LIST OF U.S. NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARKS BY STATE
The following is a list of United States National Historic Landmarks by state, together with the total number of landmarks for each U.S. state or jurisdiction.
__NOTOC__
| Alabama - Alaska - Arizona - Arkansas - California - Colorado - Connecticut - Delaware - ''District of Columbia'' - Florida - Georgia - ''Hawaiʻi'' - Idaho - Illinois - ''Indiana'' - Iowa - Kansas - Kentucky - Louisiana - ''Maine'' - Maryland - Massachusetts - Michigan - Minnesota - Mississippi - Missouri - Montana - Nebraska - Nevada - New Hampshire - New Jersey - New Mexico - New York - North Carolina - North Dakota - Ohio - Oklahoma - ''Oregon'' - Pennsylvania - Rhode Island - South Carolina - ''South Dakota'' - ''Tennessee'' - Texas - ''Utah'' - Vermont - Virginia - Washington - West Virginia - Wisconsin - Wyoming |
| American Samoa - Marshall Islands - Federated States of Micronesia - Midway Islands - Morocco - Northern Mariana Islands - Palau - Puerto Rico - Virgin Islands - Wake Island - 'References' - 'External links' |
Vivian Malone arriving to register for classes at the University of Alabama's Foster Auditorium.
The Saturn V Launch Vehicle on display.
The Sloss Blast Furnaces.
===Alabama===
#USS ''Alabama'' (battleship) - Mobile (1986)
#Apalachicola Fort Site - Russell County (1964)
#Barton Hall - Cherokee (1973)
#Bethel Baptist Church, Parsonage, and Guard House - Birmingham (2005)
#Bottle Creek Site - Baldwin County (1994)
#Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church - Selma (1997)
#City Hall - Mobile (1973)
#Henry D. Clayton House - Clayton (1976)
#J.L.M. Curry Home - Talladega (1965)
#Dexter Avenue Baptist Church - Montgomery (1974)
#USS ''Drum'' (submarine) - Mobile (1986)
#Episcopal Church of the Nativity - Huntsville (1990)
#First Confederate Capitol - Montgomery (1960)
#Fort Mitchell Site - Fort Mitchell (1990)
#Fort Morgan - Gasque (1960)
#Fort Toulouse Site - Wetumpka (1960)
#Foster Auditorium - Tuscaloosa (2005)
#Gaineswood - Demopolis (1973)
#Government Street Presbyterian Church - Mobile (1992)
#Ivy Green (Helen Keller birthplace) - Tuscumbia (1992)
#Kenworthy Hall - Marion (2004)
#''Montgomery'' (snagboat) - Pickensville (1989)
#Montgomery Union Station and Trainshed - Montgomery (1976)
#Moundville Site - Moundville (1964)
#Neutral Buoyancy Space Simulator - Huntsville (1985)
#Propulsion and Structural Test Facility - Huntsville (1985)
#Redstone Test Stand - Huntsville (1985)
#St. Andrew's Church - Prairieville (1973)
#Saturn V Dynamic Test Stand - Huntsville (1985)
#Saturn V Launch Vehicle - Huntsville (1987)
#Sixteenth Street Baptist Church - Birmingham (2006)
#Sloss Blast Furnaces - Birmingham (1981)
#Swayne Hall, Talladega College - Talladega (1974)
#Tuskegee Institute - Tuskegee (1965)
#Wilson Dam - Florence (1966)
#Yuchi Town Site - Russell County (1996)
:''In addition:''
:
★ Old Mobile Site National Historic Landmark Program: Properties Determined Eligible for Designation as National Historic Landmarks - Mobile County (determined eligible 2001)
:
★ William Lowndes Yancey Law Office National Historic Landmark Program: Withdrawal of National Historic Landmark Designation - Montgomery (designated 1973, designation withdrawn 1986)
===Alaska===
★ Cape Krusenstern Archeological District - Northwest Arctic Borough
★ Church of the Holy Ascension - Unalaska
★ Eagle Historic District
★ Holy Assumption Orthodox Church - Kenai, Alaska
★ Kake Cannery
★ Kennecott Mines
★ New Russia Site - Yakutat
★ Russian American Building #29 - Sitka
★ Russian American Magazine - Kodiak
★ Russian Bishop's House - Sitka
★ Sheldon Jackson School - Sitka
★ Skagway Historic District And White Pass
★ St. Michael's Cathedral - Sitka
===Arizona===
★ Air Force Facility Missile Site 8 (Titan II ICBM Site 571-7), Green Valley, Pima County, added 1994
★ Awatovi Ruins, Navajo County, added 1964
★ Casa Malpais Site, Apache County, added 1964
★ Colter, Mary Jane, Buildings, Coconino County, added 1987
★ Desert Laboratory, Pima County, added 1965
★ Double Adobe Site, Cochise County, added 1961
★ El Tovar, Grand Canyon National Park, Coconino County, added 1987
★ Fort Bowie and Apache Pass, Cochise County, added 1960
★ Fort Huachuca, Cochise County, added 1976
★ Gatlin Site, Maricopa County, added 1964
★ Grand Canyon Depot, Grand Canyon National Park, Coconino County, added 1987
★ Grand Canyon Lodge, Grand Canyon National Park, Coconino County, added 1987
★ Grand Canyon Park Operations Building, Grand Canyon National Park, Coconino County, added 1987
★ Grand Canyon Power House, Grand Canyon National Park, Coconino County, added 1987
★ Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyon National Park, Coconino County, added 1987
★ Hubbell Trading Post, Ganado, Apache County, added 1960
★ Jerome Historic District, Jerome, Yavapai County, added 1966
★ Kinishba Ruins, Gila County, added 1964
★ Lehner Mammoth-Kill Site, Cochise County, added 1967
★ Lowell Observatory, Flagstaff, Coconino County, added 1965
★ Merriam, C. Hart Base Camp Site, Little Springs, Coconino County, added 1965
★ Mission Los Santos Angeles de Guevavi, Santa Cruz County, added 1990
★ Navajo Nation Council Chamber, Window Rock, Apache County, added 2004
★ Old Oraibi, Navajo County, added 1964
★ Painted Desert Inn, Navajo County, added 1987
★ Phelps Dodge General Office Building, Bisbee, Cochise County, added 1983
★ Point of Pines Sites, Graham County, added 1964
★ Pueblo Grande Ruin and Irrigation Sites, Phoenix, Maricopa County, added 1964
★ San Bernardino Ranch, Cochise County, added 1964
★ San Cayetano de Calabazas, Santa Cruz County, added 1990
★ San Xavier del Bac Mission, Pima County, added 1960
★ Sierra Bonita Ranch, Cochise and Graham Counties, added 1964
★ Taliesin West, Scottsdale, Maricopa County, added 1982
★ Tombstone Historic District, Tombstone, Cochise County, added 1961
★ Tumacácori Museum, Tumacácori, Santa Cruz County, added 1987
★ Ventana Cave, Pima County, added 1964
★ Winona Site, Coconino County, added 1964
★ Yuma Crossing and Associated Sites, Yuma, Yuma County (and Winterhaven, Imperial County, California), added 1966
:''In addition:''
:
★ Hoover Dam - Mohave County (1985) (main listing under Nevada)
===Arkansas===
The Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo, also called Carmel Mission.
===California===
California is home to 133 National Historic Landmarks.
===Colorado===
★ Beaver Meadows Visitor Center in Rocky Mountain National Park near Estes Park (NHL)
★ Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site near Las Animas and La Junta (NHL NPS)
★ Central City/Black Hawk National Historic District in Central City and Black Hawk (NHL)
★ Colorado Chautauqua National Historic District in Boulder (NHL)
★ Cripple Creek National Historic District in Cripple Creek (NHL)
★ Durango-Silverton Narrow-Gauge Railroad National Historic District from Durango to Silverton (NHL)
★ Georgetown-Silver Plume National Historic District from Georgetown to Silver Plume (NHL)
★ Granada Relocation Center National Historic Landmark near Granada (NHL)
★ Leadville National Historic District in Leadville (NHL)
★ Lindenmeier Site National Historic Landmark near Carr (NHL)
★ Lowry Ruin National Historic Landmark near Pleasant View (NHL BLM)
★ Mesa Verde National Park Administrative District near Mancos and Cortez (NHL NPS)
★ Philadelphia Toboggan Company Carousel No. 6 in Burlington (NHL)
★ Pikes Peak National Historic Landmark near Manitou Springs (NHL)
★ Pike's Stockade National Historic Landmark near Sanford (NHL)
★ Raton Pass National Historic Landmark near Starkville (NHL)
★ Shenandoah-Dives (Mayflower) Mill near Silverton (NHL)
★ Silverton National Historic District in Silverton (NHL)
★ Telluride National Historic District in Telluride (NHL)
★ United States Air Force Academy, Cadet Area National Historic District near Colorado Springs (NHL)
===Connecticut===
★ Bush-Holley House - Greenwich
★ Russell Henry Chittenden House, New Haven
★ Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, New Haven
★ Connecticut Hall, Yale University - New Haven
North side of the Connecticut State Capitol.
★ Connecticut State Capitol - Hartford
★ James Dwight Dana House, New Haven
★ Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven
★ Hill-Stead Museum - Farmington
★ Henry Whitfield House, Guilford, Connecticut (1997)
★ Litchfield Historic District
★ Lockwood-Mathews Mansion - Norwalk
★ Lafayette B. Mendel House, New Haven
★ Othniel Marsh House, New Haven
★ USS ''Nautilus'' nuclear submarine - Groton
★ New Haven Green Historic District, New Haven
★ Mark Twain House - Hartford
★ Yale Bowl - New Haven
The old New Castle Court House.
