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- Grand 1901 church designed by Erhard Brielmaier, inspired by St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. Named the third basilica in the US in 1929. (en)
- Twin-spired French Gothic-style Catholic church designed by Henry C. Koch and built in 1893. (en)
- Moorish Revival-styled Shrine Center, with massing based on the Taj Mahal, designed by Clas and Shepard and built in 1928. One of the best examples of this architectural style in the U.S. (en)
- Schlitz brewery complex, including the 1886 German Renaissance Revival-styled Stock and Malt house, the 1886/1910/1936 Office/Brown Bottle Pub, the 1890 Romanesque Revival-styled Brew House, the 1899 Bottle House A, and six other industrial buildings. (en)
- Neoclassical-styled Christian Science church designed by S.S. Beman and built in 1907. (en)
- Home built in 1890 with livery stable added in 1893. In 1918 Archibald Lohman bought both and started a full service funeral home business, which provided hearses, first horse-drawn and later gas-powered. Livery stable being razed as of October 2012. (en)
- Historic warehouse and factory district rebuilt after the fire of 1892. Irish settlers dominated before that, shifting to Italian businesses in the early 1900s. (en)
- Upscale Queen Anne-styled row house designed by George B. Ferry and built in 1883 as an investment property for Peck, the newspaperman, author, and later mayor of Milwaukee and governor of Wisconsin. (en)
- Later parish of German immigrants, with Romanesque Revival church built in 1890-92, Neoclassical school built in 1890, and Romanesque convent built in 1889. (en)
- Romanesque Revival school built 1891-92 to house a private Academy started in 1851 by German immigrants to promote German language and culture. Designed by Crane and Barkhausen. (en)
- Home of the first unified electric power utility in the nation, the Milwaukee Electric Railway and Light Company , founded 1896. The 4-story building was designed by Herman J. Esser in Beaux-Arts style and built 1902-06 as a streetcar terminal, electric plant, public auditorium, and company headquarters. (en)
- Grouping of 22 properties, including the 1889 Queen Anne-style Kunz Schlitz Brewery Tavern, the 1893/1919 Cutler-Hammer Factory and Machine Shop, the 1901 Milwaukee Casket Company, the 1902 Geuder, Paeschke, and Frey Manufacturing Co., the 1913 Milwaukee Brewers Specialty Co., the 1929 20th Century Commercial-styled NESCO office building, and the 1951 Cutler-Hammer Motor Switch Plant. (en)
- Zopfstil-style church built in 1850 by German-speaking Catholic parish. Now one of the oldest surviving church buildings in Milwaukee, and very intact. (en)
- Intact group of high style Victorian homes just south of Burns Park, including the 1855/1860/1895/1984 now-Neoclassical Diederichs house, the 1874 Italianate Prentiss house, the 1874 High Victorian Gothic Downer house, the 1875 Queen Anne Rublee house, the 1887 Queen Anne/Romanesque Miller house, the 1890 wooden Queen Anne Forsythe house, and the 1896 Elizabethan Revival Hawley house. (en)
- Large neighborhood on a bluff on the upper east side, including the 1895 Queen Anne-style Schmitt house, the 1906 Neoclassical-style Dearholt house, the 1909 Colonial Revival Ellsworth house, the 1911 Georgian Revival Akin house, the 1912 Craftsman Schley house, the 1912 Prairie style Engelhardt house, the 1912 Tudor Revival Upham house, the 1916 Arts and Crafts-style Black house, and the 1924 Mediterranean Revival Kern house. (en)
- Three historic stockhouses from the old Blatz brewery plant, built in 1891, 1904 and 1906 - all in German Renaissance Revival style. (en)
- Complex of Italianate-style buildings which housed Milwaukee's largest wholesale hardware company, built from 1875 to 1919. (en)
- School complex, with its oldest part the 1885 State Normal School, designed in Queen Anne style by E. Townsend Mix. Converted in 1919 to the MPS's Girls technical high school, where girls learned dressmaking, millinery, short-hand, typing and bookkeeping, and Tudor-Gothic wings were added in 1918 and 1932. (en)
