[1] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed[2] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Avalon Hotel | March 19, 1982 (#82002992) |
301 North Broadway 44°01′35″N 92°27′48″W / 44.026453°N 92.463291°W | Rochester | 1919 hotel, originally a kosher venue for Jewish travelers, that in 1944 became one of Rochester's few African American-owned and -oriented businesses prior to desegregation. Now the Avalon Music store.[3] | |
2 | Dr. Donald C. Balfour House | July 21, 2004 (#04000723) |
427 6th Avenue, SW. 44°01′06″N 92°28′19″W / 44.018416°N 92.471858°W | Rochester | 1910 house of Mayo Clinic co-founder Dr. Donald Balfour.[4] | |
5 | Chateau Dodge Theatre | July 17, 1980 (#80002098) |
15 1st Street, S.W. 44°01′22″N 92°27′50″W / 44.022803°N 92.463962°W | Rochester | 1927 Exotic Revival atmospheric theatre.[5] | |
10 | Mayo Clinic Building | August 4, 1969 (#69000075) |
110 and 115 2nd Avenue, SW. 44°01′19″N 92°27′56″W / 44.02189°N 92.465548°W | Rochester | Also known as the Plummer Building, the 1928 headquarters of the influential Mayo Clinic.[6] | |
11 | Dr. William J. Mayo House | March 26, 1975 (#75001001) |
701 4th Street, SW. 44°01′11″N 92°28′25″W / 44.019735°N 92.473748°W | Rochester | 1916 stone Tudor Revival mansion of Mayo Clinic co-founder Dr. William James Mayo. Later known as the Mayo Foundation House.[5][7] | |
12 | Mayowood Historic District | ![]() |
September 22, 1970 (#70000306) |
3720 Mayowood Road, SW. 43°59′40″N 92°31′09″W / 43.994536°N 92.519163°W | Rochester | Estate of Mayo Clinic co-founder Dr. Charles Horace Mayo, including his 1911 mansion plus a lodge, farm, and greenhouse complex built 1908–1920s.[8] |
14 | Pierce House | ![]() |
July 21, 1980 (#80002101) |
426 2nd Avenue, SW. 44°01′06″N 92°27′56″W / 44.018363°N 92.465634°W | Rochester | 1877 brick Italianate hotel.[5] Demolished June 5, 2007.[9] |
15 | Pill Hill Residential Historic District | ![]() |
November 29, 1990 (#85003768) |
Roughly bounded by 3rd and 9th Streets and 7th and 10th Avenues, SW. 44°01′02″N 92°28′32″W / 44.0171°N 92.475545°W | Rochester | Early-20th-century residential neighborhood where many Mayo Clinic doctors lived.[5] |
17 | Henry S. Plummer House | May 21, 1975 (#75001002) |
1091 Plummer Lane 44°00′38″N 92°28′47″W / 44.010657°N 92.479789°W | Rochester | 1924 Tudor Revival mansion of Mayo Clinic co-founder Dr. Henry Stanley Plummer.[8] Now a city-owned art center and event venue.[10] | |
18 | Rochester Armory | December 2, 1980 (#80004268) |
121 North Broadway 44°01′31″N 92°27′49″W / 44.025139°N 92.463491°W | Rochester | 1915 brick Romanesque Revival armory of the Minnesota National Guard.[5] | |
19 | Rochester Public Library | July 2, 1980 (#80004537) |
226 2nd Street, SW. 44°01′17″N 92°28′01″W / 44.02134°N 92.466991°W | Rochester | 1937 Jacobean Revival library designed by Harold Crawford and built of Kasota limestone by the Public Works Administration.[5] Now the Mayo Medical School's Mitchell Student Center.[11] | |
20 | St. Mary's Hospital Dairy Farmstead | July 2, 1980 (#80004538) |
East of Rochester on County Highway 104 44°01′29″N 92°33′22″W / 44.024704°N 92.556085°W | Rochester | 1923 dairy farm built to supply St. Mary's Hospital with pasteurized milk.[5] | |
21 | George Stoppel Farmstead | May 12, 1975 (#75001000) |
County Highways 25 and 122 44°00′29″N 92°30′36″W / 44.008045°N 92.509962°W | Rochester | 1861 limestone house, barn, and two-story smokehouse.[8] | |
22 | Toogood Barns | ![]() |
June 26, 1975 (#75001003) |
Mayowood Road 44°00′01″N 92°28′21″W / 44.000194°N 92.472553°W | Rochester | c. 1870 stone barns of Yankee farmer William F. Toogood.[5] |
25 | Timothy A. Whiting House | ![]() |
December 4, 1980 (#80004269) |
225 1st Avenue, NW. 44°01′34″N 92°27′54″W / 44.026035°N 92.464898°W | Rochester | 1875 frame Italianate house of a notable grain merchant.[5] Now the Heritage House museum.[12] |
[1] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Chicago Great Western Railroad Company Depot | ![]() |
December 4, 1980 (#80004267) | November 13, 1987 | 88 S. Park Ave. and 130 S. Park Ave. (original address) Current coordinates are 44°01′08″N 92°27′41″W / 44.018984°N 92.461361°W | Rochester | 1900 Chicago Great Western Railway depot.[13] Moved in 1987.[5][14] |
2 | Cutting Barn | October 22, 1980 (#80002099) | May 4, 1984 | 3210 19th St. N.W. | Rochester | 1868 limestone barn of a prosperous early farm. Destroyed by an accidental fire on January 24, 1982.[15] | |
3 | Hotel Zumbro | October 10, 1980 (#80002100) | March 28, 1988 | 101 1st Ave., S.W. | Rochester | 1912 hotel catering to Mayo Clinic patients and their families. Demolished by owners in 1987 to make way for a modern replacement.[15] | |
4 | Charles H. Mayo House | July 2, 1980 (#80004535) | September 25, 1987 | 419 4th St., SW | Rochester | 1903 house of Dr. Charles Horace Mayo. Demolished as a condition of land sale back to the Mayo Clinic in 1987.[15] |