Commercial Historic District (Potlatch, Idaho)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Commercial_Historic_District_(Potlatch,_Idaho) an entity of type: Thing

The Commercial Historic District in Potlatch, Idaho was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. In 1986, it included seven contributing buildings and a contributing object. It includes work by architect C. Ferris White and work by A.M. Homes. It includes seven buildings of the administrative center of historic Potlatch, which was a company town of the Potlatch Lumber Company, plus some additional objects. Specifically, it includes: rdf:langString
rdf:langString Commercial Historic District (Potlatch, Idaho)
rdf:langString Commercial Historic District
rdf:langString Commercial Historic District
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xsd:integer 26350088
xsd:integer 1092243898
xsd:date 1986-09-11
rdf:langString White, C. Ferris; Homes, AM
xsd:integer 1906
rdf:langString Administration building / Potlatch City Hall
rdf:langString Roughly Pine St. between Seventh and Fifth Sts., Potlatch, Idaho
rdf:langString Idaho#USA
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString hd
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rdf:langString The Commercial Historic District in Potlatch, Idaho was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. In 1986, it included seven contributing buildings and a contributing object. It includes work by architect C. Ferris White and work by A.M. Homes. It includes seven buildings of the administrative center of historic Potlatch, which was a company town of the Potlatch Lumber Company, plus some additional objects. Specifically, it includes: * Washington. Idaho and Montana Railway Depot (1906), a two-story west-facing building, the first major building completed in Potlatch, designed by C. Ferris White * Gymnasium building (1916), a two-story frame building designed by architect A. M. Holmes, the largest building in Potlatch. Southfacing, with a gambrel roof, it has an open porch on its east, south, and west sides supported by 16 Doric columns. * Implement Store, a two-story frame building with a gambrel roof. Served as storage warehouse for the lumber company's Townsite Department, the maintenance department for the town. * Administrative Office (1917), a two-and-one-half-story frame building which was the main administrative office building for the lumber company, and in the 1950s became city hall. * Storage Building, a two-and-one-half-story building with a metal roof on a concrete foundation * Produce Cellar (1910 or 1911), with capacity for 25 railroad carloads, a 40 feet (12 m) by 60 feet (18 m) structure built into the side of a hill, with brick walls and a metal gambrel roof. * Creamery (probably 1906), a one-story building with a hipped metal roof, sided with clapboard, west-facing, adjacent to the depot building to its south. * a large boulder monument to William Deary * Engine 1 of the Washington, Idaho and Montana Railway. The city of Potlatch offers a free walking tour guide, "A Walking Tour of the Potlatch Commercial District" at the city hall, at 195 6th Street. The guide is provided by the Potlatch Historical Society.
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xsd:gYear 1906
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