- Best example of Byzantine Revival-inspired architecture in the city, designed by E. Brielmaier & Sons and built in 1917 for its Syrian-Lebanese community, exemplifying the association between ethnicity and architectural design. (en)
- Large Arts and Crafts-style house designed by Messmer & Son and built in 1906 for William Engelbert Conrad, a tannery owner. In 1953 the house was bought by Willie and B. Fostoria Jones, African Americans involved in a number of black-owned businesses in Bronzeville, and the basement bar became a local social center. Miss Eva Hill bought the house in 1967. (en)
- Christian Science church inspired by the Pantheon in Rome, designed by Carl Barkhausen and built in 1913. (en)
- Group of 11 multi-story factories built from 1891 to 1928 near the Soo Line Railroad yard, including an 1891 gas stove factory, a factory that made looseleaf notebooks, a bedding company, a candy company, and two seed companies. (en)
- Wood-clad Italianate house designed by Henry C. Koch and built in 1870 for Oliver, a Civil War veteran, grain broker, meat-packing businessman, industrialist, and speculator in real estate and lard. One of the best frame Italianate houses remaining in Milwaukee. (en)
- Zopfstil-style cathedral, designed by Victor Schulte and built 1847-1852. The top of the tower is an 1893 redesign by Ferry & Clas. (en)
- Housed Miss Ethelyn Bennet's distinguished business training institution from 1923 to 1965, where the school pioneered work-study programs and the trimester calendar. The Georgian Revival building was designed by Alexander Eschweiler and built in 1911 to be the Kilbourn Exchange of the Wisconsin Telephone Company. (en)
- Group of stylish mansions on a bluff overlooking Lake Michigan, including the 1876 High Victorian Italianate Collins-Elwell-Cary house, the 1888 Queen Anne Osborne house, the 1901 Elizabethan Revival Black house, the 1902 Mediterranean Revival Kraus house, and the 1907 Neoclassical First Church of Christ Scientist. (en)
- Gothic Revival church designed by Koch & Hess and built in 1870, with a colossal corner tower. (en)
- Another prestigious neighborhood on the upper east side, on a bluff above Lake Michigan and Lake Park, including the 1894 early Georgian Revival-style Douglass house, the 1895 early Neoclassical Major Sawyer house, the 1895 Dutch Colonial Revival Skinner house, the 1896 Queen Anne-styled Laffer house, the 1907 Colonial Revival Koss house, the 1907 Craftsman Adams house, and the 1924 Tudor Revival Mischler house. (en)
- Lighthouse established in 1855, rebuilt in 1888, and raised in 1913 to be visible farther out on Lake Michigan. (en)
- Romanesque and German Renaissance-styled structure built for Frederick Ketter about 1891, probably as a grocery warehouse. Bought by Walter Geiger in 1926 and used as a junk shop, plaster studio, flax seed warehouse, a bottling plant for horseradish and honey, and for light manufacturing. (en)
- Working class residential neighborhood settled chiefly by Polish immigrants starting in the 1860s. Many of the houses are workers' cottages like the 1881 Rewolinski house and "Polish flats" on raised foundations, like the 1900 Stan Toyar house. Some lots contain an extra "rear house" or two. Interspersed are businesses like the 1903 Wolski's Tavern and more stylish buildings like the Craftsman-styled Stormowski duplex. (en)
- Row house built in 1891, designed by W.A. Holbrook in Queen Anne style, which is unusual for row houses. (en)
- Masonic temple designed by H. Paul Schnetzky in simple Classical Revival style and built in 1911 for Kilbourn Lodge #3. (en)
- Cast Iron façade, shipped from New York, built 1861. Now one of the few pre-Civil War buildings left in the central business district, and the city's main surviving example of a building with a cast iron front. (en)
- Office and cold storage facility of Mansfield's dairy company, begun in 1908 and expanded between 1919 and 1927. Later bought by Gridley Dairy and Borden. (en)
- Four buildings of Milwaukee-Downer College, the early women's college, built from 1897 to 1905. Now part of UW-Milwaukee. (en)
