1894 – Donaldson Hotel, Fargo, North Dakota
Architect: Built as a meetingplace for the local branch of the International Order of Odd Fellows, an offshoot of the Masons. The building has a fine sandstone facade with an excellent Palladian window...
Architect: Built as a meetingplace for the local branch of the International Order of Odd Fellows, an offshoot of the Masons. The building has a fine sandstone facade with an excellent Palladian window...
Architect: Bassford & Company Designed by Bassford & Company of Minneapolis, the building work was supervised by the local Hancock brothers. Construction started in 1891 and was halted by the Fargo fire, it...
Architect: Jacob Friedlander A fine smaller building that once housed a well-known local bicycle shop. Worthy of note is the decorative brick cornice, and the glazing on the shopfront.
Architect: Cass Gilbert The Northern Pacific was the first major railroad to go through Fargo, and the only mainline through the city. The line of the Great Northern Railroad was a spur from...
Architects: McMillan & Tenbusch, Andrew O’Shea Built and designed in two phases, the original two floors were designed by McMillan & Tenbusch and built in 1894. The top three floors were designed by...
Architect: Hammel Green & Abrahamson This 1904 building (previously the International Harvester Building) was renovated in 1996 to house the Plains Art Musuem. Typical of warehouses of the period, the structure is of...
Architect: G. & W. Hancock Once the finest hotel in Fargo, catering to travelling salemsmen and politicians, the Gardner Hotel is a large imposing structure with classical detailing. The building had all the...
Architect: Fine commercial building with handsome parapet, that was built in several stages from 1909-16. Named Loretta by the developer Peter Elliott after his youngest daughter.