National Register of Historic Places listings in Tuscarawas County, Ohio
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This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Tuscarawas County, Ohio.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Tuscarawas County, Ohio, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.[1]
There are 25 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county, including 2 National Historic Landmarks.
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted June 14, 2024.[2]
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap
Download coordinates as:
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Current listings
[3] | Name on the Register[4] | Image | Date listed[5] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Frederick Bernhard House | December 9, 1988 (#88002748) | 211 E. Front St. 40°31′19″N 81°28′21″W / 40.521944°N 81.472500°W / 40.521944; -81.472500 (Frederick Bernhard House) | Dover | ||
2 | Katherine Cooper House | January 4, 1996 (#95001487) | 118 W. 7th St. 40°31′32″N 81°28′50″W / 40.525556°N 81.480556°W / 40.525556; -81.480556 (Katherine Cooper House) | Dover | ||
3 | John Deis House | June 30, 1988 (#88000980) | 203 W. 6th St. 40°31′27″N 81°28′54″W / 40.524167°N 81.481667°W / 40.524167; -81.481667 (John Deis House) | Dover | ||
4 | Dennison High School | ![]() | February 1, 2006 (#05001573) | 220 N. 3rd St. 40°23′40″N 81°20′01″W / 40.394444°N 81.333611°W / 40.394444; -81.333611 (Dennison High School) | Dennison | |
5 | E.D. Fisher House | September 24, 1999 (#99001194) | 432 S. Park Ave. 40°38′45″N 81°27′16″W / 40.645833°N 81.454444°W / 40.645833; -81.454444 (E.D. Fisher House) | Bolivar | ||
6 | Fort Laurens Site | ![]() | November 10, 1970 (#70000518) | Near State Route 212, 0.5 mi (0.80 km) south of Bolivar 40°38′20″N 81°27′22″W / 40.638889°N 81.456111°W / 40.638889; -81.456111 (Fort Laurens Site) | Lawrence Township | |
7 | Garver Brothers Store | November 26, 1980 (#80003238) | 134 N. Wooster Ave. 40°35′51″N 81°31′40″W / 40.5975°N 81.527778°W / 40.5975; -81.527778 (Garver Brothers Store) | Strasburg | destroyed by arson October 2010 [6] | |
8 | Gnadenhutten Massacre Site | ![]() ![]() | November 10, 1970 (#70000519) | South of downtown Gnadenhutten on a county road 40°21′15″N 81°26′06″W / 40.354167°N 81.435°W / 40.354167; -81.435 (Gnadenhutten Massacre Site) | Gnadenhutten | |
9 | Johnson Site II | Upload image | February 9, 1984 (#84003808) | Above Brandywine Creek, west of Dover[7] | Dover Township | |
10 | T. Lanning & Co. Department Store | ![]() | April 28, 2000 (#00000420) | 226-228 Grant St. 40°23′34″N 81°20′03″W / 40.392778°N 81.334167°W / 40.392778; -81.334167 (T. Lanning & Co. Department Store) | Dennison | |
11 | John Lebol House, Smokehouse and Springhouse | July 15, 1982 (#82003660) | Route 1, east of Bolivar 40°38′19″N 81°26′03″W / 40.638611°N 81.434167°W / 40.638611; -81.434167 (John Lebol House, Smokehouse and Springhouse) | Lawrence Township | ||
12 | Pennsylvania Railroad Depot and Baggage Room | ![]() ![]() | September 8, 1976 (#76001536) | 400 Center St. 40°23′31″N 81°19′56″W / 40.391944°N 81.332222°W / 40.391944; -81.332222 (Pennsylvania Railroad Depot and Baggage Room) | Dennison | Designated a National Historic Landmark June 17, 2011 |
13 | Christian Pershing Barn | March 19, 1992 (#92000172) | Off State Route 39 west of Dover 40°30′58″N 81°32′46″W / 40.516111°N 81.546111°W / 40.516111; -81.546111 (Christian Pershing Barn) | Dover Township | ||
14 | Port Washington Town Hall | ![]() | February 22, 1979 (#79001971) | Main St. 40°19′40″N 81°31′08″W / 40.327778°N 81.518889°W / 40.327778; -81.518889 (Port Washington Town Hall) | Port Washington | |