- Home of Alexander Mitchell, Scottish immigrant, banker, and president of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad. Begun by Mitchell in 1848, remodeled in 1859 to then-stylish Italianate style, then remodeled again to Second Empire style in 1876, designed by E. Townsend Mix. Bought by the Deutscher Club, renamed the Wisconsin Club around WWI. (en)
- Henry C. Koch-designed Flemish Revival building, built 1894-95. Tallest building in US outside of New York City from 1895 to 1901. (en)
- Late Queen Anne house with unusual Flemish Renaissance gable and bell-shaped dome on turret, designed by Crane and Barkhausen and built in 1899. (en)
- Built in 1902 as the Tenth District Primary School No. 2, the building was designed by Van Ryn & DeGelleke in Italianate style. In 1964 civil rights organizers selected this as one of the schools for the first protests against segregation in Milwaukee Public Schools. (en)
- Romanesque Revival style church noted for its Tiffany windows, built 1882-90 by local architect E. Townsend Mix adapting an original design published earlier by Henry Hobson Richardson. (en)
- Site of pioneering experiments into the use of pulverized coal in boilers from 1918 to 1920. Brick Neoclassical-styled building, designed by Herman Esser and built 1900. (en)
- Ferry & Clas-designed 1895 Renaissance-style library, with the side shown at left perhaps inspired by the Louvre in Paris. (en)
- Art Deco office building with Art Moderne influence, designed by Herbert Tullgren and built in 1934 for the large coal distributor, with scenes of coal processing in the panels between the windows. (en)
- Historic neighborhood of stylish homes built along the named boulevards beginning in 1912, mostly for businessmen and professionals. In Milwaukee, "boulevard" generally meant a broad street with a landscaped median, connecting two parks. (en)
- Catholic institution to nurture unwanted infants and unwed mothers, with the 1878 section designed by Charles Gombert and the 1890 section by E. Townsend Mix. (en)
- Intact commercial neighborhood on the 27th Street streetcar line, including the 1916 Baebenroth's Pharmacy, the Elizabethan Revival-styled West Point Apartments, the 1925 Mediterranean Revival Cecelia Apartments, the 1926 Mediterranean Revival Tower Theater, and the 1928 Liberty Building, which was converted to Doctors' Hospital in 1949. (en)
- Large residential neighborhood strung along Layton Blvd, including the 1892 Queen Anne-style Kretschmar house, the 1902 Neoclassical Dr. Stack house, the 1907 Arts and Crafts Baumann house, the 1908 American Foursquare Schuerman house, the 1909 Colonial Revival Kroening house, the 1911 Filipowicz bungalow, the 1912 Craftsman Nimmer house, the 1914 Romanesque Revival St. Joseph's Convent Chapel, the 1915 Prairie School Huschek house, the 1927 Mediterranean Revival Huber house, and the 1927 Tudor Revival Dr. Bernhard house. (en)
- Brewing company founded in 1844, and by 1892 the largest brewer of lager in the world. Surviving buildings in the complex include the 1875 Italianate-styled 6-story stock/fermenting house, the 1880 main office , the 1889 German Renaissance Revival bottling house, and the 1933 Flemish Renaissance Revival visitor center. (en)
- Intact tannery complex along the Milwaukee River owned by German immigrant August F. Gallun, including a number of early buildings, the 1894 Ferry & Clas-designed office building, and the 1905 hide house. (en)
- Largely intact 3-story school building designed by H.C. Koch and built in 1887, with striking 2-story windows and tiled roof. The round-topped openings are a hallmark of Romanesque Revival style. (en)
- Neoclassical-style library with an unusual semi-circular stack room, designed by Brust and Philipp and built 1908-10 - the first purpose-built branch library in Milwaukee, with a particular aim to serve the south side's immigrants with materials in German and Polish. (en)
