[1] |
Landmark name |
Image |
Date designated[2] |
Location |
County |
Description |
1 |
Robert S. Abbott House |
|
000000001976-12-08-0000December 8, 1976 (#76000686) |
Chicago 41°48′29″N 87°36′58″W / 41.808068°N 87.616135°W / 41.808068; -87.616135 (Robert S. Abbott House) |
Cook |
A home of Robert S. Abbott, founder of the Chicago Defender newspaper.
|
2 |
Adler Planetarium |
|
000000001987-02-27-0000February 27, 1987 (#87000819) |
Chicago 41°51′59″N 87°36′27″W / 41.866454°N 87.607416°W / 41.866454; -87.607416 (Adler Planetarium) |
Cook |
First and oldest planetarium in the western hemisphere.
|
3 |
Auditorium Building |
|
000000001975-05-15-0000May 15, 1975 (#70000230) |
Chicago 41°52′33″N 87°37′28″W / 41.875756°N 87.624370°W / 41.875756; -87.624370 (Auditorium Building) |
Cook |
Building designed by Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan.
|
4 |
Bishop Hill Colony |
|
000000001970-04-27-0000April 27, 1970 (#70000244) |
Bishop Hill 41°12′01″N 90°07′08″W / 41.2003°N 90.1189°W / 41.2003; -90.1189 (Bishop Hill Colony) |
Henry |
Historic district of Swedish dissident commune founded in 1846.
|
5 |
Cahokia Mounds |
|
000000001964-07-19-0000July 19, 1964 (#66000899) |
Collinsville 38°39′14″N 90°03′52″W / 38.653889°N 90.064444°W / 38.653889; -90.064444 (Cahokia Mounds) |
Madison and St. Clair |
Largest archaeological site related to Mississippian culture, and largest pre-Columbian earthworks in North America north of Mexico. Also a UNESCO World Heritage Site
|
6 |
Carson, Pirie, Scott, and Company Store |
|
000000001975-05-15-0000May 15, 1975 (#70000231) |
Chicago 41°52′55″N 87°37′40″W / 41.881894°N 87.627780°W / 41.881894; -87.627780 (Carson, Pirie, Scott, and Company Store) |
Cook |
Architect Louis Sullivan-designed building.
|
7 |
James Charnley House |
|
000000001998-08-05-0000August 5, 1998 (#70000232) |
Chicago 41°54′26″N 87°37′39″W / 41.907264°N 87.627597°W / 41.907264; -87.627597 (James Charnley House) |
Cook |
Louis Sullivan AND Frank Lloyd Wright got in on this one's design.
|
8 |
Chicago Board of Trade Building |
|
000000001978-06-02-0000June 2, 1978 (#78003181) |
Chicago 41°52′41″N 87°37′56″W / 41.878123°N 87.632131°W / 41.878123; -87.632131 (Chicago Board of Trade Building) |
Cook |
Skyscraper designed by Holabird & Root, housed the world's largest trading floor when built in 1930.
|
9 |
Church of the Holy Family |
|
000000001970-04-15-0000April 15, 1970 (#70000851) |
Cahokia 38°34′13″N 90°11′18″W / 38.57035°N 90.18844°W / 38.57035; -90.18844 (Church of the Holy Family) |
St. Clair |
A church dating from 1799.
|
10 |
Columbus Park |
|
000000002003-07-31-0000July 31, 2003 (#91000567) |
Chicago 41°52′26″N 87°46′11″W / 41.873889°N 87.769722°W / 41.873889; -87.769722 (Columbus Park) |
Cook |
Magnum Opus of landscape architect Jens Jensen.
|
11 |
Arthur H. Compton House |
|
000000001976-05-11-0000May 11, 1976 (#76000687) |
Chicago 41°47′33″N 87°35′47″W / 41.792435°N 87.596263°W / 41.792435; -87.596263 (Arthur H. Compton House) |
Cook |
Home of Nobel Prize–winning physicist who proved light has both wave and particle aspects, the Compton Effect.
|
12 |
Avery Coonley House |
|
000000001970-12-30-0000December 30, 1970 (#70000243) |
Riverside 41°49′07″N 87°49′43″W / 41.818629°N 87.828618°W / 41.818629; -87.828618 (Avery Coonley House) |
Cook |
Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home, in Riverside Historic District
|
13 |
Crow Island School |
|
000000001990-12-14-0000December 14, 1990 (#89001730) |
Winnetka 42°06′04″N 87°44′46″W / 42.101111°N 87.746113°W / 42.101111; -87.746113 (Crow Island School) |
Cook |
An elementary school designed by Perkins + Will and Eliel & Eero Saarinen. Model for the now-widespread Winnetka Plan school design.