===Delaware===
#Aspendale - Kenton (1970)
#Jacob Broom House - Montchanin (1974)
#Corbit-Sharp House - Odessa (1967)
#John Dickinson House - Dover (1961)
#Eleutherian Mills - Greenville (1966)
#Fort Christina - Wilmington (1961)
#Holy Trinity (Old Swedes) Church - Wilmington (1961)
#Howard High School - Wilmington (2005)
#Lombardy Hall - Wilmington (1974)
#New Castle Historic District (1967)
#New Castle Court House - New Castle (1972)
#Stonum - New Castle (1973)
----
===District of Columbia===
:'74 National Historic Landmarks'
===Florida===
:'39 National Historic Landmarks'
===Georgia===
★ Bellevue - LaGrange, added 1973
★ Calhoun Mine - Dahlonega, added 1973
★ Etowah Mounds - Bartow County, added 1964
★ Fort Jackson - Savannah, added 2000
★ Fox Theatre - Atlanta, added 1976
★ Georgia State Capitol - Atlanta, added 1973
★ Historic Augusta Canal and Industrial District - Augusta, added 1977
★ Jekyll Island - Glynn County, added 1978
★ Johnston-Felton-Hay House - Macon, added 1973
★ Kolomoki Mounds - Early County, added 1964
★ Liberty Hall - Crawfordville, added 1983
★ Martin Luther King, Jr. Historic District - Atlanta, added 1977
★ New Echota - Gordon County, added 1973
★ Octagon House - Columbus, added 1973
★ Pine Mountain State Park - Harris County, added 1997
★ Springer Opera House - Columbus, added 1978
★ Sweet Auburn Historic District - Atlanta, added 1976
★ Traveler's Rest - Toccoa, added 1964
----
===Hawaiʻi===
:'33 National Historic Landmarks'
| 'Landmark name' | 'Image' | 'Year of designation' | 'Locality' National Historic Landmark Program: NHL Database | 'Island' | 'Description' |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| '''Arizona'', USS (shipwreck)' | 1989 | Pearl Harbor | Oʻahu | These are the sunken remains of the USS ''Arizona'', destroyed in battle during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. It is now the focal point of a shrine in memory of the American servicemen killed in the attack. | |
| '''Bowfin'', USS (shipwreck)' | 1986 | Pearl Harbor | Oʻahu | [103] | |
| 'CINCPAC Headquarters' | 1987 | Pearl Harbor | Oʻahu | This was the headquarters of Admiral Chester W. Nimitz from 1942 through 1945, while he was Commander in Chief of the Pacific Fleet during World War II. Commanding land, sea, and air forces, Admiral Nimitz had major responsibility for campaigns such as the Battle of Midway, the liberation of Guam, and the seizure of Saipan and Tinian in the Marianas. | |
| 'Cook Landing Site' | image pending | 1962 | Waimea | Kauaʻi | Captain James Cook landed here at the mouth of the Waimea River on January 20, 1778. Cook is the first European known to have sighted the Hawaiian Islands, and the January 20 landfall in southwestern Kauaʻi was his first arrival upon Hawaiian soil. |
| '''Falls of Clyde'' (four-masted oil tanker)' | 1989 | Honolulu | Oʻahu | [104] | |
| 'Hickam Field' | 1985 | Honolulu | Oʻahu | [105] | |
| 'Hokukano-Ualapue Complex' | image pending | 1962 | Ualapue | Molokaʻi | This archaeological site includes six heiaus and two fishponds. The complex is one of the most important collections of native Hawaiian sites in Hawaiʻi. |
| 'Honokohau Settlement' | image pending | 1962 | na | Hawaiʻi | [106] |
| 'Huilua Fishpond' | image pending | 1962 | KÄneÊ»ohe | OÊ»ahu | This is one of the last surviving fishponds out of an estimated 97 such structures that once existed on coastal OÊ»ahu, and one of the few ancient Hawaiian fishponds that were still operational well into the 20th century. |
| 'Iolani Palace' | 1962 | Honolulu | Oʻahu | [107] | |
| 'Kalaupapa Leprosy Settlement' | 1976 | Kalaupapa | Molokaʻi | Hansen's disease was epidemic in Hawaiʻi between 1866 and the 1940s. In response to this public health crisis, Kalaupapa was founded in 1866 for the isolation of afflicted Hawaiians. Over time, wooden houses, churches, and auxiliary buildings were constructed to accommodate the increasing numbers of sufferers. Various religious groups provided aid, including the Belgian priest Father Joseph Damien, who eventually succumbed to the disease himself. | |
| 'Kamakahonu' | image pending | 1962 | Kailua-Kona | Hawaiʻi | King Kamehameha I, who unified the Hawaiian Islands, lived out the last years of his life and instituted some of the most constructive measures of his reign (1810-1819). The residential compound includes the personal heiau of the King. It was here, too, within a year of the Kamehameha's death, that the first missionaries to the Hawaiʻi arrived in 1820. |
| 'Kaneohe Naval Air Station' | 1987 | Kailua | Oʻahu | [108] | |
| 'Kaunolu Village Site' | image pending | 1962 | na | LÄnaÊ»i | This former fishing village, abandoned in the 1880s, is the largest surviving ruins of a prehistoric Hawaiian village. The archaeological site is very well-preserved. |
| 'Kawaiahao Church and Mission Houses' | 1962 | Honolulu | Oʻahu | [109] | |
| 'Keauhou Holua Slide' | image pending | 1962 | Keauhou | HawaiÊ»i | This is the largest and best-preserved hÅlua course, used in the extremely toboggan-like activity restricted to chiefs. |
| 'Lahaina Historic District' | 1962 | LÄhainÄ | Maui | [110] | |
| 'Loaloa Heiau' | image pending | 1962 | Kaupo | Maui | This is one of the few remaining intact examples of a large luakini heiau (state level temple where human sacrifice was performed). Once the center of an important cultural complex around Kaupo, oral tradition attributes the construction of the temple at about 1730 AD to Kekaulike, King of Maui, who lived at Kaupo and died in 1736. |
| 'Mauna Kea Adz Quarry' | image pending | 1962 | na | Hawaiʻi | This quarry was used by prehistoric Hawaiians to obtain basalt for stone tools. Located at an elevation of 12,000' (3,657 m), this is the largest primitive quarry in the world. The archaeological complex also includes religious shrines, trails, rockshelters, and petroglyphs. |
| 'Mookini Heiau' | image pending | 1962 | HÄwÄ« | HawaiÊ»i | [111] |
| 'Old Sugar Mill of Koloa | image pending | 1962 | KÅloa | KauaÊ»i | [112] |
| 'Opana Radar Site' | image pending | 1994 | Kawela | Oʻahu | [113] |
| 'Palm Circle' | 1987 | Honolulu | Oʻahu | This portion of Fort Shafter housed the headquarters of the commanding general and his staff, U.S. Army forces, Pacific Ocean Areas, during World War II. By 1944 this command was responsible for the supply and administration of all U.S. Army personnel in the Central and South Pacific, and from 1943 to 1945, carried out logistical planning for the invasions of the Gilberts, Marshalls, Marianas, Guam, Palau, and Okinawa. | |
| 'Piilanihale Heiau' | 1964 | HÄna | Maui | [114] | |
| 'Puu O Mahuka Heiau' | 1962 | Haleʻiwa | Oʻahu | [115] | |
| 'Puukohola Heiau' | image pending | 1962 | Kawaihae | Hawaiʻi | [116] |
| 'Russian Fort' | 1962 | Waimea | Kauaʻi | [117] | |
| 'South Point Complex' | 1962 | NÄÊ»Älehu | HawaiÊ»i | [118] | |
| 'United States Naval Base, Pearl Harbor' | 1964 | Pearl Harbor | Oʻahu | [119] | |
| '''Utah'', USS (shipwreck)' | 1989 | Pearl Harbor | Oʻahu | [120] | |
| 'Wailua Complex of Heiaus' | image pending | 1962 | WailuÄ | KauaÊ»i | [121] |
| 'Washington Place' | image pending | 2007 | Honolulu | Oʻahu | Built in 1844-1847, this was the home of Queen Liliʻuokalani, the last reigning monarch of the Hawaiian kingdom, from the time of her marriage in 1862 to her death in 1917. While living here, she saw the monarchy overthrown and Hawaiʻi annexed to the United States. It was subsequently used as the executive mansion by the territorial and state governors of Hawaiʻi until 2002, reflecting the expansion of U.S. territory and power into the Pacific.[2] |
| 'Wheeler Field' | image pending | 1987 | Honolulu | Oʻahu | [122] |
===Idaho===
#Assay Office - Boise (1961)
#Bear River Massacre Site - Preston (1990)
#Camas Meadows Battle Sites - Kilgore (1989)
#Cataldo Mission - Cataldo (1961)
#City of Rocks - Almo (1964)
#Experimental Breeder Reactor No. 1 - Arco (1965)
#Fort Hall - Fort Hall (1961)
#Lemhi Pass - Lemhi County (and Beaverhead County, Montana) (1960)
#Lolo Trail - Clearwater and Idaho Counties (and Missoula County, Montana) (1960)
#Weippe Prairie - Weippe (1966)
Old State Capitol, Springfield.
Fort Sheridan Historic District.