- Strip of urban parkland along the Kinnickinnic River connecting Jackson Park and Pulaski Park. Designed by Charles Whitnall and Alfred Boerner and built starting in 1934 during the Great Depression with help from the Works Progress Administration. (en)
- Diverse neighborhood north of the old Schlitz and Blatz breweries, where a laborer's cottage could stand across the street from a manager's Queen Anne-styled home. (en)
- Large, varied residential neighborhood, including the 1891 brick Queen Anne-styled Miller house, the 1893 frame Queen Anne Stolper house, the 1897 Dutch Colonial Revival Shape house, the 1905 Neogothic English Lutheran Church, the 1912 Craftsman Mausz house, the 1912 Feur bungalow, and the 1913 Colonial Revival-styled Masonic Temple. (en)
- Original 1910 headquarters, 1931 Research and Engineering building, and the world's first automated assembly plant, where auto frames were made. A. O. Smith also designed bomb casings, propellers, and components for the atom bomb during WWII. (en)
- Romanesque Revival-styled church designed by E. Townsend Mix and built 1887-88 for progressive Congregational congregation. (en)
- Very intact emergency hospital and clinic designed by Van Ryn & DeGelleke in severe Neoclassical style and built in 1927. First full-service, public hospital in Milwaukee that served all, regardless of ability to pay, and site of Dr. Edgar End's research into high-pressure oxygen therapies. (en)
- Luxurious 5-story office building designed by Solon Spencer Beman in Richardsonian Romanesque style and built 1885-86 for Northwestern Mutual. (en)
- Built in 1913 to house the fossils and minerals collected by Milwaukee druggist and amateur geologist Greene, including fossilized trilobites, crinoids and corals from the dolomite outcrops of southeastern Wisconsin. (en)
- Headquarters of MUSIC and site of freedom schools during Milwaukee's civil rights movement from 1964 to '67 under Pastor B.S. Gregg. Before that, the Collegiate Gothic church was built in 1915. (en)
- Queen Anne-styled corner bar designed by Charles Kirchoff Jr. and built by Schlitz in 1897, then leased until 1920, when antitrust law forced Schlitz to divest ownership of its bars. The belted globe on the turret is a Schlitz trademark, and very few like it remain. (en)
- French Second Empire-style office building, designed by E. Townsend Mix and built for Alexander Mitchell in 1876 to house his bank and insurance company. (en)
- Cluster of six affordable Prairie style Frank Lloyd Wright-designed homes and duplexes built in 1915 by the Richards Company as demonstration models of Wright's system of standard designs and precut parts. (en)
- Art moderne monument to postwar suburban mobility, built by the Gimbels store in 1947. (en)
- Gothic Revival-styled church designed by Frederick Velguth and built in 1901 by its German Lutheran congregation. (en)
- English Gothic Revival-styled Episcopal church, limestone-clad with a large square corner tower, designed by Gordon W. Lloyd and built 1867-68. (en)
- Young Jewish-Ukrainian refugee Golda Mabovitch attended this school from 1906 to 1902, before going to Palestine and eventually becoming Prime Minister of Israel Golda Meir. (en)
- String of upper middle-class homes along a landscaped boulevard, including the 1896 Chateauesque-style Goldberg house, the 1900 Elizabethan Revival Wiggenhorn house, the 1908 Arts and Crafts-style Russel house, the 1908 American Foursquare Meisenheimer house, the 1909 Georgian Revival Halsey house, the 1917 Italian Renaissance revival Miller house, the 1917 Maitland bungalow, the 1919 Mediterranean Revival Doepke house, the 1921 Prairie Style Dr. Bours house, the 1925 English-cottage-style Tries house, the 1925 Colonial Revival Zimmermann house, and the 1929 Tudor Revival Harnischfeger house. (en)
- String of mansions and large houses on large lots facing the landscaped esplanade down Highland Boulevard, including the 1897 Beaux Arts-style Koch house, the 1897 Queen Anne-style Manegold house, the 1898 Elizabethan Revival-style Gustav Pabst house, the 1905 German Renaissance Revival Starke house, the 1911 Prairie School Weinhagen house, and the 1917 Stroble bungalow. (en)