|
14 |
Susan Lawrence Dana House |
|
000000001976-01-07-0000January 7, 1976 (#74000774) |
Springfield 39°47′38″N 89°39′07″W / 39.793930°N 89.652075°W / 39.793930; -89.652075 (Susan Lawrence Dana House) |
Sangamon |
A Frank Lloyd Wright-designed house.
|
15 |
David Davis House |
|
000000001975-05-15-0000May 15, 1975 (#72001479) |
Bloomington 40°28′54″N 88°58′50″W / 40.481624°N 88.980419°W / 40.481624; -88.980419 (David Davis House) |
McLean |
Home of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States and Abraham Lincoln campaign manager David Davis.
|
16 |
Charles G. Dawes House |
|
000000001976-12-08-0000December 8, 1976 (#76000706) |
Evanston 42°02′33″N 87°40′23″W / 42.042526°N 87.673084°W / 42.042526; -87.673084 (Charles G. Dawes House) |
Cook |
Home of Charles Gates Dawes, Nobel Peace Prize recipient and Vice President to Calvin Coolidge.
|
17 |
John Deere Home and Shop |
|
000000001964-07-19-0000July 19, 1964 (#66000327) |
Grand Detour 41°53′48″N 89°24′53″W / 41.896618°N 89.414648°W / 41.896618; -89.414648 (John Deere Home and Shop) |
Ogle |
Site of the invention of the first steel plow by John Deere.
|
18 |
Oscar Stanton DePriest House |
|
000000001975-05-15-0000May 15, 1975 (#75000646) |
Chicago 41°48′35″N 87°37′05″W / 41.809769°N 87.617957°W / 41.809769; -87.617957 (Oscar Stanton DePriest House) |
Cook |
Home of the first post-Reconstruction African-American US congressman.
|
19 |
Jean Baptiste Point Du Sable Homesite |
|
000000001976-05-11-0000May 11, 1976 (#76000690) |
Chicago 41°53′16″N 87°37′24″W / 41.887739°N 87.623409°W / 41.887739; -87.623409 (Jean Baptiste Point Du Sable Homesite) |
Cook |
Home of a Chicago's first settler, an African-American.
|
20 |
Eads Bridge |
|
000000001964-01-29-0000January 29, 1964 (#66000946) |
East St. Louis 38°37′39″N 90°11′08″W / 38.627417°N 90.185585°W / 38.627417; -90.185585 (Eads Bridge) |
St. Clair |
A combined road and railway bridge which was, when completed in 1874, the longest arch bridge in the world. Extends into St. Louis, Missouri.
|
21 |
Farm Creek Section |
|
000000001997-12-09-0000December 9, 1997 (#91002039) |
East Peoria 40°40′32″N 89°29′23″W / 40.6755°N 89.4898°W / 40.6755; -89.4898 (Farm Creek Section) |
Tazewell |
Site of exposed geological strata.
|
22 |
Farnsworth House |
|
000000002006-02-17-0000February 17, 2006 (#04000867) |
Plano 41°38′06″N 88°32′09″W / 41.634989°N 88.535722°W / 41.634989; -88.535722 (Farnsworth House) |
Kendall |
A one-room home designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.
|
23 |
John Farson House |
|
000000001996-06-19-0000June 19, 1996 (#72000454) |
Oak Park 41°53′07″N 87°48′02″W / 41.885278°N 87.800556°W / 41.885278; -87.800556 (John Farson House) |
Cook |
The most famous work of George Washington Maher.
|
24 |
Fort De Chartres |
|
000000001960-10-09-0000October 9, 1960 (#66000329) |
Prairie du Rocher 38°05′05″N 90°09′29″W / 38.084652°N 90.157968°W / 38.084652; -90.157968 (Fort De Chartres) |
Randolph |
French fort built in 1720. Its powder magazine is believed to be oldest standing building in Illinois.
|
25 |
Fort Sheridan Historic District |
|
000000001984-04-20-0000April 20, 1984 (#80001379) |
Fort Sheridan 42°12′45″N 87°48′38″W / 42.2125°N 87.810556°W / 42.2125; -87.810556 (Fort Sheridan Historic District) |
Lake |
An area originally established as a United States Army Post. The campus was designed by Holabird & Roche.