===Illinois===
#Robert S. Abbott House, Chicago
#Adler Planetarium, Chicago
#Auditorium Building Chicago
#Bishop Hill Colony, Bishop Hill, Henry County
#Cahokia Mounds, St. Clair County
#Carson Pirie Scott Store, Chicago
#James Charnley House, Chicago
#Chicago Board of Trade Building, Chicago
#Church of the Holy Family, St. Clair County
#Columbus Park, Chicago
#Arthur H. Compton House, Chicago
#Avery Coonley House, Riverside, Cook County
#Crow Island School, Winnetka, Cook County
#Susan Lawrence Dana House, Springfield
#David Davis House, Bloomington
#Charles G. Dawes House, Evanston
#John Deere Home and Shop, Ogle County
#Oscar Stanton De Priest House, Chicago
#Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable Homesite, Chicago
#Eads Bridge, East St. Louis (Also in Missouri)
#Farm Creek Section, Tazewell County
#Farnsworth House, Plano
#John Farson House, Chicago
#Fort de Chartres, Randolph County
#Fort Sheridan Historic District, Lake County
#John J. Glessner House, Chicago
#Ulysses S. Grant Home, Galena
#Grosse Point Light Station, Evanston, Cook County
#Haymarket Martyrs' Monument, Waldheim Cemetery, Forest Park.
#Isadore H. Heller House, Chicago
#Arthur Heurtley House, Oak Park, Cook County
#Hull House, Chicago
#Illinois and Michigan Canal Locks and Towpath, Will County
#Kennicott Grove, Glenview, Cook County
#Kincaid Site, Massac County and Pope County
#Leiter II Building, Chicago
#Nicholas Jarrot Mansion, Cahokia
#Frank R. Lillie House, Chicago
#Abraham Lincoln Home, Springfield
#Lincoln Park Lily Pool, Chicago
#Lincoln Tomb, Springfield
#Vachel Lindsay House, Springfield
#Owen Lovejoy House, Princeton, Bureau County
#Marquette Building, Chicago
#Marshall Field's Store, Chicago
#Mazon Creek Fossil Beds, Grundy County
#Pierre Menard House, Randolph County
#Robert A. Millikan House, Chicago
#Modoc Rock Shelter, Randolph County
#Montgomery Ward Company Complex, Chicago
#Morrow Plots, University of Illinois, Urbana
#Nauvoo Historic District
#Old Kaskaskia Village, LaSalle County
#Old Main Knox College, Galesburg
#Old State Capitol, Springfield
#Old Stone Gate, Chicago Union Stockyards, Chicago
#Orchestra Hall, Chicago
#Principia College, Elsah, Illinois
#Pullman Historic District, Chicago
#Reliance Building, Chicago
#Riverside Historic District, Cook County
#Frederick C. Robie House, Chicago
#Rock Island Arsenal, Rock Island
#Rookery Building, Chicago
#Room 405, George Herbert Jones Laboratory, University of Chicago, Chicago
#Sears, Roebuck, and Company, Chicago
#John G. Shedd Aquarium, Chicago
#Site of the First Self-Sustaining Nuclear Reaction, University of Chicago, Chicago
#South Dearborn Street - Printing House Row North, Chicago
#S.R. Crown Hall at Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago
#Starved Rock, LaSalle County
#Lorado Taft Midway Studios, Chicago
#Tomek House, Riverside
#Lyman Trumbull House, Alton
#U-505 German U-Boat, Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago
#Unity Temple, Oak Park,
#University of Illinois Observatory, Urbana
#The Wayside, Henry Demarest Lloyd House, Winnetka
#Ida B. Wells House, Chicago
#Frances Willard House, Evanston
#Daniel Hale Williams House, Chicago
#Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio, Oak Park
Source [123]
----
===Indiana
Indiana is home to 37 National Historic Landmarks.
Iowa===Powder House, Amana Colonies.
★ Amana Colonies - Iowa County
★ Blood Run Site - Iowa County (''also in South Dakota'')
★ Dubuque County Jail - Dubuque
★ Farm House - Ames
★ Fort Des Moines Provisional Army Officer Training School - Des Moines
★ ''George M. Verity'' (towboat) -Keokok
★ Grenville M. Dodge House - Council Bluffs
★ William P. Hepburn House - Clarinda, Page County
★ Reverend George B. Hitchcock, House - Lewis, Cass County
★ Herbert Hoover Birthplace - West Branch
★ Indian Village Site - O'Brien County
★ James B. Weaver House - Bloomfield
★ Julien Dubuque's Mines - Dubuque
★ ''Lone Star'' (towboat) - Le Claire
★ Merchants' National Bank - Grinnell
★ Old Capitol - Iowa City
★ Phipps Site - Cherokee County
★ ''President'' (riverboat, ''relocated to Mississippi'') - Davenport
★ Sergeant Floyd Monument - Sioux City
★ ''Sergeant Floyd'' (towboat) - Sioux City
★ Terrace Hill - Des Moines
★ Toolesboro Mound Group - Louisa County
★ Van Allen and Company Department Store - Clinton
★ ''William M. Black'' (dredge) - Dubuque
★ Woodbury County Courthouse - Sioux City
===Kansas===
===Kentucky
Kentucky is home to 30 National Historic Landmarks.
Louisiana===#Acadian House - St. Martinville
#The Cabildo - New Orleans
#George Washington Cable House - New Orleans
#Kate Chopin House - Cloutierville
#The Courthouse & Lawyers' Row - Clinton
#Delta Queen (river steamboat) - New Orleans
#Deluge (firefighting tugboat) - New Orleans
#James H. Dillard Home - New Orleans
#Evergreen Plantation - Wallace
#Fort De La Boulaye - New Orleans
#Fort Jackson - Triumph
#Fort Jesup - Many
#Gallier Hall - New Orleans
#Gallier House - New Orleans
#Garden District - New Orleans
#Hermann-Grima House - New Orleans
#Homeplace Plantation House - Hahnville
#Jackson Square - New Orleans
#USS Kidd (DD-661) - Baton Rouge
#Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop - New Orleans
#Los Adaes - Robeline
#Louisiana State Bank Building - New Orleans
#Louisiana State Capitol - Baton Rouge
#Madame John's Legacy - New Orleans
#Madewood Plantation House - Napoleonville
#Magnolia Plantation - Derry
#Marksville Prehistoric Indian Site - Marksville
#Mayor Girod House - New Orleans
#Natchitoches Historic District - Natchitoches
#New Orleans Cotton Exchange Building - New Orleans
#Oak Alley Plantation - Vacherie
#Oakland Plantation - Natchez
#Old Louisiana State Capitol - Baton Rouge
#Parlange Plantation House - Mix
#Pontalba Buildings - New Orleans
#Port Hudson - Port Hudson
#Poverty Point - Delhi
#The Presbytere - New Orleans
#Saint Alphonsus Church - New Orleans
#San Francisco Plantation House - Reserve
#Shadows-on-the-Teche - New Iberia
#Shreveport Waterworks Pumping Station - Shreveport
#St. Mary's Assumption Church - New Orleans
#St. Patrick's Church - New Orleans
#United States Customhouse - New Orleans
#United States Mint, New Orleans Branch - New Orleans
#Ursuline Convent - New Orleans
#Vieux Carre Historic District - New Orleans
#Edward Douglass White House - Thibodaux
#Yucca Plantation - Melrose
----
===Maine===
:'41 National Historic Landmarks'
:''In addition:'' 1 withdrawn designation
===Maryland===
#Accokeek Creek Site - Prince Georges County
#''Baltimore'' (tug) – Baltimore
#Baltimore and Ohio Transportation Museum and Mount Clare – Baltimore
#Clara Barton House - Glen Echo, Maryland
#Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary – Baltimore
#Bollman Truss Railroad Bridge – Howard County
#Brice House – Annapolis
#Carrollton Viaduct - Baltimore
#Rachel Carson House - Silver Spring
#Casselman River Bridge - Garrett County
#Whittaker Chambers Farm - Westminster, Carroll County, Maryland
#Chase-Lloyd House - Annapolis
#Chestertown Historic District - Chestertown, Kent County
#College of Medicine of Maryland - Baltimore
#Colonial Annapolis Historic District - Annapolis
#USS ''Constellation'' - Baltimore
#Doughoregan Manor – Howard County
#''Edna E. Lockwood'' (Bugeye) – Talbot County
#Ellicott City Station - Howard County
#First Unitarian Church - Baltimore
#Fort Frederick - Washington County
#Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory - Montgomery County
#Greenbelt, Maryland Historic District - Prince George's County
#Habre-de-venture - Charles County
#Hammond-Harwood House - Annapolis
#''Hilda M. Willing'' (Skipjack) – Talbot County
#His Lordship's Kindness - Prince George's County
#Homewood - Baltimore
#SS John W. Brown (1942 Liberty Ship) - Baltimore
#''Kathryn'' (Skipjack) – Talbot County
#Kennedy Farm Washington County
#Lightship Chesapeake - Baltimore
#London Town Publik House - Anne Arundel County
#J.C. Lore House – Solomons
#Maryland State House - Annapolis
#Elmer V. McCollum House - Baltimore
#H.L. Mencken House - Baltimore
#Monocacy Battlefield - Frederick County
#Montpelier - Prince George's County
#Mount Clare - Baltimore
#Mount Royal Station & Trainshed - Baltimore
#Mount Vernon Place Historic District - Baltimore
#''Nellie Crocket'' (Buy-Boat) Kent County
#Old Lock Pump House, Chesapeake & Delaware Canal - Cecil County
#William Paca House - Annapolis, Maryland
#Peale's Baltimore Museum - Baltimore
#Phoenix Shot Tower - Baltimore
#Edgar Allan Poe House - Baltimore
#''Rebecca T. Ruark'' (Skipjack) – Tilghman Island
#Ira Remsen House – Tilghman Island
#Resurrection Manor (designation withdrawn February 17, 2006) - St. Mary's County
#Riversdale Mansion - Prince George's County
#Henry August Rowland House - Baltimore
#St. Mary's Historic District – St. Mary's County
#St. Mary's Seminary Chapel - Baltimore
#Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital and Gate House - Baltimore County
#Sion Hill Harford County
#Sotterley – St. Mary's County
#Spacecraft Magnetic Test Facility - Greenbelt
#Star-Spangled Banner Flag House - Baltimore
#Peggy Stewart House - Annapolis
#USCGC ''Taney'' - Baltimore
#Thomas Point Shoal Light Station - Anne Arundel County
#Thomas Viaduct, Baltimore and Ohio Railroad - Baltimore County & Howard County
#USS Torsk - Baltimore
#Tulip Hill - Anne Arundel County
#United States Naval Academy - Annapolis
#William Henry Welch House - Baltimore
#West St. Mary's Manor – St. Mary's County
#Whitehall - Annapolis
#''William B. Tennison'' (Buy-Boat) – Solomons
#Wye House - Talbot County
:''In addition:''
★ Washington Aqueduct - Montgomery County (main listing under District of Columbia)
===Massachusetts===
Massachusetts is home to 183 National Historic Landmarks.