- Fairly intact part of the old central business district, including the 1858 Greek Revival-styled Webber townhouse, the 1860 Italianate Iron Block, the 1878 Second Empire-style Mitchell building, the 1879 High ItalJones-ianate-styled Mackie Building, which housed the Grain Exchange, the 1883 Queen Anne-styled Milwaukee Club, the 1890 Richardsonian Romanesque Pfister Hotel, the 1901 Beaux Arts Wells building, the 1925 Mediterranean Revival Watts building, the 1916 French Gothic-styled Wisconsin Telephone building, and the 1937 Moderne-styled Mariner building. (en)
- Part of the central business district along W. Wisconsin, including the 1891-92 Romanesque Revival Matthews Brothers building, the 1895-1920 Commercial-style Plankinton/Boston Store, the 1901 Commercial-style Gimbels Dept. Store, the 1907/1913 Caswell office building, the 1907 Beaux-Arts Majestic office towers, the 1913 German Renaissance Revival Hotel Wisconsin, the 1916 Neoclassical Plankinton Arcade, the 1927 Mediterranean Revival Empire Building/Riverside Theater, the 1930 Art Deco Kresge building, and the 1930 Moderne-style Warner building. (en)
- Business district on the South Side, once called "the Polish Grand Avenue." Includes the 1872 Romanesque Revival St. Stanislaus Church, the 1888 Queen Anne-styled Noe meat market, the 1889 Boomtown-style Kubal Grocery & Saloon, the 1896 Chateauesque St. Anthony's rectory, the 1897 Neoclassical-styled Czerwinski real estate office, the 1898 German Renaissance Revival Kalczynski dry goods store, the 1914 20th Century Commercial Schuster's Department Store, the 1924 Neoclassical-styled Modjeska Theater, and the 1937 Art Deco-styled Grand Department Store. (en)
- Milwaukee's first German Catholic church, designed by Victor Schulte in Zopfstil style, which must have been familiar to many of the parish's German immigrants. Completed in 1847. Current exterior looks much as it did after an 1867 remodeling, two years after the Civil War. Now the oldest surviving church in Milwaukee. (en)
- Gothic Revival-styled church designed by James J. Egan and built from 1893 to 1895. (en)
- Milwaukee's first business district outside the central downtown, a mile north of that downtown, with surviving examples of many phases of commercial development all the way back to 1854. (en)
- Designed by Andrew Elleson in Victorian Gothic Revival style and completed in 1885. (en)
- Neighborhood of 24 homes built in the 1920s. Many are imaginative bungalows, including the 1923 Craftsman-styled Freiburger bungalow, the 1923 frame Conrad bungalow, the 1924 Tudor Revival-flavored Hirt bungalow, and the 1926 Damkoehler bungalow with its clipped gables. Also the 1928 Colonial Revival Olroge house. (en)
- Picturesque Queen Anne-style rowhouse of ten 3-story apartments, each with a private garden and patio. Designed by Howland Russel and built in 1889 for Edwin H. Abbot of the Wisconsin Central RR. (en)
- Neighborhood of stylish homes built starting in 1907 along the parkway connecting Sherman and Washington Parks. (en)
- Very intact High Victorian Gothic-style home built in 1876, with scroll-sawn bargeboards and iron cresting, and a matching carriage house behind. Thomas Desmond was secretary of the Milwaukee school board, William Farnham worked life insurance, and John Hustis developed real estate. (en)
- Lindsay Brothers, one of the largest wholesalers of agricultural implements in Wisconsin, built this 5-story industrial building in 1904, with John Deere Co. its first occupant. In this building William Lindsay improved a self-feeder for threshers and separators. Bostrom Corp. bought the building in 1947 and in it developed the "suspension" tractor seat which is still used on most tractors and large trucks. (en)
- The Milwaukee News building , built 1879, housed the Milwaukee Journal offices from 1885 to 1891. The Abstract Assn. building was built in 1884. Both are clad in cream city brick, with form and styling typical of the period when they were built. (en)
- First public housing project in the U.S., built in 1923 by the City of Milwaukee under socialist mayor Daniel Hoan to ease the city's housing shortage, based on ideas from Britain's garden city movement. (en)