|
25.5 |
Henry Gerber House |
|
000000002015-07-21-0000July 21, 2015 (#15000584) |
Chicago 41°54′47″N 87°38′10″W / 41.91308°N 87.63600°W / 41.91308; -87.63600 (Henry Gerber House) |
Cook |
Gerber established the Society for Human Rights, the first American gay rights organization, here in the 1920s.
|
26 |
John J. Glessner House |
|
000000001976-01-07-0000January 7, 1976 (#70000233) |
Chicago 41°51′28″N 87°37′15″W / 41.857886°N 87.620784°W / 41.857886; -87.620784 (John J. Glessner House) |
Cook |
A 19th century house designed by Henry Hobson Richardson.
|
27 |
Ulysses S. Grant Home |
|
000000001960-12-19-0000December 19, 1960 (#66000322) |
Galena 42°24′36″N 90°25′23″W / 42.410104°N 90.422924°W / 42.410104; -90.422924 (Ulysses S. Grant Home) |
Jo Daviess |
A house given to General of the Army Ulysses S. Grant following the Civil War. Grant was elected President of the United States while residing here.
|
28 |
Grosse Point Lighthouse |
|
000000001999-01-20-0000January 20, 1999 (#76000707) |
Evanston 42°03′50″N 87°40′34″W / 42.063889°N 87.676111°W / 42.063889; -87.676111 (Grosse Point Lighthouse) |
Cook |
A lighthouse on the shores of Lake Michigan, built in 1873 the wake of several shipping disasters.
|
29 |
Haymarket Martyrs' Monument |
|
000000001997-02-18-0000February 18, 1997 (#97000343) |
Forest Park 41°52′11″N 87°49′11″W / 41.869793°N 87.819778°W / 41.869793; -87.819778 (Haymarket Martyrs' Monument) |
Cook |
A monument in Waldheim Cemetery commemorating the Haymarket Riot.
|
30 |
Hegeler-Carus Mansion |
|
000000002007-03-29-0000March 29, 2007 (#95000989) |
LaSalle 41°20′09″N 89°05′13″W / 41.335836°N 89.087053°W / 41.335836; -89.087053 (Hegeler-Carus Mansion) |
La Salle |
Designed by Chicago architect William W. Boyington for Edward C. Hegeler, a partner in a nearby zinc company. It was later the home of his son-in-law, publisher and philosopher Paul Carus.
|
31 |
Isidore H. Heller House |
|
000000002004-08-18-0000August 18, 2004 (#72000450) |
Chicago 41°48′05″N 87°35′50″W / 41.801333°N 87.597089°W / 41.801333; -87.597089 (Isidore H. Heller House) |
Cook |
A Frank Lloyd Wright-designed house.
|
32 |
Arthur Heurtley House |
|
000000002000-02-16-0000February 16, 2000 (#00000258) |
Oak Park 41°53′34″N 87°47′59″W / 41.892722°N 87.799822°W / 41.892722; -87.799822 (Arthur Heurtley House) |
Cook |
Frank Lloyd Wright-designed house.
|
33 |
Hull House |
|
000000001965-06-23-0000June 23, 1965 (#66000315) |
Chicago 41°52′17″N 87°38′50″W / 41.871399°N 87.647133°W / 41.871399; -87.647133 (Hull House) |
Cook |
One of the first settlement houses in the U.S., founded by Jane Addams.
|
34 |
Illinois and Michigan Canal Locks And Towpath |
|
000000001964-01-29-0000January 29, 1964 (#66000332) |
Joliet 41°34′11″N 88°04′11″W / 41.569722°N 88.069722°W / 41.569722; -88.069722 (Illinois and Michigan Canal Locks And Towpath) |
Will |
A canal that helped establish transportation from the Great Lakes to the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico. It established Chicago as a major center of commerce.
|
35 |
Nicholas Jarrot Mansion |
|
000000002001-08-07-0000August 7, 2001 (#74002197) |
Cahokia 38°34′12″N 90°11′14″W / 38.57011°N 90.18711°W / 38.57011; -90.18711 (Nicholas Jarrot Mansion) |
St. Clair |
A mansion built in 1799 for a fur trader.