The tower and quadrangle at Cranbrook.
The Fisher Building.
The tool and die works at the Ford River Rouge Complex.
===Michigan===
#Bay View (1987)
#Calumet Historic District (1989)
#''City of Milwaukee'' (Great Lakes car ferry) - Manistee (1990)
#''Columbia'' (excursion steamer) - Ecorse (1992)
#Cranbrook - Bloomfield Hills (1989)
#Alden Dow House and Studio - Midland (1989)
#Herbert H. Dow House - Midland (1976)
#Durant-Dort Carriage Company Office - Flint (1978)
#Edison Institute (Greenfield Village and Henry Ford Museum) - Dearborn (1981)
#Fair Lane (Henry Ford Estate) - Dearborn (1966)
#Fisher Building - Detroit (1989)
#Ford Piquette Avenue Plant - Detroit (2006)
#Ford River Rouge Complex - Dearborn (1978)
#Fort Michilimackinac - Mackinaw City (1960)
#Fox Theater - Detroit (1989)
#General Motors Building - Detroit (1978)
#Grand Hotel - Mackinac Island (1989)
#Guardian Building - Detroit (1989)
#Ernest Hemingway Cottage - Walloon Lake (1968)
#Highland Park Ford Plant - Highland Park (1978)
#Lightship ''No. 103'', "Huron" - Port Huron (1989)
#Mackinac Island (1960)
#Marshall Historic District (1991)
#Michigan State Capitol - Lansing (1992)
#''Milwaukee Clipper'' (passenger steamship) - Muskegon (1989)
#North Manitou Island Lifesaving Station - Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore (1998)
#Norton Mound Group - Grand Rapids (1965)
#Parke-Davis Research Laboratory - Detroit (1976)
#Pewabic Pottery - Detroit (1991)
#Quincy Mining Company Historic District - Houghton (1989)
#St. Clair River Tunnel - Port Huron (1993)
#St. Ignace Mission - St. Ignace (1960)
#St. Mary's Falls Canal - Sault Ste. Marie (1966)
#USS ''Silversides'' - Muskegon (1986)
:''In addition:''
:
★ Lincoln Motor Company Plant - Detroit (designated 1978, designation withdrawn 2005)
:
★ Reo Motor Car Company Plant - Lansing (designated 1978, designation withdrawn 1985)
:
★ ''Ste. Claire'' (passenger steamboat) (1992) (formerly in Ecorse, relocated to Ohio)
===Minnesota===
★ F. Scott Fitzgerald House - St. Paul
★ Fort Snelling Historic District - Hennepin County
★ James J. Hill House - St. Paul
★ Hull-Rust-Mahoning Open Pit Iron Mine - Hibbing
★ Kathio Historic District - Kathio Township
★ Oliver H. Kelley Homestead - Elk River
★ Frank B. Kellogg House - St. Paul
★ Sinclair Lewis Boyhood Home - Sauk Centre
★ Charles A. Lindbergh House - Little Falls
★ Mayo Clinic Plummer Building and 1914 Building - Rochester
★ Mountain Iron Mine - Mountain Iron
★ National Farmer's Bank of Owatonna - Owatonna
★ Peavey-Haglin Experimental Concrete Grain Elevator - St. Louis Park
★ Pillsbury A Mill - Minneapolis
★ Rabideau Civilian Conservation Corps Camp - Blackduck
★ O.E. Rolvaag House - Northfield, Minnesota
★ St. Croix Boom Site - Washington County
★ St. Croix Recreational Demonstration Area - Pine County
★ Soudan Mine - Breitung Township
★ Thomas Veblen Farmstead - Wheelen Township
★ Andrew J. Volstead House - Granite Falls
★ Washburn "A" Mill - Minneapolis
Beauvoir, showing damage from Hurricane Katrina.
===Mississippi===
#Ammadelle Oxford, Mississippi Building
#Anna Site Natchez, Mississippi Site
#Arlington Natchez Building
#Auburn Natchez Building
#Beauvoir - Biloxi (1973)
#Champion Hill Battlefield Bolton, Mississippi District
#Commercial Bank And Banker's House Natchez Building
#Dancing Rabbit Creek Treaty Site Macon, Mississippi Site
#Dunleith Natchez Building
#Emerald Mound Site Stanton, Mississippi Site
#William Faulkner's House, Rowan Oak - Oxford (1968)
#Fort St. Pierre Site Vicksburg vicinity, Mississippi Site
#Grand Village of the Natchez Natchez, Mississippi Site
#Hester Site Armory, Mississippi Site
#Highland Park Dentzel Carousel Meridian, Mississippi Structure
#Holly Bluff Site Holly Bluff, Mississippi Site
#House on Ellicott's Hill Natchez, Mississippi Building
#Jaketown Site Belzoni, Mississippi Site
#Lamar, Lucius Q.C., House Oxford, Mississippi Building
#Longwood Natchez, Mississippi Building
#McLaran,Charles, House Columbus, Mississippi Building
#Melrose - Natchez (1974)
#Mississippi Governor's Mansion Jackson, Mississippi Building
#Monmouth Natchez, Mississippi, Building
#Montgomery, I.T., House Mound Bayou, Mississippi Building
#Oakland Memorial Chapel Alcorn, Mississippi Building
#Old Mississippi State Capitol Jackson,Mississippi Building
#Pemberton's Headquarters Vicksburg,Mississippi Building
#Port Gibson Battle Site Port Gibson,Mississippi Site
#PRESIDENT (Steamboat) Vicksburg,Mississippi Structure
#Rocket Propulsion Test Complex Bay St. Louis,MississippiStructure
#Rosalie Natchez Mississippi Building
#Siege and Battle of Corinth Sites - Corinth (and Hardeman County, Tennessee) (1991)
#Stanton Hall Natchez,Mississippi Building
#Warren County Courthouse Vicksburg,Mississippi Building
#Waverly West Point,Mississippi Building
#Welty, Eudora, House Jackson,Mississippi Building
#Winterville Site Greenville,Mississippi Site
===Missouri===
★ Anheuser-Busch Brewery - Saint Louis
★ Arrow Rock - Arrow Rock
★ Carrington Osage Village Sites - Vernon County
★ Christ Church Cathedral - Saint Louis
★ Champ Clark House - Bowling Green
★ Eads Bridge - Saint Louis
★ Fort Osage - Jackson County
★ Gateway Arch - Saint Louis
★ General John J. Pershing Boyhood Home - Laclede
★ George Caleb Bingham House - Arrow Rock
★ Goldenrod (showboat)- Saint Louis
★ Graham Cave - Montgomery County
★ Harry S. Truman Historic District - Independence
★ Harry S. Truman Farm Home - Grandview
★ Joseph Erlanger House - Saint Louis
★ Laura Ingalls Wilder House - Mansfield
★ Liberty Memorial - Kansas City
★ Louis Bolduc House - Ste. Genevieve
★ Mark Twain Boyhood Home - Hannibal
★ Missouri Botanical Gardens - Saint Louis
★ Mutual Musicians Association Building - Kansas City
★ Patee Hall - Saint Joseph
★ Research Cave - Callaway County
★ Ste. Genevieve Historical District - Ste. Genevieve
★ Sanborn Field and Soil Erosion Plots - Columbia
★ Scott Joplin Residence - Saint Louis
★ Shelly House - Saint Louis
★ Tower Grove Park - Saint Louis
★ Union Station- Saint Louis
★ United States Custom House and Post Office - Saint Louis
★ Utz Site - Saline County
★ Wainwright Building - Saint Louis
★ Washington University Hilltop Campus Historical District - Saint Louis
★ Watkins Mill - Clay County
★ Westminster College Gymnasium - Fulton
★ White Haven - Grantwood Village
===Montana===
===Nebraska===
★ Ash Hollow Cave, Garden County
★ William Jennings Bryan House, Lincoln
★ ''Captain Meriwether Lewis'' (Dustpan dredge), Brownville
★ Willa Cather House, Red Cloud
★ Coufal Site, Howard County
★ Father Flanagan's Boys' Home, Boys Town
★ Fort Atkinson, Washington County
★ Fort Robinson and Red Cloud Agency, Dawes County and Sioux County
★ ''USS Hazard'', Omaha
★ Leary Site, Richardson County
★ J. Sterling Morton House, Nebraska City
★ Nebraska State Capitol, Lincoln
★ George W. Norris House, McCook
★ Palmer Site, Merrick County
★ Dr. Susan La Flesche Picotte Memorial Hospital, Walthill
★ Pike Pawnee Village Site, Webster County
★ Robidoux Pass, Scotts Bluff County
★ Schultz Site, Valley County
★ Signal Butte, Scotts Bluff County
★ Walker Gilmore Site, Cass County
===Nevada===
#Fort Churchill - Weeks (1961)
#Hoover Dam - Boulder City (and Mohave County, Arizona) (1985)
#Leonard Rockshelter - Lovelock (1961)
#Nevada Northern Railway, East Ely Yards - Ely (2006)
#Francis G. Newlands Home - Reno (1963)
#Virginia City Historic District (1961)
:''In addition:''
:
★ Fort Ruby - White Pine County (designated 1961, designation withdrawn 2000)
===New Hampshire===
★ Canterbury Shaker Village
★ Daniel Webster Family Home - West Franklin
★ E. E. Cummings House - Silver Lake
★ Franklin Pierce Homestead - Hillsborough
★ Josiah Bartlett House - Kingston
★ Robert Frost Homestead - Derry
===New Jersey===
★ Cape May, New Jersey
★ Church of the Presidents (New Jersey), Long Branch
★ Hangar No. 1, Lakehurst Naval Air Station, Ocean County
★ Horn Antenna, Holmdel
★ Lucy the Margate Elephant, Margate City
★ Craftsman Farms, Parsippany
★ Georgian Court University, Lakewood
★ Speedwell Ironworks, Morristown
★ King Store and Homestead,Ledgewood
The test explosion at Trinity Site.
