with light coming in through blue windows (en)
  • One-story building with spherical protrusions from the roof; leafless trees are in front of it (en)
  • Red brick church with triangular facade and tall, sloping roof (en)
  • Large red brick home with two-story columned white porch (en)
  • Log cabin in the shadows of trees with a split-rail fence in the foreground (en)
  • Aerial view of square white limestone building with pyramidal roof on a plaza; before it is a black obelisk with a golden capstone at the center of a circle (en)
  • Red mansion with a wing on the left and a grassy lawn in front (en)
  • House with a round protruding porch with white columns and red-white-blue banners; red leaves in foreground (en)
  • One-story building with large windows covered by white blinds and a red grid-like overhang (en)
  • Side view of a stone mansion with a dark roof, four visible chimneys, and a drive-though arch (en)
  • Rectangualr building with large cross and many square on front next to a tall clock tower (en)
  • Small rectangular red brick house with white roof and many windows (en)
  • White house with porch in front of large modern buildings (en)
  • Front of red brick building with main entrance and trees (en)
  • Exterior of a large arena with a semicircular roof curving over the building (en)
  • Angle view of large white limestone building with tall rotunda (en)
  • Red brick two-story house with a second-story balcony, stair leading up to the entrance coved by a striped awning, tall narrow windows, and small fence in front (en)
dbp:article
  • Samara (en)
  • Hinkle Fieldhouse (en)
  • Indianapolis Motor Speedway (en)
  • First Christian Church (en)
  • Allen County Courthouse (en)
  • Angel Mounds (en)
  • Athenæum (en)
  • First Baptist Church (en)
  • Benjamin Harrison Presidential Site (en)
  • Broad Ripple Park Carousel (en)
  • Spencer Park Dentzel Carousel (en)
  • Charles L. Shrewsbury House (en)
  • Duck Creek Aqueduct (en)
  • Miller House (en)
  • Fort Ouiatenon (en)
  • Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Facility (en)
  • Cannelton Cotton Mill (en)
  • Circus Hall of Fame (en)
  • Hillforest (en)
  • Eleutherian College (en)
  • Eugene V. Debs Home (en)
  • General Lew Wallace Study (en)
  • Irwin Union Bank and Trust (en)
  • Grouseland (en)
  • Indiana World War Memorial Plaza (en)
  • James Whitcomb Riley Museum Home (en)
  • Joseph Bailly Homestead (en)
  • Lanier Mansion (en)
  • Levi Coffin House (en)
  • Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial (en)
  • Mabel McDowell Adult Education Center (en)
  • Madam Walker Legacy Center (en)
  • Madison Historic District (en)
  • Marie Webster House (en)
  • New Harmony Historic District (en)
  • North Christian Church (en)
  • Oldfields: The J. K. Lilly Jr. Estate (en)
  • Richardville House (en)
  • The Republic Newspaper Office (en)
  • Tippecanoe Battlefield Park (en)
  • Tippecanoe Place (en)
  • West Baden Springs Hotel (en)
  • West Union Covered Bridge (en)
dbp:city
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  • Samara (en)
  • Hinkle Fieldhouse (en)
  • Indianapolis Motor Speedway (en)
  • First Christian Church (en)
  • Allen County Courthouse (en)
  • Athenæum (en)
  • First Baptist Church (en)
  • Walker Theatre (en)
  • Cannelton Cotton Mills (en)
  • Charles L. Shrewsbury House (en)
  • Duck Creek Aqueduct (en)
  • Miller House (en)
  • Fort Ouiatenon (en)
  • Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Facility (en)
  • Benjamin Harrison House (en)
  • Hillforest (en)
  • Eleutherian College (en)
  • Eugene V. Debs Home (en)
  • Irwin Union Bank and Trust (en)
  • Grouseland (en)
  • Indiana World War Memorial Plaza (en)
  • James Whitcomb Riley Museum Home (en)
  • Joseph Bailly Homestead (en)
  • Lanier Mansion (en)
  • Levi Coffin House (en)
  • Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial (en)
  • Mabel McDowell Adult Education Center (en)
  • Madison Historic District (en)
  • Marie Webster House (en)
  • New Harmony Historic District (en)
  • North Christian Church (en)
  • Oldfields (en)
  • Carousel at the Children's Museum of Indianapolis (en)
  • Dentzel Carousel at Logansport (en)
  • Lew Wallace Study & Museum (en)
  • Mounds at Angel Mounds site (en)
  • The Republic offices (en)
  • Tippecanoe Battlefield Memorial (en)
  • Tippecanoe Place (en)
  • West Baden Springs Hotel (en)
dbp:county
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  • 2021-01-13 (xsd:date)
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  • 1890.0
  • 3.15576E9
  • 1840.0
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  • Eugene V. Debs, founder of Industrial Workers of the World and the American Railway Union, lived in this home from its construction in 1890 until his death in 1926. He ran as a Socialist candidate in the 1900, 1904, 1908, 1912, and 1920 United States presidential elections. (en)
  • Completed in 1964, this was designed by Finnish architect Eero Saarinen. It has a hexagonal shape with an elevated hexagonal sanctuary in the center and pews surrounding the altar. From the roof rises a spire and cross, which represents Christianity arising from Judaism. (en)
  • Benjamin Harrison lived in this Italianate house from 1875 until his death there in 1901, except from 1889 to 1893 while he was the 23rd President. He was also a Senator from Indiana from 1881 to 1887. Harrison accepted the Republican nomination for the Presidential election in 1888 and conducted his Front Porch Campaign here. (en)