|
36 |
Kennicott Grove |
|
000000001976-01-07-0000January 7, 1976 (#73000698) |
Glenview 42°05′13″N 87°52′12″W / 42.086865°N 87.870023°W / 42.086865; -87.870023 (Kennicott Grove) |
Cook |
The home of Robert Kennicott, an American naturalist.
|
37 |
Kincaid Site |
|
000000001964-07-19-0000July 19, 1964 (#66000326) |
Brookport 37°04′50″N 88°29′30″W / 37.080575°N 88.491783°W / 37.080575; -88.491783 (Kincaid Site) |
Massac and Pope |
Archaeological site.
|
38 |
Leiter II Building |
|
000000001976-01-07-0000January 7, 1976 (#76000695) |
Chicago 41°52′28″N 87°37′39″W / 41.874477°N 87.627377°W / 41.874477; -87.627377 (Leiter II Building) |
Cook |
Longtime flagship store of Sears, Roebuck & Co., designed by William Le Baron Jenney.
|
39 |
Frank R. Lillie House |
|
000000001976-05-11-0000May 11, 1976 (#76000696) |
Chicago 41°47′22″N 87°35′35″W / 41.789545°N 87.593114°W / 41.789545; -87.593114 (Frank R. Lillie House) |
Cook |
Former home of embryologist Frank Rattray Lillie.
|
40 |
Abraham Lincoln Home |
|
000000001960-12-19-0000December 19, 1960 (#71000076) |
Springfield 39°47′43″N 89°38′41″W / 39.795352°N 89.644724°W / 39.795352; -89.644724 (Abraham Lincoln Home) |
Sangamon |
The only house ever owned by America's 16th president.
|
41 |
Lincoln Park Lily Pool |
|
000000002006-02-17-0000February 17, 2006 (#06000235) |
Chicago 41°55′31″N 87°38′03″W / 41.9253°N 87.6341°W / 41.9253; -87.6341 (Lincoln Park Lily Pool) |
Cook |
An example of Prairie School landscape architecture designed by Alfred Caldwell.
|
42 |
Lincoln Tomb |
|
000000001960-12-19-0000December 19, 1960 (#66000330) |
Springfield 39°49′24″N 89°39′21″W / 39.823333°N 89.655833°W / 39.823333; -89.655833 (Lincoln Tomb) |
Sangamon |
The tomb of America's 16th president, Abraham Lincoln.
|
43 |
Vachel Lindsay House |
|
000000001971-11-11-0000November 11, 1971 (#71000297) |
Springfield 39°47′45″N 89°38′58″W / 39.795926°N 89.649441°W / 39.795926; -89.649441 (Vachel Lindsay House) |
Sangamon |
Home of poet Vachel Lindsay.
|
44 |
Owen Lovejoy House |
|
000000001997-02-18-0000February 18, 1997 (#73000690) |
Princeton 41°22′23″N 89°27′03″W / 41.373056°N 89.450833°W / 41.373056; -89.450833 (Owen Lovejoy House) |
Bureau |
Home of prominent abolitionist Owen Lovejoy.
|
45 |
Marquette Building |
|
000000001976-01-07-0000January 7, 1976 (#73000697) |
Chicago 41°52′49″N 87°37′46″W / 41.880193°N 87.629371°W / 41.880193; -87.629371 (Marquette Building) |
Cook |
Skyscraper designed by Holabird & Roche.
|
46 |
Marshall Field Company Store |
|
000000001978-06-02-0000June 2, 1978 (#78001123) |
Chicago 41°53′01″N 87°37′40″W / 41.883532°N 87.627850°W / 41.883532; -87.627850 (Marshall Field Company Store) |
Cook |
Designed by Daniel Burnham, it was the longtime flagship store of Marshall Field's.
|
47 |
Mazon Creek Fossil Beds |
|
000000001997-09-25-0000September 25, 1997 (#97001272) |
Morris 41°19′16″N 88°20′46″W / 41.321°N 88.346°W / 41.321; -88.346 (Mazon Creek Fossil Beds) |
Grundy |
Lagerstätte of fossils, best known as one of the only sites where Tully Monsters were found.
|
48 |
Pierre Menard House |
|
000000001970-04-15-0000April 15, 1970 (#70000245) |
Ellis Grove 37°57′53″N 89°54′36″W / 37.9647°N 89.9099°W / 37.9647; -89.9099 (Pierre Menard House) |
Randolph |
House of fur trader Pierre Menard, the first lieutenant governor of Illinois.