15 | Ragersville School | July 22, 1994 (#94000777) | 8807 County Road 52, SW. (Crooked Run Rd.) in Ragersville 40°27′11″N 81°37′48″W / 40.453056°N 81.63°W / 40.453056; -81.63 (Ragersville School) | Auburn Township | ||
16 | The Railway Chapel | ![]() | April 15, 2009 (#09000212) | 301 Grant St. 40°23′35″N 81°20′03″W / 40.393169°N 81.334075°W / 40.393169; -81.334075 (The Railway Chapel) | Dennison | Also known as the "Presbyterian Church of Dennison." |
17 | Jeremiah Reeves House and Carriage House | July 15, 1982 (#82003661) | 325 E. Iron Ave. 40°30′57″N 81°27′46″W / 40.515833°N 81.462778°W / 40.515833; -81.462778 (Jeremiah Reeves House and Carriage House) | Dover | ||
18 | Christian H. Rinderknecht House | July 31, 1991 (#91000972) | 602 N. Wooster Ave. 40°31′32″N 81°28′48″W / 40.525417°N 81.480000°W / 40.525417; -81.480000 (Christian H. Rinderknecht House) | Dover | ||
19 | Schoenbrunn Site | ![]() | November 10, 1970 (#70000520) | U.S. 250 40°27′55″N 81°25′08″W / 40.465278°N 81.418889°W / 40.465278; -81.418889 (Schoenbrunn Site) | New Philadelphia | Schoenbrunn Village State Memorial |
20 | Seven Ranges Terminus | ![]() ![]() | December 12, 1976 (#76001527) | West of Magnolia at the junction of Stark, Tuscarawas, and Carroll counties 40°39′07″N 81°19′05″W / 40.651944°N 81.318056°W / 40.651944; -81.318056 (Seven Ranges Terminus) | Sandy Township | Extends into Carroll and Stark counties |
21 | Dr. Joseph Slingluff House | November 19, 1998 (#98001384) | 606 N. Wooster Ave. 40°31′32″N 81°28′48″W / 40.525694°N 81.480000°W / 40.525694; -81.480000 (Dr. Joseph Slingluff House) | Dover | ||
22 | Tuscarawas County Courthouse | ![]() ![]() | July 16, 1973 (#73001544) | Courthouse Sq. 40°29′24″N 81°26′42″W / 40.49°N 81.445°W / 40.49; -81.445 (Tuscarawas County Courthouse) | New Philadelphia | |
23 | Warther Family Home and Museum | Upload image | May 30, 2023 (#100009003) | 331 Karl Ave. 40°31′31″N 81°29′15″W / 40.5254°N 81.4875°W / 40.5254; -81.4875 (Warther Family Home and Museum) | Dover | |
24 | Zoar Historic District | ![]() ![]() | June 23, 1969 (#69000150) | Bounded by 5th, Foltz, and 1st Sts. and by rear property lines of properties; also village of Zoar along State Route 212; also roughly bounded by Zoar Cemetery, Cemetery Rd., Lake Dr., the Tuscarawas River, State Route 212, 5th, E. 2nd, and East Sts. 40°36′48″N 81°25′22″W / 40.613333°N 81.422778°W / 40.613333; -81.422778 (Zoar Historic District) | Zoar | Second set of boundaries represents a boundary increase on August 11, 1975; third set of boundaries represents a boundary increase on September 20, 2013. Designated a National Historic Landmark District in 2016. |
25 | Zoarville Bridge | ![]() ![]() | March 13, 1997 (#97000199) | Across the Conotton Creek east of the junction of State Routes 212 and 800, near Zoarville 40°34′38″N 81°23′30″W / 40.577222°N 81.391667°W / 40.577222; -81.391667 (Zoarville Bridge) | Fairfield Township | The only Fink through truss bridge known in the United States today[8] |
See also
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Tuscarawas County, Ohio.
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Ohio
- Listings in neighboring counties: Carroll, Coshocton, Guernsey, Harrison, Holmes, Stark
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Ohio
References
- ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved June 14, 2024.
- ^ Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 24, 2008.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ Canton Repository Archived 2010-10-24 at the Wayback Machine arson fire story accessed 11-09-2010
- ^ Brown, Jeffrey D. "The Johnson Site II: Terminal Archaic Points and Pottery". Ohio Archaeologist 46.2 (1996): 4-7: 4.
- ^ Zoarville Station Bridge, Historic American Engineering Record via the Library of Congress, 1992. Accessed 2009-04-25.
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