===New Mexico===
★ Acoma Pueblo
★ Ernie Pyle House/Library
★ Hawikuh Ruins
★ Las Trampas Historic District, added 1967
★ Raton Pass
★ San Jose De Gracia Church, Las Trampas, added 1970
★ Trinity site
The Empire State Building with the Chrysler Building in the background.
===New York
New York is home to 258 National Historic Landmarks.
North Carolina===★ Blandwood Mansion and Gardens, Greensboro
★ Biltmore Estate, Asheville
★ Cape Hatteras Light Station, Buxton
★ Duke Homestead and Tobacco Factory, Durham
★ Guilford Courthouse National Military Park, Greensboro
★ USS Monitor shipwreck (ironclad), Dare County
★ USS ''North Carolina'' (battleship), Wilmington
★ Pinehurst Resort
★ Wright Brothers National Memorial Visitor Center, Kill Devil Hills
===North Dakota===
#Big Hidatsa Village Site, Mercer County
#Fort Union Trading Post, Williams County
#Frederick A. and Sophia Bagg Bonanza Farm, Richland County
#Huff Archeological Site, Morton County
#Menoken Indian Village Site, Burleigh County
===Ohio===
★ 1905 Wright Flyer III - Dayton
★ Carew Tower - Cincinnati
★ Cleveland Arcade - Cleveland
★ Fort Ancient - Warren County
★ James A. Garfield home - Mentor
★ Kirtland Temple - Kirtland
★ The Newark Earthworks State Memorial - Newark
★ Oberlin College - Oberlin
★ Ohio and Erie Canal - Valley View
★ Ohio Statehouse - Columbus
★ John Rankin home - Ripley
★ ''Ste. Claire'' (passenger steamboat) - Toledo
★ SunWatch Indian Village/Archaeological Park - Dayton
★ Serpent Mound - Adams County
★ Taft Museum of Art - Cincinnati
★ Tappan Square - Oberlin
★ Thomas Edison birthplace - Milan
★ Thrift Building - Sidney
★ Ulysses S. Grant boyhood home - Georgetown
★ U.S.S. COD Submarine Memorial - Cleveland
★ Warren G. Harding home - Marion
★ West Side Market - Cleveland
★ William McKinley tomb - Canton
★ Wright Cycle Company - Dayton
===Oklahoma===
★ 101 Ranch Historic District, Marland (1975)
★ Bizzell Library, University of Oklahoma, Norman (2001)
★ Boley Historic District (1975)
★ Boston Avenue Methodist Church, Tulsa (1999)
★ Camp Nichols, Cimarron County (1963)
★ Cherokee National Capitol, Tahlequah (1961)
★ Creek National Capitol, Okmulgee (1961)
★ Deer Creek Site, Kay County (1964)
★ Fort Gibson, Muskogee County (1960)
★ Fort Sill, Comanche County (1960)
★ Fort Washita, Bryan County (1965)
★ Guthrie Historic District (1999)
★ Ernest Whitworth Marland Mansion, Ponca City (1977)
★ McLemore Site, Washita County (1964)
★ Murrell Home, Park Hill (1974)
★ Price Tower, Bartlesville (2007)
★ Sequoyah's Cabin, Sequoyah County (1965)
★ Stamper Site, Texas County (1964)
★ Washita Battlefield, Roger Mills County (1965)
★ Wheelock Academy, McCurtain County (1965)
----
===Oregon===
:'15 National Historic Landmarks'
:''In addition:'' 1 withdrawn designation, 1 site listed primarily under another state
| 'Landmark name' | 'Image' | 'Year of designation' | 'Locality' | 'County' | 'Description' |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 'Bonneville Dam Historic District' | 1987 | na | Multnomah (and Skamania County, Washington) | Built in the 1930s to harness the Columbia River for power generation, this was the first hydroelectric dam with a hydraulic drop sufficient to produce 500,000 kW of hydropower. The NHL district covers the dam and other elements of the federal dam project, including the #1 powerhouse, navigation lock, fish ladder, and hatchery. | |
| 'Columbia River Highway' | 2000 | na | Multnomah, Hood River, and Wasco | Constructed between 1913 and 1922, this was the first scenic highway in the United States. Designed specifically to provide visitors access to the most outstanding of the scenic features of the Columbia River Gorge, the highway is also an outstanding example of modern highway development for its pioneering advances in road engineering, and is the single most important contribution to the fields of civil engineering and landscape architecture by Samuel C. Lancaster. | |
| 'Crater Lake Superintendent's Residence' | 1987 | Crater Lake National Park | Klamath | The 1930s-era Munson Valley development was originally one of the best-designed rustic installations in a U.S. national park. This is the only building in the group to remain in near-original condition, and it employed unusual construction methods in response to the very short Crater Lake building season. | |
| 'Deady and Villard Halls, University of Oregon' | 1977 | Eugene | Lane | Completed in 1876 and 1886, respectively, Deady and Villard Halls are the first and second buildings of the University of Oregon. Deady Hall is simplified Italianate in design with mansarded main roof and towers; Villard Hall has Second Empire touches, and is one of the few surviving academic buildings of its era in the Western United States. | |
| 'Fort Astoria Site' | 1961 | Astoria | Clatsop | John Jacob Astor attempted to break the British monopoly on the Pacific Northwest fur trade starting with construction of this fortified trading post in 1811. The fort subsequently became an important part of the American territorial claim to the Oregon Country. Astor sold the fort to the British North West Company in 1813. | |
| 'Fort Rock Cave' | image pending | 1961 | Fort Rock | Lake | This cave yielded to archaeologists the "Fort Rock sandals", the oldest manufactured articles found in the Americas, which demonstrated the early development of weaving among Native Americans. Occupation of the site has been dated to 11,000 BCE. |
| 'Jacksonville Historic District' | 1966 | Jacksonville | Jackson | Founded in 1852 as a mining town, Jacksonville became the principal financial center of southern Oregon until it was bypassed by the railroad. Today, its group of surviving unaltered commercial and residential buildings makes it a significant example of a mid-19th century inland commercial town. | |
| 'Kam Wah Chung Company Building' | image pending | 2005 | John Day | Grant | This building is the best known example of a Chinese mercantile and herb store in the United States. It embodies the role of immigrant Chinese in the post-Civil War expansion period of the western United States. |
| 'Lightship ''WAL-604'', "Columbia"' | 1989 | Astoria | Clatsop | Retired in 1979 as the last lightship to be stationed at the Columbia River Bar - or anywhere on the Pacific coast of the United States - ''WAL-604'' retains the best historic integrity of the last generation of U.S. Coast Guard lightships after 1939. ''WAL-604'', built in 1950, and its relatives closely resembled earlier lightship types in external appearance, but were a distinct departure in their overall design. | |
| 'Oregon Caves Chateau' | 1987 | Oregon Caves National Monument | Josephine | This rustically intimate site features a shaggy bark finish, stone retaining walls, fishponds, waterfalls, and walkways. Built in 1934, the structure makes use of a very limited site over a canyon, and retains a high degree of integrity in its design, furnishings, and setting. | |
| 'Pioneer Courthouse' | 1977 | Portland | Multnomah | Built in 1875 and restored in the 1970s, this was one of the first monumental buildings in the Pacific Northwest. It has served as a U.S. courthouse, a customhouse, and a post office. It underwent another rehabilitation in the 2000s. | |
| 'Skidmore/Old Town Historic District' | 1977 | Portland | Multnomah | One of the most impressive historic commercial districts on the West Coast, this is where Portland began and first flourished. The buildings, which date from the mid-to-late-19th century, were built in a variety of High Victorian architectural styles, and many feature cast iron fronts. | |
| 'Sunken Village Archeological Site' | image pending | 1989 | na | Multnomah | The archaeological remains of this Chinookan village are unusually well preserved. This cosmopolitan people's complex hunter-gatherer economy and extensive trade network allowed them to establish one of the highest population densities aboriginal North America, yet they left very few physical remains. The site has been subject to erosion and looting, problems which have been ameliorated by a protective layer of riprap.[3][4] |
| 'Timberline Lodge' | 1977 | Government Camp | Clackamas | President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated this lodge at an elevation of 6,000 feet (1,830 m) on the south slope of Mount Hood in 1937. It is considered the finest example of 1930s-era "mountain architecture" by the Works Progress Administration. | |
| 'Wallowa Lake Site' | image pending | 1989 | Joseph | Wallowa | The religious and cultural values associated with this traditional Nez Perce ancestral campground have persisted for over a century since Young Chief Joseph and his band of nontreaty Nez Perce were driven out. It provides a view of high, glaciated lake and mountain country. |
| ''Elmore, Samuel, Cannery '' | 1966, withdrawn 1993 | Astoria | Clatsop | The home of "Bumble Bee" brand tuna, this was in fact the longest continuously-operated salmon cannery in the United States, from its construction in 1898 until decomissioning in 1980. The canned salmon industry was a cornerstone of the Northwest's resource-based economy from the late 1860s until after World War II. Amidst seasonal and declining salmon stocks, the cannery diversified into tuna in the 1930s. Due to structural deterioration, the building was slated for demolition in 1991, and it burned in 1993. | |
| ''Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge'' | 1965 | na | Klamath | See main listing under California. |
===Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania is home to 158 National Historic Landmarks.