|
49 |
Robert A. Millikan House |
|
000000001976-05-11-0000May 11, 1976 (#76000699) |
Chicago 41°47′35″N 87°35′47″W / 41.792918°N 87.596283°W / 41.792918; -87.596283 (Robert A. Millikan House) |
Cook |
Home of Robert A. Millikan, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist.
|
50 |
Modoc Rock Shelter |
|
000000001961-01-20-0000January 20, 1961 (#66000328) |
Modoc 38°03′46″N 90°03′49″W / 38.062778°N 90.063611°W / 38.062778; -90.063611 (Modoc Rock Shelter) |
Randolph |
An archaeological site, a rock overhang used as shelter during the Archaic period in North America.
|
51 |
Montgomery Ward Company Complex |
|
000000001978-06-02-0000June 2, 1978 (#78001125) |
Chicago 41°53′47″N 87°38′36″W / 41.896450°N 87.643396°W / 41.896450; -87.643396 (Montgomery Ward Company Complex) |
Cook |
The former warehouse and offices of the national headquarters of one of the nation's first mail order companies, Montgomery Ward.
|
52 |
Morrow Plots, University of Illinois |
|
000000001968-05-23-0000May 23, 1968 (#68000024) |
Urbana 40°06′09″N 88°13′33″W / 40.102556°N 88.225817°W / 40.102556; -88.225817 (Morrow Plots, University of Illinois) |
Champaign |
An experimental corn field.
|
53 |
Nauvoo Historic District |
|
000000001961-01-20-0000January 20, 1961 (#66000321) |
Nauvoo 40°32′53″N 91°22′55″W / 40.548°N 91.382°W / 40.548; -91.382 (Nauvoo Historic District) |
Hancock |
A historic district based around a 19th-century Mormon settlement; beginning of the Mormon Trail.
|
54 |
New Philadelphia Townsite |
|
000000002009-01-16-0000January 16, 2009 (#05000869) |
Barry 39°41′45″N 90°57′35″W / 39.695833°N 90.959722°W / 39.695833; -90.959722 (New Philadelphia Townsite) |
Pike |
Site of first U.S. settlement founded by an African-American.
|
55 |
Old Kaskaskia Village |
|
000000001964-07-19-0000July 19, 1964 (#66000324) |
Ottawa 41°19′19″N 88°57′36″W / 41.32194°N 88.96000°W / 41.32194; -88.96000 (Old Kaskaskia Village) |
La Salle |
The best-documented Native American village in the Illinois River Valley.
|
56 |
Old Main, Knox College |
|
000000001961-07-04-0000July 4, 1961 (#66000323) |
Galesburg 40°56′29″N 90°22′14″W / 40.941423°N 90.370568°W / 40.941423; -90.370568 (Old Main, Knox College) |
Knox |
Best-preserved site of one of the Lincoln-Douglas debates.
|
57 |
Old State Capitol |
|
000000001961-07-04-0000July 4, 1961 (#66000331) |
Springfield 39°47′57″N 89°38′53″W / 39.799238°N 89.648143°W / 39.799238; -89.648143 (Old State Capitol) |
Sangamon |
The fifth capitol building of Illinois. Site of Lincoln's House Divided Speech.
|
58 |
Old Stone Gate, Chicago Union Stockyards |
|
000000001981-05-29-0000May 29, 1981 (#72000451) |
Chicago 41°49′00″N 87°38′54″W / 41.816627°N 87.648364°W / 41.816627; -87.648364 (Old Stone Gate, Chicago Union Stockyards) |
Cook |
Entrance to the famous Union Stock Yards, designed by John Wellboorn Root.
|
59 |
Orchestra Hall |
|
000000001994-04-19-0000April 19, 1994 (#78001127) |
Chicago 41°52′45″N 87°37′28″W / 41.879200°N 87.624429°W / 41.879200; -87.624429 (Orchestra Hall) |
Cook |
A symphony hall designed by Daniel Burnham.
|
60 |
Principia College Historic District |
|
000000001993-04-19-0000April 19, 1993 (#93001605) |
Elsah 38°56′56″N 90°20′51″W / 38.94890°N 90.34753°W / 38.94890; -90.34753 (Principia College Historic District) |
Jersey |
One of the last major works by Bernard Maybeck.
|
61 |
Pullman Historic District |
|
000000001970-12-30-0000December 30, 1970 (#69000054) |
Chicago 41°41′50″N 87°36′34″W / 41.697222°N 87.609444°W / 41.697222; -87.609444 (Pullman Historic District) |
Cook |
Another historic district of the Pullman Company, including the Hotel Florence.
