Leavenworth Ranger Station Explained
Leavenworth Ranger Station, also known as the Wenatchee River Ranger District, in Leavenworth, Washington was built during 1937-38 by the Civilian Conservation Corps. It was designed by the United States Forest Service's Region 6 USDA Forest Svce. Architecture Group in Rustic architecture. The listing includes nine contributing buildings on a 9.9acres area.[1] [2]
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.
Contributing Properties
The listing contains 9 contributing properties, built between 1937 and 1939:[2]
- The Ranger Station Office, 47.5988°N -120.6576°W, built 1937-1938
- The Residence #1245, 47.5981°N -120.6597°W, built 1937-1938
- The Garage #1586, 47.5983°N -120.6596°W, built 1937-1938
- The Residence #1243, 47.5995°N -120.6576°W, built 1938-1939
- The Garage for Residence #1243, 47.5995°N -120.6574°W, built 1938-1939
- The Automotive Shop, 47.5993°N -120.657°W
- The Equipment Storage Building, 47.5995°N -120.6565°W, built 1937-1938
- The Gas House, 47.5992°N -120.6566°W
- The Fire Warehouse, 47.5988°N -120.6581°W
See also
- Leavenworth National Fish Hatchery, also NRHP-listed
Notes and References
- Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=64000698}} USDA Forest Service Administrative Buildings in the State of Oregon and Washington built by the Civilian Conservation Corps / Depression Era Buildings ]. . E. Gail Throop . September 1984 . November 26, 2016 .
- Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=86000840}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Depression-Era Buildings, Continuation Sheet: Leavenworth Ranger Station ]. . E. Gail Throop . September 1984 . November 26, 2016 . with