Rhode Island===★ Belcourt Castle, Newport
★ The Breakers - Newport
★ The Elms - Newport
★ Fort Adams - Newport
★ Kingscote - Newport
★ Newport Casino
★ Newport Historic District
★ University Hall, Brown University - Providence
★ Ocean Drive Historic District - Newport
===South Carolina===
★ Beaufort Historic District
★ Brookgreen Gardens, Georgetown County, South Carolina
★ Camden Battlefield, Kershaw County, South Carolina
★ College of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina
★ USS ''Clamagore'' (submarine), Patriot's Point, Mount Pleasant
★ Drayton Hall, Charleston, South Carolina
★ Fireproof Building, Charleston, South Carolina
★ Fort Hill, Clemson, South Carolina
★ USCGC ''Ingham'' (Coast Guard cutter), Patriot's Point, Mount Pleasant
★ USS ''Laffey'' (destroyer), Patriot's Point, Mount Pleasant
★ USS ''Yorktown'' (aircraft carrier), Patriot's Point, Mount Pleasant
----
===South Dakota===
:'14 National Historic Landmarks'
:''In addition:'' 1 site listed primarily under another state
| 'Landmark name' | 'Image' | 'Year of designation' | 'Locality' | 'County' | 'Description' |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 'Arzberger Site' | image pending | 1964 | Pierre | Hughes | This archaeological site, dating from ''ca.'' 1500 CE, includes the remains of a very large fortified village on a mesa above the Missouri River. It consists of at least 44 circular house rings and 24 bastions covering 70 acres (28.3 ha). It is the northernmost site showing features of Central Plains cultures, and likely represents the Arikara people during a period when they were differentiating from the Pawnee. |
| 'Bear Butte' | 1981 | Sturgis | Meade | [162] | |
| 'Bloom Site' | image pending | 1964 | Bloom | Hanson | This fortified archaeological site preserves the remains of about 25 rectangular houses dating to approximately 1000 CE. The site also once contained a notable concentration of burial mounds, which were however destroyed by cultivation. It is believed that this site was occupied by the ancestors of the Mandan. |
| 'Crow Creek Site' | image pending | 1964 | Chamberlain | Buffalo | [163] |
| 'Deadwood Historic District' | 1961 | Deadwood | Lawrence | [164] | |
| 'Fort Pierre Chouteau Site' | 1991 | Fort Pierre | Stanley | [165] | |
| 'Fort Thompson Mounds' | image pending | 1964 | Fort Thompson | Buffalo | [166] |
| 'Frawley Ranch' | image pending | 1977 | Spearfish | Lawrence | [167] |
| 'Langdeau Site' | image pending | 1964 | Lower Brule | Lyman | [168] |
| 'Mitchell Site' | image pending | 1964 | Mitchell | Davison | [169] |
| 'Molstad Village' | image pending | 1964 | Mobridge | Dewey | A fortified prehistoric village of five circular house rings enclosed by a ditch comprises this archaeological site. It represents a transitional period as the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara peoples arose from the mixing of Central Plains and Middle Missouri cultural traits. |
| 'Vanderbilt Archeological Site' | image pending | 1997 | Pollock | Campbell | [170] |
| 'Verendrye Site' | image pending | 1971 | Fort Pierre | Stanley | [171] |
| 'Wounded Knee' | 1965 | Pine Ridge Indian Reservation | Shannon | [172] | |
| ''Blood Run Site'' | image pending | 1970 | na | Lincoln | See main listing under Iowa. |
----
===Tennessee===
:'27 National Historic Landmarks'
:''In addition:'' 2 withdrawn designations, 1 site listed primarily under another state
| 'Landmark name' | 'Image' | 'Year of designation' | 'Locality' | 'County' | 'Description' |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 'Beale Street Historic District' | 1966 | Memphis | Shelby | Birthplace of the blues style of music, Beale Street produced significant developments in African-American music and the music of the United States generally. W.C. Handy was a prominent Beale Street figure from when this was a lively district of saloons and theaters. | |
| 'Blount, William, Mansion' | 1965 | Knoxville | Knox | The home of William Blount from 1792 to his death in 1800. A veteran of the Congress of the Confederation and the Constitutional Convention where he represented North Carolina, Blount then became governor of the Southwest Territory, led Tennessee to statehood, and later served in the US Senate. | |
| 'Chucalissa Site' | image pending | 1994 | Memphis | Shelby | This archaeological mound complex dates from the Walls Phase (approximately 1400-1500). Its well-preserved historic materials include architecture, flora, fauna, and human skeletal remains. |
| 'Fort Loudoun' | 1965 | Vonore | Monroe | Built by the British in 1756 during the French and Indian War, Fort Loudoun allied with the Cherokee to protect the British southern marches. The fort was abandoned in 1760. | |
| 'Fort Pillow' | 1974 | Fort Pillow | Lauderdale | The Confederate victory at the Battle of Fort Pillow (April 1864) ended in the killing of 229 Black Union soldiers out of 262 engaged in the battle. This slaughter by the Southern troops under Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest has been labeled a massacre. "Remember Fort Pillow!" became a battle cry among Black soldiers for the remainder of the Civil War. | |
| 'Franklin Battlefield' | 1960 | Franklin | Williamson | At the Civil War Battle of Franklin (November 30, 1864), Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield's Union troops repelled repeated assaults by Confederate forces under Gen. John Bell Hood. The devastating losses sustained helped doom Hood's Army of Tennessee. | |
| 'George Peabody College for Teachers' | 1965 | Nashville | Davidson | As the University of Nashville, the college was the first institution to receive support from the Peabody Education Fund, which had been founded by George Peabody to rebuild education in the South after the Civil War. The university began operating as a teachers' college in 1875 and formally changed its name in 1909. It moved to its present location in 1914. | |
| 'Graceland (Home of Elvis Presley)' | 2006 | Memphis | Shelby | Elvis Presley profoundly influenced American music and culture in the 20th century, and has been inducted into the Rock and Roll, Gospel, and Country Halls of Fame. Graceland was Presley's home for 20 years starting in 1957, and is intimately associated with his music and career. | |
| 'Hermitage, The' | 1960 | Nashville [3] | Davidson | This plantation was the home of Andrew Jackson from 1804 until his death. He built the Greek Revival mansion house in 1819. Jackson served as President of the United States from 1829 to 1837. | |
| 'Hiram Masonic Lodge No. 7' | image pending | 1973 | Franklin | Williamson | The Chickasaw people were removed from their eastern homeland to territory across the Mississippi River by the Treaty of Franklin, which was signed here in 1830. President Andrew Jackson opened the meeting personally. |
| 'Jubilee Hall, Fisk University' | image pending | 1974 | Nashville | Davidson | Fisk University was founded in 1865 by the American Missionary Association to provide a liberal arts education for Blacks after the Civil War. Completed in 1876, this Victorian Gothic structure is the oldest building on campus. |
| 'Long Island of the Holston' | image pending | 1960 | Kingsport | Sullivan | The Long Island was a sacred council and treaty site among the Cherokee. Daniel Boone began from here to clear the Wilderness Road through the Cumberland Gap in 1775. The island has been heavily transformed by industrial development, and NPS staff recommended withdrawal of National Historic Landmark status in 1996 due to loss of historic integrity. |
| 'Moccasin Bend Archeological District' | image pending | 1986 | Chattanooga | Hamilton | This archaeological site on the Tennessee River contains a highly diverse set of Native American remains from the Archaic, Woodland, and Mississippian periods. Spanish artifacts from the 16th century illustrate the early contact period in the Southeast. Earthworks from the Civil War Battle of Chattanooga are also preserved. |
| 'Montgomery Bell Tunnel' | image pending | 1994 | White Bluff | Cheatham | This is the oldest known full-size tunnel in the US. It was built in 1818-1819 by Montgomery Bell to divert water to provide industrial power. Manual drilling was arduous and performed by slaves using tools such as hammers, chisels, and black powder. |
| 'Old First Presbyterian Church' | 1993 | Nashville | Davidson | Architect William Strickland designed this church in the Egyptian Revival style. Beginning his career as an apprentice to Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Strickland was one of the most prominent architects in the United States at the time of his simultaneous work on the church and the Tennessee State Capitol. Built in 1849, the church has been nicknamed "Karnak on the Cumberland," and was his most in-depth application of the Egyptian style. | |
| 'Pinson Mounds' | image pending | 1964 | Pinson | Madison | This site includes mounds covering a large spread of archaeological periods, beginning as early as 5000 BCE. Built here are two temple mounds, one effigy mound, and several other earthworks. |
| 'Polk, James K., House' | image pending | 1961 | Columbia | Maury | This house, built in 1816 was the home of future President James K. Polk for several years when he was a young man. |
| 'Rattle and Snap' | image pending | 1971 | Columbia | Maury | This mansion was built in the Greek Revival style by a relative of President James K. Polk, and sports a distinctive Corinthian portico. |
| 'Rhea County Courthouse' | 1976 | Dayton | Rhea | This courthouse was the scene of the Scopes Trial of July 1925, in which teacher John T. Scopes faced charges for including Charles Darwin's theory of evolution in his public school lessons. The trial became a clash of titans between the lawyers William Jennings Bryan for the prosecution and Clarence Darrow for the defense, and epitomizes the tension between fundamentalism and modernism in a wide range of aspects of American society. | |