|
62 |
Reliance Building |
|
000000001976-01-07-0000January 7, 1976 (#70000237) |
Chicago 41°52′57″N 87°37′40″W / 41.882382°N 87.627844°W / 41.882382; -87.627844 (Reliance Building) |
Cook |
A building designed by Burnham & Root.
|
63 |
Riverside Historic District |
|
000000001970-08-29-0000August 29, 1970 (#69000055) |
Riverside 41°49′54″N 87°48′49″W / 41.8318°N 87.8135°W / 41.8318; -87.8135 (Riverside Historic District) |
Cook |
Planned community designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux.
|
64 |
Frederick C. Robie House |
|
000000001963-11-27-0000November 27, 1963 (#66000316) |
Chicago 41°47′25″N 87°35′46″W / 41.790332°N 87.596214°W / 41.790332; -87.596214 (Frederick C. Robie House) |
Cook |
A Prairie style home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1908.
|
65 |
Rock Island Arsenal |
|
000000001988-06-07-0000June 7, 1988 (#69000057) |
Rock Island 41°31′01″N 90°32′31″W / 41.516944°N 90.541944°W / 41.516944; -90.541944 (Rock Island Arsenal) |
Rock Island |
An arsenal and site of a large Union prison camp.
|
66 |
Rookery Building |
|
000000001975-05-15-0000May 15, 1975 (#70000238) |
Chicago 41°52′45″N 87°37′56″W / 41.879284°N 87.632273°W / 41.879284; -87.632273 (Rookery Building) |
Cook |
An office building designed by Daniel Burnham and John Wellborn Root.
|
67 |
Room 405, George Herbert Jones Laboratory |
|
000000001967-05-28-0000May 28, 1967 (#67000005) |
Chicago 41°47′18″N 87°36′04″W / 41.788422°N 87.601025°W / 41.788422; -87.601025 (Room 405, George Herbert Jones Laboratory) |
Cook |
The laboratory that first isolated plutonium and determined its atomic mass.
|
68 |
Sears, Roebuck and Company |
|
000000001978-06-02-0000June 2, 1978 (#78001129) |
Chicago 41°52′07″N 87°42′38″W / 41.868541°N 87.710573°W / 41.868541; -87.710573 (Sears, Roebuck and Company) |
Cook |
The headquarters of Sears, Roebuck and Company for almost seven decades.
|
69 |
Second Presbyterian Church |
|
000000002013-03-11-0000March 11, 2013 (#74000754) |
Chicago 41°51′21″N 87°37′28″W / 41.8558°N 87.6244°W / 41.8558; -87.6244 (Second Presbyterian Church) |
Cook |
This church is a masterpiece of the Arts and Crafts movement with an interior by Howard Van Doren Shaw.
|
70 |
Shedd Aquarium |
|
000000001987-02-27-0000February 27, 1987 (#87000820) |
Chicago 41°52′02″N 87°37′09″W / 41.867182°N 87.619236°W / 41.867182; -87.619236 (Shedd Aquarium) |
Cook |
Formerly the largest indoor aquarium in the world.
|
71 |
Site of the First Self-Sustaining Nuclear Reaction |
|
000000001965-02-18-0000February 18, 1965 (#66000314) |
Chicago 41°47′26″N 87°36′04″W / 41.790494°N 87.601043°W / 41.790494; -87.601043 (Site of the First Self-Sustaining Nuclear Reaction) |
Cook |
Site of the First Self-Sustaining Nuclear Reaction.
|
72 |
South Dearborn Street-Printing House Row North Historic Districtt |
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000000001976-01-07-0000January 7, 1976 (#76000705) |
Chicago 41°52′36″N 87°37′41″W / 41.876545°N 87.62812°W / 41.876545; -87.62812 (South Dearborn Street-Printing House Row North Historic Districtt) |
Cook |
A historic district reflecting Chicago's legacy as a major printing center.
|
73 |
S.R. Crown Hall |
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000000002001-08-07-0000August 7, 2001 (#01001049) |
Chicago 41°50′01″N 87°37′38″W / 41.833611°N 87.627222°W / 41.833611; -87.627222 (S.R. Crown Hall) |
Cook |
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe-designed architecture school building at Illinois Institute of Technology
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74 |
Starved Rock |
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000000001960-10-09-0000October 9, 1960 (#66000325) |
Ottawa 41°19′17″N 88°59′25″W / 41.321389°N 88.990278°W / 41.321389; -88.990278 (Starved Rock) |
La Salle |
A Sandstone butte overlooking the Illinois River, purportedly the site of a massacre of the Illinois Confederation.