  • Designed by Eero Saarinen in 1954, the Irwin Bank is meant to be welcoming, being the first open bank with glass walls. It has a Miesian glass pavilion and influenced subsequent bank designs. (en)
  • Grouseland was the home of William Henry Harrison from 1804 to 1812, while he was Governor of the Indiana Territory. He held conferences there with Native Americans, including Shawnee leader Tecumseh. Harrison later became the 9th President, serving one month in 1841. (en)
  • Architect John Carl Warnecke designed this contextual work as part of the movement to improve the quality of life in Columbus through outstanding architecture. This school in the modern style contains five separate one-story buildings linked by landscaped courtyards and covered walkways. Four classroom buildings flank the central hub which contains the cafeteria and administration spaces. It has been converted to an adult education center. (en)
  • The Madison Historic District showcases architecture from 1817 to 1939, having many buildings in Federal, Greek Revival and Italianate styles. Infrastructure and houses remain from the 19th century, related to leaders of the Underground Railroad. (en)
  • One of the nation's best-preserved examples of a 19th-century Burr Truss covered bridge. (en)
  • Lew Wallace was a Civil War general, governor of the New Mexico Territory, and minister to the Ottoman Empire, and he is best known for writing Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ. He used this building as his study from 1895 until his death in 1905. Wallace designed it himself, and it is now a museum. (en)
  • This building was used by the Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus, the American Circus Corporation and the Ringling Brothers Circus as a winter headquarters. It is now the Circus Hall of Fame and has many artifacts from classic circuses. (en)
  • This is one of three remaining Dentzel menagerie carousels in good condition. It is also called the Riverside Park Carousel. (en)
  • Archeological site of the first colonial fortification in Indiana (en)
  • The 16th US President Abraham Lincoln grew up here from 1816 to 1830. The site features the foundation of the original cabin, a replica farm house, the gravesite of Lincoln's mother Nancy Hanks Lincoln, and a memorial building. (en)
  • From AD 1000 to 1600, a town on this site was home to people of the Middle Mississippian culture. They built many mounds at this community. (en)
  • This house is a rare surviving example of a treaty house. Built as part of the terms of the 1826 Treaty of Mississinewas between the Miami and the United States, it is associated with Pinšiwa, the akima of the Miami. (en)
  • Madam C. J. Walker founded a manufacturing company that produced hair care products and cosmetics for Black women, and it was the most successful Black business for years. Finished in 1927, the building also served as a community cultural center. It has since been restored and hosts many performing arts and educational programs. (en)
  • Built in 1846, this is the only surviving covered bridge aqueduct in the United States. (en)
  • Associated with Cummins founder J. Irwin Miller, the Miller House is a work of Eero Saarinen representing International style. The building is integrated with the modern landscape of Dan Kiley. (en)
  • Completed in 1956, Samara is an outstanding and mature example of a Usonian house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright during his late period . It is a remarkably complete Usonian design, incorporating more than 40 Wrightian design elements, including character-defining Usonian features such as modular design, indoor-outdoor connections, slab floor construction, flat roofs, and open-plan public spaces conducive to simple living for average middle-class families. (en)
  • Joseph Bailly acquired the Homestead and surrounding lands in 1822 when the Calumet was opened to white settlement. He established a trading post that was a meeting place for both Indians and whites and a stopping place for travelers and missionaries. It is now at the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore. (en)
  • A Beaux-Arts-style building that was built in 1902, the Allen County Courthouse is a unique combination of fine art, sculpture, and architecture. (en)
  • Located above the Ohio River, Hillforest was built in 1855 in the Italian Renaissance architectural style. Designed by Isaiah Rogers, its full-width frontal porch is reminiscent of a steamboat's deck. (en)
  • Located in the Lockerbie Square Historic District, this Victorian style building was home to Hoosier Poet James Whitcomb Riley for 23 years. (en)
  • West Baden Springs has many natural mineral water springs. This hotel was built in 1902, and its glass dome was once the largest dome in the world. (en)
  • Francis Costigan designed this Classical Revival house for merchant Charles L. Shrewsbury. It was completed in 1849 and is an example of Regency architecture. (en)
  • On the grounds of the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Oldfields is a estate. The 22-room mansion was the home of philanthropist and businessman Josiah K. Lilly Jr. and was designed by Olmsted Brothers. (en)
  • Originally located at Broad Ripple Village, this carousel was brought to Indiana in 1917 and is one of three surviving Dentzel menagerie carousels. Its animals predate 1900 and it is now housed in The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. (en)