- Lighthouse on the breakwater, built in 1926 to mark an entry into the harbor. (en)
- Lutheran hospital founded in 1863, with surviving buildings as old as 1912 - a leader in antiseptic procedures around 1900 and x-rays in the 1920s. (en)
- Henry C. Koch-designed 1882 meeting place of German-American social, political and gymnastic organization, the Turners. (en)
- Relatively intact remnant of the old German retail district west of the Milwaukee River, including the 1858 Italianate-styled Bauer building, the 1889 Romanesque Revival Schlitz Brewing Company saloon, the 1906 Neoclassical-styled Usinger sausage factory, and the 1953 Neo-Germanic-styled Mader's German Restaurant. (en)
- Fine Queen Anne-styled house with various turrets and textures, designed by Charles Gombert and built in 1890 for Schlitz, a German immigrant who became a wealthy liquor and wine distributor. (en)
- Technologically innovative theater, financed by Frederick Pabst, designed by Otto Strack in German Renaissance Revival style, and built 1895. At that early date, included a fire curtain, electric lights, and ice-and-fan air conditioning. (en)
- Art Moderne-styled paint factory, designed by Eschweiler & Eschweiler and built in 1937. (en)
- Eclectic-styled 1891 red brick and sandstone home with bays and tower, Flemish gables, and a bartizan, with 1891 carriage barn. Designed by Crane & Barkhausen for tobacco merchant Schuster. (en)
- Large historic neighborhood around what was once Concordia College, including the 1851 Italianate-styled Faries house, the 1868 Gothic Revival-styled Yates house, the 1888 Queen Anne-styled Eiring house, the 1890 Shingle style Bancker house, the 1891 Dutch Colonial Revival Reynolds house, the 1897 Colonial Revival Strong duplex, the 1897 Neoclassical Meissner house, and the 1900 Beaux Arts-styled Concordia classroom building. (en)
- Industrial buildings built from 1910 to 1926, where William S. Harley invented the first commercially successful motorcycle clutch, the step starter, the carburetor choke, an 2 and 3-speed transmissions. (en)
- Another fragment of the old Yankee Hill, including the 1870 Italianate Hutchinson house , the 1892 Queen Anne Parker house, the 1897 Tudor Revival Mrs. Willis Danforth house, and the 1904 Dutch Colonial Revival Charles Danforth house. (en)
- Gothic/Romanesque-style theater at the Milwaukee Soldiers Home, designed by H.C. Koch and built in 1881-82. Now one of the oldest theaters in Wisconsin. (en)
- Queen Anne style mansion designed by James Douglas and built in 1883 for Kane, hotelier and a manager of Siloam Mineral Spring Co. (en)
- Very intact 3-story elementary school designed by Van Ryn & DeGelleke in Collegiate Gothic style and built in 1921. Served as a school until 2007. (en)
- Group of historic apartment buildings on the Lower East Side, including the 1909 Elizabethan Revival-styled Cudahy Apartments, the 1911 Neoclassical Wallard Apartments, the 1922 Georgian Revival Ambassador Apartments, the 1924 Mediterranean Revival Shorecrest Hotel, and the 1930 Art Deco Park Lane. (en)
- Craftsman-style house built in 1914 for an executive of the Franzen Paper Company. (en)
- Upscale subdivision built 1913–1931 with large lots and deed restrictions that required single-family homes, large setbacks, and minimum home values. (en)
- Queen Anne-style house built in 1886 for Howie, an agent of a fuel company. Now the Manderley Bed and Breakfast. (en)
- High Victorian Gothic house designed by E. Townsend Mix and built in 1875 for Cook, who owned a quarry business. (en)
- Massive Classical Revival courthouse designed by Albert Randolph Ross and completed in 1931. (en)
- Tudor Revival-styled funeral home, designed by Raymond Dwyer and built in 1937 with air conditioning and a sound system - advanced for the time. (en)
- Modest Victorian Gothic-styled church built in 1874 for the German congregation. Now houses St. Michael's Ukrainian Roman Catholic Church. (en)