|
75 |
Adlai E. Stevenson II Farm |
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000000002014-04-22-0000April 22, 2014 (#03000918) |
Mettawa 42°13′44″N 87°55′50″W / 42.228811°N 87.930538°W / 42.228811; -87.930538 (Adlai E. Stevenson II Farm) |
Lake |
Home of several-time candidate for United States President Adlai E. Stevenson II.
|
76 |
Lorado Taft Midway Studios |
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000000001965-12-21-0000December 21, 1965 (#66000317) |
Chicago 41°47′07″N 87°36′10″W / 41.785402°N 87.602750°W / 41.785402; -87.602750 (Lorado Taft Midway Studios) |
Cook |
Studios of sculptor Lorado Taft, designed by Pond & Pond.
|
77 |
F.F. Tomek House |
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000000001999-01-20-0000January 20, 1999 (#99000632) |
Riverside 41°49′56″N 87°49′02″W / 41.832153°N 87.8171°W / 41.832153; -87.8171 (F.F. Tomek House) |
Cook |
A Frank Lloyd Wright house in the Riverside Historic District
|
78 |
Lyman Trumbull House |
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000000001975-05-15-0000May 15, 1975 (#75000667) |
Alton 38°53′51″N 90°10′35″W / 38.897389°N 90.176415°W / 38.897389; -90.176415 (Lyman Trumbull House) |
Madison |
House of US Senator Lyman Trumbull. He co-authored the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
|
79 |
U-505 (German Submarine) |
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000000001989-06-29-0000June 29, 1989 (#89001231) |
Chicago 41°51′52″N 87°36′57″W / 41.864543°N 87.615713°W / 41.864543; -87.615713 (U-505 (German Submarine)) |
Cook |
German U-Boat at Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago
|
80 |
Unity Temple |
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000000001970-12-30-0000December 30, 1970 (#70000240) |
Oak Park 41°53′19″N 87°47′48″W / 41.888613°N 87.796798°W / 41.888613; -87.796798 (Unity Temple) |
Cook |
A temple designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
|
81 |
University Of Illinois Observatory |
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000000001989-12-20-0000December 20, 1989 (#86003155) |
Urbana 40°06′15″N 88°13′33″W / 40.104081°N 88.225712°W / 40.104081; -88.225712 (University Of Illinois Observatory) |
Champaign |
An observatory.
|
82 |
The Wayside |
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000000001966-11-13-0000November 13, 1966 (#66000320) |
Winnetka 42°06′51″N 87°43′57″W / 42.114222°N 87.732475°W / 42.114222; -87.732475 (The Wayside) |
Cook |
Home of Henry Demarest Lloyd.
|
83 |
Ida B. Wells-Barnett House |
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000000001974-05-30-0000May 30, 1974 (#74000757) |
Chicago 41°49′40″N 87°37′03″W / 41.827794°N 87.617504°W / 41.827794; -87.617504 (Ida B. Wells-Barnett House) |
Cook |
Former home of civil rights advocate Ida B. Wells.
|
84 |
Frances Willard House |
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000000001965-06-23-0000June 23, 1965 (#66000318) |
Evanston 42°02′54″N 87°40′43″W / 42.048287°N 87.678481°W / 42.048287; -87.678481 (Frances Willard House) |
Cook |
Former home of temperance reformer Frances Willard, and longtime headquarters of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union.
|
85 |
Daniel Hale Williams House |
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000000001975-05-15-0000May 15, 1975 (#75000655) |
Chicago 41°49′06″N 87°36′55″W / 41.818425°N 87.615284°W / 41.818425; -87.615284 (Daniel Hale Williams House) |
Cook |
The former home of Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, one of the first major African American surgeons.
|
86 |
Frank Lloyd Wright Home And Studio |
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000000001976-01-07-0000January 7, 1976 (#72000456) |
Oak Park 41°53′36″N 87°48′01″W / 41.893387°N 87.800182°W / 41.893387; -87.800182 (Frank Lloyd Wright Home And Studio) |
Cook |
Former home and studio of Frank Lloyd Wright. |