| 'Ryman Auditorium' | 2001 | Nashville | Davidson | This auditorium was the home of the Grand Ole Opry from for 31 years from 1943 to 1974. The Opry, with its live music shows and radio programs, has deeply influenced the development of country music. | |
| 'Shiloh Indian Mounds Site' | image pending | 1989 | Hurley | Hardin | This is the largest remaining fortified Mississippian ceremonial mound complex in the Tennessee Valley, including 6 Mississippian temple mounds, one Woodland burial mound, a village site, and a palisade foundation. |
| 'Sun Record Company' | 2003 | Memphis | Shelby | This musical recording studio was established by Sam Phillips in 1952. It was here that he discovered and/or recorded many of the greatest names in rock and roll, including: B.B. King, Howlin' Wolf, Ike Turner, Rufus Thomas, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Charlie Rich, and Roy Orbison. Rock and roll was deeply influenced by Phillips' work, and its advent drove profound changes in American music, society, and race relations. | |
| 'Sycamore Shoals' | image pending | 1964 | Elizabethton | Carter | A treaty with the Cherokee, signed here in 1775, allowed the United States to acquire 20 million acres of Cherokee land. Sycamore Shoals later served as a staging area for the 1780 march of the Overmountain Men to victory over the British at Kings Mountain during the Revolutionary War. |
| 'Tennessee State Capitol' | 1971 | Nashville | Davidson | This fine example of Greek Revival architecture includes four Ionic porticos and a simple, well-proportioned interior. It was built in 1845-1859 under the direction of the noted architect William Strickland. | |
| 'Wynnewood' | image pending | 1971 | Castalian Springs | Sumner | This was the earliest settlement in Middle Tennessee, and remains today as a group of six log buildings at a sulphur spring. The 1828 main house was a stagecoach inn and residence. |
| 'X-10 Reactor, Oak Ridge National Laboratory' | image pending | 1965 | Oak Ridge | Roane | As the main atomic research facility in the United States, this nuclear reactor pioneered the production of plutonium and, later, medical radioisotopes. Built in 1943, it was the world's first full-scale reactor. |
| 'York, Alvin Cullom, Farm' | image pending | 1976 | Pall Mall | Fentress | At the 1918 Battle of the Argonne Forest during World War I, Alvin C. York distinguished himself with a one-man action that killed 25 enemy soldiers, took 132 prisoners, and captured 35 machine guns. York received the Medal of Honor for this feat, and became even more famous for his refusal to capitalize on the award. He lived at this farm from 1922 until his death in 1964. |
| ''Franklin, Isaac, Plantation'' | image pending | 1977, withdrawn 2005 | Gallatin | Sumner | Fairvue Plantation was built in 1832 by Isaac Franklin. Franklin retired to be a planter after a successful career as a partner in the largest slave-trading firm in the South prior to the Civil War. Loss of historic integrity due to redevelopment resulted in de-designation. |
| ''Nashville Union Station and Trainshed '' | 1975, withdrawn 2003 | Nashville | Davidson | The station and trainshed were built in the 1890s by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad as a major transfer station for routing passengers to the Midwest and West. The trainshed was the longest single-span, gable roof structure constructed in the United States. The trainshed was demolished in 2001 due to dangerous structural deterioration, leading to withdrawal of National Historic Landmark designation. | |
| ''Siege and Battle of Corinth Sites'' | 1991 | na | Hardeman | See main listing under Mississippi. |
===Texas===
#The Alamo - San Antonio
#Apollo Mission Control Center - Houston
#Bastrop State Park
#Dealey Plaza Historic District
#East End Historic District - Galveston
#Elissa (BARK) - Galveston
#Espada Aqueduct - San Antonio
#Fair Park Texas Centennial Buildings - Dallas
#Fort Belknap
#Fort Brown
#Fort Concho - San Angelo
#Fort Davis
#Fort Richardson - Jacksboro
#Fort Sam Houston
#John Nance Garner House - Uvalde
#Governor's Mansion - Austin
#HA. 19 (Midget submarine) - Fredericksburg
#Hangar 9, Brooks Air Force Base - San Antonio
#Harrell Site - South Bend
#Highland Park Shopping Village - Highland Park
#J A Ranch (Goodnight Ranch)
#LBJ boyhood home - Johnson City
#King Ranch
#Landergin Mesa - Vega
#Lubbock Lake Landmark - Lubbock
#Majestic Theatre - San Antonio
#Mission Concepcion - San Antonio
#Palmito Ranch Battlefield - Brownsville
#Palo Alto Battlefield - Brownsville
#Plainview Site - Plainview
#Porter Farm - Terrell
#Presidio Nuestra Senora De Loreto De La Bahia - Goliad
#Randolph Field Historic District - San Antonio
#Resaca de La Palma Battlefield - Brownsville
#Roma Historic District - Roma
#Samuel Rayburn House - Bonham
#San Jacinto Battlefield - Houston
#Space Environment Simulation Laboratory - Houston
#Spanish Governor's Palace - San Antonio
#Spindletop Oilfield - Beaumont
#Strand National Historic Landmark District - Galveston
#Texas State Capitol - Austin
#Trevino-Uribe Rancho - San Ignacio
#USS Lexington (CV-16) - Corpus Christi
#USS Texas (BB-35) - Houston
#Woodland (Home of Sam Houston) - Huntsville
:''In Addition:''
:
★ USS Cabot (CVL-28) - Port of Brownsville - designated June 29, 1990 (located in New Orleans), designation withdrawn August 7, 2001 (located in Port Brownsville).
----
===Utah===
:'13 National Historic Landmarks'
| 'Landmark name' | 'Image' | 'Year of designation' | 'Locality' | 'County' | 'Description' |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 'Alkali Ridge' | image pending | 1964 | na | San Juan | A set of widely-scattered archaeological remains of the earliest forms of Puebloan architecture, representing a period of transition from scattered, pit-style dwellings to a settled agricultural lifestyle. These multi-story buildings and kivas have yielded high-quality ceramics, and form the type location for the Pueblo II period (''ca.'' 900 CE - ''ca.'' 1100 CE). |
| 'Bingham Canyon Open Pit Copper Mine' | 1966 | na | Salt Lake | The world's first and largest open-pit copper mine, Bingham Canyon was opened in 1904. | |
| 'Bryce Canyon Lodge and Deluxe Cabins' | 1987 | Bryce Canyon National Park | Garfield | The Union Pacific Railroad built this national park lodge in 1924-1927. The architectural style was used by railroads for lodges across the American west with the encouragement of the National Park Service. | |
| 'Central Utah Relocation Center (Topaz)' | 2007 | na | Millard | One of 10 relocation centers for internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. The internees were mostly from northern California and the San Francisco Bay Area, and included many professional artists. | |
| 'Danger Cave' | image pending | 1961 | na | Tooele | Archaeological site featuring artifacts of the Desert Culture from ''ca.'' 9500 BCE until ''ca.'' 500 CE. |
| 'Desolation Canyon' | image pending | 1968 | na | Carbon, Emery, Grand, and Uintah | This remote canyon on the Colorado River was traversed by John Wesley Powell in 1869. Powell's expedition was sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution. |
| 'Emigration Canyon' | 1961 | Salt Lake City | Salt Lake | The Mormon pioneers traversed the Wasatch Range through this canyon at the western end of their trail, beginning in 1847. The canyon mouth is the location of Brigham Young's famous quotation "This is the place." | |
| 'Fort Douglas' | image pending | 1975 | Salt Lake City | Salt Lake | This US Army post was established in the 1860s to uphold United States authority in the Mormon territories, and to protect overland transportation and communication lines. |
| 'Old City Hall' | 1975 | Salt Lake City | Salt Lake | Completed in 1866, the city hall also served as the capitol of the Utah Territory, and was the scene of many tensions between Mormon leaders and the United States. | |
| 'Quarry Visitor Center' | image pending | 2001 | Dinosaur National Monument | Uintah | Built as part of the National Park Service's Mission 66 program of modern architectural design in the US national parks, this visitor center exemplifies the philosophy of locating visitor facilities immediately at the resource being interpreted. The visitor center is presently closed due to structural damage from unstable soils, and its future is in doubt. |
| 'Smoot, Reed O., House' | 1976 | Provo | Utah | The home of Reed Smoot from 1892 to his death in 1941. Smoot was a prominent US Senator best known for advocacy of protectionism and the Hawley-Smoot Tariff. | |
| 'Temple Square' | 1964 | Salt Lake City | Salt Lake | The earthly center of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Begun in the mid-19th century, the Square's Mormon landmarks include the Salt Lake Temple, the Tabernacle, and the Assembly Hall. | |
| 'Young, Brigham, Complex' | 1964 | Salt Lake City | Salt Lake | The Beehive House and adjacent Lion House were the residence of Brigham Young from 1852 until his death in 1877. As President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints at the time of the Mormon settlement of the Salt Lake Valley, Young and his home were pivotal in the development of the Church, Utah, and the American west. |
===Vermont===
★ Calvin Coolidge Homestead District - Plymouth Notch
★ Robert Frost Farm - Ripton
★ Rockingham Meeting House
★ Shelburne Farms - Shelburne
★ Socialist Labor Party Hall - Barre
★ Saint Johnsbury Athenaeum
Montpelier, undergoing restoration.