- Cluster of historic factory buildings at Walker's Point, including the 1925 Art Deco-styled Pittsburgh Plate Glass-Dry Color Factory and its 1927 Mixmax Lacquer Plant, the 1927 International-style Hydrite Chemical Building H, and the 1948 Art Moderne Building #20. (en)
- Machek was a Viennese woodcarver who in 1884 was awarded a medal for his work on the royal palace in Belgrade. After immigrating to Milwaukee, he built this house in 1893-94. From a distance its style is Tudor Revival, but up close the woodwork is decorated with Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque and Oriental designs. (en)
- Early junior high school designed by Guy Edson Wiley in Collegiate Gothic style and built in 1927, when the junior high was a newish idea for bridging the gap between elementary and high school without extending school beyond 12 years. (en)
- Four-block cluster of historic residences including five row houses. Includes the 1874 Italianate-styled Krause cottage, the 1891 Queen Anne-styled Breslauer house, the 1897 German Renaissance Revival Breslauer Doublehouse, the 1897 Queen Anne Starke Row, the 1897 Trimborn Row , and the 1899 Queen Anne Forrestal Apartments. (en)
- Group of 28 commercial and industrial buildings near the confluence of the Milwaukee and Menomonee Rivers, including the ca 1858 Greek Revival-styled Borger tavern, the 1864 Romanesque Revival Burnham warehouse, the 1865 Italianate Stamm building, the 1872 Victorian Gothic-influenced Michel warehouse, the 1873 Queen Anne-style Seidel tavern, and the 1892 Romanesque Revival Milwaukee Cold Storage, and Lindsay Ag Implement warehouse. (en)
- Intact bank building designed by Kirchoff & Rose in Beaux Arts style and built in 1913, currently home to the Milwaukee County Historical Center. (en)
- Resting place for many noted Milwaukee residents, including beer barons, industrialists and politicians, founded 1850. (en)
- Gothic Revival-styled church designed by Herman Schnetzky and built in 1887, with gold pinnacles on the towers. (en)
- Historic sections are the Sentinel's 1918 4-story cast concrete office building and the Journal's 1924 5-story Art Deco pink office building designed by Frank Chase, with its frieze depicting the history of communications in 6-foot relief figures carved by Arthur Weary. (en)
- Public school building begun in 1889, which also provided evening and weekend activities for children and adults in the Bay View neighborhood - an example of Milwaukee's "lighted schoolhouses" idea and the larger Social Center movement. (en)
- High Victorian Gothic-styled frame doublehouse designed by James Douglas and built in 1875 for Calkins, a newspaperman and Civil War veteran. (en)
- Upper-middle-class neighborhood on the upper east side on a bluff overlooking Lake Michigan, including the 1895 Queen Anne-style Middleton house, the 1901 Tudor Revival Eschweiler house, the 1906 American Foursquare Dearsley house, the 1912 Prairie Style Stanz house, the 1914 Franzen Craftsman bungalow, the 1915 Arts and Crafts Horter house, the 1924 Mediterranean Revival Moss house, the 1925 Dutch Colonial Revival Locher house, and the 1926 Georgian Revival Bloodgood house. (en)
- Concentration of historic commercial buildings, including the 1870 Italianate-styled Nunnemacher building, the 1895 German Renaissance Revival Milwaukee City Hall, the 1897 Queen Anne-styled Cawker building, the 1900 Neoclassical-styled Pietsch Dye Works, the 1904 Miller Brewing Co. bar, and the 1909 Chicago Commercial-style Manufacturers' Home building. (en)
- Picturesque Victorian Gothic-style house designed by James Douglas and built ca. 1878, with 2-story bays and deep, flared eaves. Exterior is little changed since 1878. (en)
- Fine 2-story frame Queen Anne house with many textures and gables, built in 1888, and little changed since. Built for Sivyer, founder of Northwestern Malleable Iron Co. and Milwaukee's first trades school. (en)
- Unusual pumping station built in 1931 to provide immediate high pressure to help put out fires in its industrial neighborhood without waiting for a pumper truck. (en)