  • Located at Butler University and now called Hinkle Fieldhouse, it is the sixth-oldest basketball arena still used and was once the largest in the United States. It hosted the Indiana high school basketball tournament until 1971. (en)
  • Myron Goldsmith of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill designed the offices of this newspaper publishing house. It is the youngest architectural National Historic Landmark ever designated. (en)
  • The three buildings of the Auburn, Cord, and Duesenberg automobile manufacturing facility represent different stages in automotive development and construction. It is one of the few remaining automobile companies that made hand-assembled rather than mass-produced automobiles. The site includes the Art Deco showroom and administration building, service and new parts department building, and the Cord L-29 building. (en)
  • Founded in 1848 by abolitionist Baptist Church members, Eleutherian College was the first college in Indiana to admit students regardless of race or gender. The Chapel building was completed in 1854 and is the last structure remaining. (en)
  • Completed in 1965, the First Baptist Church is an example of modern architecture in Columbus. It was designed by architect Harry Weese. (en)
  • Designed by Finnish architect Eliel Saarinen in 1942, the First Christian Church was one of the first modern-style churches in America. (en)
  • This was the home of quilter Marie Webster, who wrote Quilts: Their History and How to Make Them. It is now the home of the Quilters Hall of Fame. (en)
  • The Indiana World War Memorial, begun in 1926 and finished in 1965, is a building commemorating World War I and II veterans. It is tall, made of Indiana limestone, and based on the Mausoleum of Mausolus. Within it is a military museum. The Plaza also includes the American Legion headquarters, Cenotaph square, an obelisk, and fountains. Originally "Indiana World War Memorial Plaza Historic District", it was enlarged and renamed in December 2016. (en)
  • Levi Coffin lived in this house from 1827 to 1847, where he helped as many as 2,000 slaves escape to freedom. The house was known as the Union Depot of the Underground Railroad, and it contained secret doors that could hide fugitives. (en)
  • New Harmony was founded in 1815 by Rappites, and in 1825 Robert Owen attempted to create a utopian society. Many original Harmony Society buildings remain. (en)
  • The Indianapolis Motor Speedway is home to the Indianapolis 500, first held in 1911. The track, built in 1909, is the world's oldest continuously operating automobile race course. The 500 is the largest single-day sporting event in the world in terms of attendance, and with seating of over 250,000, it is also the world's largest sporting facility. (en)
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  • Samara (en)
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  • The Republic (en)
  • Duck Creek Aqueduct (en)
  • Eleutherian College Classroom and Chapel Building (en)
  • Miller House (en)
  • Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Facility (en)
  • Cannelton Cotton Mill (en)
  • Charles Shrewsbury House (en)
  • Eugene V. Debs Home (en)
  • Indiana War Memorial Plaza (en)
  • General Lew Wallace Study (en)
  • Irwin Union Bank and Trust (en)
  • Grouseland (en)
  • James Whitcomb Riley House (en)
  • Joseph Bailly Homestead (en)
  • Lanier Mansion (en)
  • Levi Coffin House (en)
  • Mabel McDowell Elementary School (en)
  • Madison Historic District (en)
  • Marie Webster House (en)
  • New Harmony Historic District (en)
  • North Christian Church (en)
  • Oldfields (en)
  • Akima Pinšiwa Awiiki (en)
  • Clement Studebaker House (en)
  • Fort Ouiatenon Archeological District (en)
  • Madam C.J. Walker Manufacturing Company (en)
  • Thomas Gaff House (en)
  • Tippecanoe Battlefield (en)
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  • 67603001041 (xsd:decimal)
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  • NHL (en)
  • NHLD (en)
  • NMEM (en)
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  • Die Liste der National Historic Landmarks in Indiana ist eine Denkmalliste von derzeit 42 vom US-Innenministerium als National Historic Landmark (NHL) anerkannten Stätten und Denkmälern von nationaler Bedeutung im Bundesstaat Indiana. Sie werden vom National Park Service verwaltet. (de)
  • National Historic Landmarks in Indiana represent Indiana's history from the Native American era to its early European settlers and motor racing. There are 43 National Historic Landmarks (NHLs) in the state, which are located in 23 of its 92 counties. They illustrate the state's industrial and architectural heritage, as well as battles, circuses, education, and several other topics. One of the NHLs in the state has military significance, fourteen are significant examples of different architectural styles, nine are associated with significant historical figures, and one is an archaeological site. Two NHL properties, both ships that were formerly located in Indiana, were later moved to another state. (en)
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  • Liste der National Historic Landmarks in Indiana (de)
  • List of National Historic Landmarks in Indiana (en)
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