===Virginia===
Virginia is home to 118 National Historic Landmarks.
The Pioneer Square Pergola with the Pioneer Building behind.
===Washington===
#''Adventuress'' (schooner) - Port Townsend (1989)
#American and English Camps - San Juan Island (1961)
#''Arthur Foss'' (tug) - Seattle (1989)
#Chinook Point - Pacific County (1961)
#''Duwamish'' (fireboat) - Seattle (1989)
#''Fireboat No. 1'' - Tacoma (1989)
#Fort Nisqually Granary - Tacoma (1970)
#Fort Worden - Port Townsend (1976)
#Lightship ''No. 83'', "Relief" - Kirkland (1989)
#Longmire Buildings - Mount Rainier National Park (1987)
#Marmes Rockshelter - Franklin County (1964)
#Mount Rainier National Park - Pierce County and Lewis County (1997)
#Panama Hotel - Seattle (2006)
#Paradise Inn - Mount Rainier National Park (1987)
#Pioneer Building, Pergola, and Totem Pole - Seattle (1977)
#Port Gamble Historic District (1966)
#Port Townsend (1977)
#Puget Sound Naval Shipyard - Bremerton (1992)
#Seattle Electric Company, Georgetown Steam Plant - Seattle (1984)
#''Virginia V'' (steamboat) - Seattle (1992)
#''W.T. Preston'' (snagboat) - Anacortes (1989)
#Yakima Park Stockade Group - Mount Rainier National Park (1987)
:''In addition:''
:
★ Bonneville Dam Historic District - Skamania County (1987) (main listing under Oregon)
===West Virginia===
★ International Mother's Day Shrine (Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church), Grafton - added 1992
★ Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Martinsburg Shops, Martinsburg - added 2003
★ Campbell Mansion Historic District, Bethany - added 1994
★ Clover Site, Lesage - added 1992
★ Davis and Elkins Historic District, Elkins - added 1988
★ Elkins Coal & Coke Company Historic District, Bretz - added 1983
★ Grave Creek Mound, Moundsville - added 1964
★ The Greenbrier, White Sulphur Springs - added 1990
★ Matewan Historic District, Matewan - added 1997
★ Old Main, Bethany College, Bethany - added 1990
★ Reber Radio Telescope, Green Bank - added 1989
★ Traveller's Rest, Kearneysville - added 1972
★ Wade House, Morgantown - added 1965
★ West Virginia Independence Hall, Wheeling - added 1988
★ Weston Hospital Main Building, Weston - added 1990
★ Wheeling Suspension Bridge, Wheeling - added 1975
The "Great Workroom" at the Administration Building and Research Tower, S.C. Johnson Company.
===Wisconsin===
#Administration Building and Research Tower, S.C. Johnson Company - Racine (1976)
#Astor Fur Warehouse - Prairie du Chien (1960)
#Aztalan - Aztalan (1964)
#Harold C. Bradley House - Madison (1976)
#Brisbois House - Prairie du Chien (1960)
#USS ''Cobia'' - Manitowoc (1986)
#Dr. Fisk Holbrook Day House - Wauwatosa (1997)
#Dousman Hotel - Prairie du Chien (1960)
#Farmers' and Merchants' Union Bank - Columbia (1976)
#First Unitarian Society Meeting House, Shorewood Hills (2004)
#Fountain Lake Farm - Montello (1990)
#Fourth Street (Meir) School - Milwaukee (1990)
#Hamlin Garland House - West Salem (1971)
#Thomas A. Greene Memorial Museum - Milwaikee (1993)
#Herbert and Katherine Jacobs First House - Madison (2003)
#Herbert and Katherine Jacobs Second House - Madison (2003)
#Herbert Johnson House - Racine (1989)
#Robert M. LaFollette Home - Maple Bluff (1964)
#Little White Schoolhouse - Ripon (1974)
#Milton House - Milton (1998)
#Milwaukee City Hall - Milwaukee (2005)
#Namur Historic District - Door County (1990)
#North Hall, University Of Wisconsin - Madison (1965)
#Oconto Site - Oconto (1961)
#Pabst Theater - Milwaukee (1991)
#Ringling Brothers Circus Winter Quarters - Baraboo (1969)
#Schoonmaker Reef - Wauwatosa (1997)
#Second Fort Crawford Military Hospital - Prairie du Chien (1960)
#Silver Mound Archeological District - Jackson County (2006)
#Soldier's Home Reef - Milwaukee (1993)
#Taliesin - Spring Green (1976)
#Ten Chimneys - Genesee (2003)
#Turner Hall - Milwaukee (1996)
#University of Wisconsin Armory and Gymnasium - Madison (1993)
#University of Wisconsin Dairy Barn - Madison (2005)
#University of Wisconsin Science Hall - Madison (1993)
#Van Hise Rock - Sauk County (1997)
#Villa Louis - Prairie du Chien (1960)
#Wisconsin State Capitol - Madison (2001)
===Wyoming===
#Expedition Island - Green River (1968)
#Fort D.A. Russell - Cheyenne (1975)
#Fort Phil Kearny and Associated Sites - Johnson County (1960)
#Fort Yellowstone - Yellowstone National Park (2003)
#Heart Mountain Relocation Center - Park County (2006)
#Horner Site - Park County (1961)
#Independence Rock - Natrona County (1961)
#Jackson Lake Lodge - Grand Teton National Park (2003)
#Lake Guernsey State Park - Guernsey (1997)
#Medicine Wheel - Big Horn County (1969)
#Murie Ranch Historic District - Grand Teton National Park (2006)
#Norris, Madison, and Fishing Bridge Museums - Yellowstone National Park (1987)
#Obsidian Cliff - Yellowstone National Park (1996)
#Old Faithful Inn - Yellowstone National Park (1987)
#Oregon Trail Ruts - Guernsey (1966)
#J.C. Penney Historic District - Kemmerer (1978)
#Sheridan Inn - Sheridan (1964)
#South Pass - Fremont County (1961)
#Tom Sun Ranch - Casper (1960)
#Swan Land and Cattle Company Headquarters - Chugwater (1964)
#Union Pacific Railroad Depot - Cheyenne (2006)
#Upper Green River Rendezvous Site - Daniel (1961)
#Wapiti Ranger Station - Park County (1963)
#Wyoming State Capitol - Cheyenne (1987)
National Historic Landmarks in U.S. commonwealths and territories
===American Samoa===
#Blunts Point Battery - Pago Pago (1987)
#Government House - Pago Pago (1990)
===Midway Islands===
#World War II Facilities at Midway (1987)
The atom bomb pit at North Field on Tinian.
===Northern Mariana Islands===
#Landing Beaches; Aslito/Isley Field; & Marpi Point, Saipan Island - Saipan (1985)
#Tinian Landing Beaches, Ushi Point & North Fields, Tinian Island - Tinian (1985)
TaÃno ball courts at Caguana Site.
===Puerto Rico===
#''Antonio Lopez'' - Dorado (1997)
#Caguana Site - Utuado (1993)
#Caparra Archaeological Site - Guaynabo (1994)
#La Fortaleza - San Juan (1960)
===Virgin Islands===
#Columbus Landing Site - Saint Croix (1960)
#Fort Christian - Saint Thomas (1977)
#Fort Frederik - Saint Croix (1997)
#St. Thomas Synagogue - Saint Thomas (1997)
#Skytsborg (Blackbeard's Castle) - Saint Thomas (1994)
Remnant artillery on Wake Island.
===Wake Island===
#Wake Island (1985)
==U.S. National Historic Landmarks in associated states==
===Marshall Islands===
#Kwajalein Island Battlefield - Kwajalein (1985)
#Roi-Namur - Kwajalein (1985)
===Federated States of Micronesia===
#Nan Madol - Pohnpei (1985)
#Truk Lagoon Underwater Fleet, Truk Atoll - Chuuk (1985)
===Palau===
#Peleliu Battlefield - Peleliu (1985)
U.S. National Historic Landmarks in foreign states
The American Legation in Tangier.
===Morocco===
#American Legation - Tangier (1982)
References
General
★
★ National Historic Landmark Program: NHL Database
★ National Historic Landmark Program: Properties Determined Eligible for Designation as National Historic Landmarks
★ National Historic Landmark Program: Withdrawal of National Historic Landmark Designation
''Note: The above references, while all authoritative, are not entirely mutually consistent. Some details of this list may have been drawn from one of the references without support from the others. Reader discretion is advised.''
Specific
1. Contact Information
2.
3. National Historic Landmark Program: NHL Database
4. .
5. National Historic Landmark Program: NHL Database
External links
★ National Historic Landmark Program at the National Park Service
★ Lists of National Historic Landmarks
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