- Old working-class neighborhood that developed in the area where George Walker initially settled, it is the only part of 19th century Milwaukee to survive largely intact, with buildings ranging from the 1849 Zopfstil Holy Trinity Catholic Church, to the 1854 Greek Revival Howard house, to remnants of the Pfister and Vogel Leather Company complex, to the 1901 Neoclassical Tivoli Palm beer garden/dance hall. (en)
- Another fossilized coral reef, much like Schoonmaker. They were the first formations in North America identified as fossil coral reefs, by James Hall in 1862. Unlike Schoonmaker, this reef remains very much as when Lapham and Hall studied it in the 1800s. (en)
- Brewery office built in 1890, designed by Paul Schnetzky in Richardsonian Romanesque style. Now part of Milwaukee School of Engineering. (en)
- German Gothic-styled church built in 1891 by the first German Methodist congregation in Wisconsin. (en)
- Modest home built in 1890 of Lloyd Barbee, Wisconsin's leading civil rights activist of the 20th century, who pushed to integrate Milwaukee's schools. (en)
- Modest 2-story frame gabled ell house built in 1867, probably by German immigrant Foth, a ship carpenter and grocer. The Komschlies bought the house in 1890 and lived there at least into the 1980s. (en)
- Originally built in 1889 as a Romanesque-style Congregational church, the building was later bought by a Masonic order and remodeled in 1937 to Art Moderne style. (en)
- Factories eventually acquired by Briggs & Stratton and merged into its West plant, consisting of the 1900 Milwaukee Reliance Boiler Works, the 1906 Eschweiler-designed Romadka Brothers trunk factory, the 1920 Westinghouse Lamp building, the 1920 Columbia Knitting and Manufacturing Co., the 1925 A.H. Weinbrenner Shoe factory, the 1929 Ideal Shoe factory, and the 1950 Briggs & Stratton factory. (en)
- Kalvelage was a son of German immigrants and secretary-treasurer of a company that made plumbing fixtures. In 1897 he built this house, designed by Otto Strack in the German Baroque style with atlantes, tin lions, and a mansard roof, similar to what was popular in the homeland at that time. The iron work is by Cyril Colnik. (en)
- Factory begun in 1910 with glazed brick, then expanded in 1927 with a cream-colored terra cotta finish designed by Verner H. Esser, aiming to inspire consumer confidence with its clean, modern finish. (en)
- Historic brick public school, with the oldest 1885 section designed by Frederick Seyring, a second section added by 1894, the westernmost block designed by Mollerus & Lotter and added in 1898, and a Contemporary-style addition in the 1950s. MPS closed the school in the 1970s. (en)
- When built in 1907, this hall housed the whole of Marquette College. Designed by Charles D. Crane with a mix of Neogothic and Renaissance Revival stylings. (en)
- Factory and headquarters complex of the maker of leather shoes, designed by Herman J. Esser and built in 1916. In 1930 Nunn-Bush was the second largest producer of fine men's shoes in the U.S. (en)
- Largely intact Italianate-style commercial building with a meeting hall on its third story, designed by E. Townsend Mix and built in 1875 by cream city brickmaker J.L. Burnham. (en)
- The oldest woman's clubhouse in the United States, designed by George Ferry and built in 1887 for the Athenaeum, the first known stock company formed by women in the U.S. (en)
- Corner brewery bar built in 1896, designed in Neo-Gothic style by Charles G. Hoffman, with a 3-story square corner tower topped with battlements and lancet windows below. Only this building remains of several bars that Pabst built in this style. (en)
- A fragment of the old Yankee Hill neighborhood on the lower east side, including the William Metcalf house, which started as a Greek Revival-styled home in 1854, the 1862 early-Italianate Carey house, the 1874 full-on Italianate Inbusch house, the 1883 Queen Anne-styled Brandt doublehouse, the 1904 Gothic Revival-styled Summerfield United Methodist church, and the 1923 Georgian Revival-styled St. John's home. (en)
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