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In either 1902 or 1903, Lee D. Miller established his funeral home and a livery barn on South Main Avenue in Sioux Falls. In 1923, Miller hired local architectural firm Perkins & McWayne to build a new, larger facility on the property, as Miller had just incorporated two other local funeral homes—Burnside Funeral Home and Joseph Nelson Funeral Home—into his.
The Josephine Martin Glidden Memorial Chapel is a historic church at 2121 E. Twelfth Street in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. It was built in 1924 and was added to the National Register in 1987. [1] It was deemed notable as "a good example of funerary architecture in a gothic style with Romanesque features." [2]
Barney A. Boos, 1938, South Dakota House of Representatives [28] Nancy Erickson,1984, Secretary of the United States Senate [29] Richard O. Gregerson, 1957, South Dakota Senate [30] Roger Haugo, 1958, South Dakota House of Representatives [31] Ried Holien, South Dakota Senate [32] Roger W. Hunt, 1959, South Dakota House of Representatives [33]
South Dakota Veterans Cemetery is located north of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, at the corner of Slip Up Creek Road (County Road 317) and 477th Avenue. [1] It is next to Slip-up Creek. [2] Spanning over 60 acres (24 ha), it has the capacity for over 28,000 burials. [3] At opening, the cemetery estimated it would receive 270 burials per year. [4]
South Dakota Department of Transportation Bridge No. 50-192-132: January 14, 2000 (#99001694) March 26, 2008: Local Rd. over Big Sioux R. (Mapleton Township) Renner: 4: South Dakota Department of Transportation Bridge No. 50-200-035: South Dakota Department of Transportation Bridge No. 50-200-035: December 9, 1993 (#93001267) December 15, 1999
The Odd Fellows Home of Dell Rapids, also known as the I.O.O.F. Home, is a historic Independent Order of Odd Fellows lodge and former orphanage in Dell Rapids, South Dakota. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012, with four contributing resources: the main building, a power plant, the front gate, and an apple orchard. [2]
The National Register nomination describes its importance as "the purest example of Neo-classic style in Sioux Falls. The combination of classic elements and internal structural innovations of the early twentieth century, such as steel doors and trim painted to resemble wood and a nine-ton glass floor, enhance the architectural importance of ...
The Presentation Children's Home is a historic building at 701 South Western Avenue in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.Built to replace an earlier orphanage in Turton that burned down, it functioned not only as an orphanage—one of the few in South Dakota—but also as a school from its opening in 1940 to its closure in 1966.