Kamp Store

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kamp_Store an entity of type: Thing

The Kamp Store is a historic general store building located at the northeast corner of Oak and Broadway in Kampsville, Illinois, United States. Joseph Kamp, the son of the founder of Kampsville, opened the store in 1902. The two-story wood-frame building features a false front with decorative metalwork. The store provided Kampsville residents with a wide variety of goods, ranging from small household items to automobiles and heavy farming equipment. St. Louis-based suppliers shipped the store its goods via Mississippi River barges. Kamp operated the store until his death in 1952; the store served as a grocery store until the 1970s and later became a carpet store. The Center for American Archeology purchased the building in 1991 and now uses it as its Visitor's Center and Museum. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Kamp Store
rdf:langString Kamp Store
rdf:langString Kamp Store
xsd:float 39.29833221435547
xsd:float -90.61027526855469
xsd:integer 6753901
xsd:integer 1049237839
xsd:date 1994-02-04
rdf:langString Early Commercial
rdf:langString less than one acre
rdf:langString Front and southern side
rdf:langString Northeastern corner of the junction of Oak and Broadway, Kampsville, Illinois
rdf:langString Illinois#USA
xsd:integer 94000027
xsd:string 39.29833333333333 -90.61027777777778
rdf:langString The Kamp Store is a historic general store building located at the northeast corner of Oak and Broadway in Kampsville, Illinois, United States. Joseph Kamp, the son of the founder of Kampsville, opened the store in 1902. The two-story wood-frame building features a false front with decorative metalwork. The store provided Kampsville residents with a wide variety of goods, ranging from small household items to automobiles and heavy farming equipment. St. Louis-based suppliers shipped the store its goods via Mississippi River barges. Kamp operated the store until his death in 1952; the store served as a grocery store until the 1970s and later became a carpet store. The Center for American Archeology purchased the building in 1991 and now uses it as its Visitor's Center and Museum. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on February 4, 1994.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2803
xsd:string 94000027
xsd:gYear 1902
<Geometry> POINT(-90.610275268555 39.298332214355)

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