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The Nemaha
County jail and sheriff’s residence (1879) is located on three
lots (12,13,14 of block 61) on the southwest corner of the
intersection of North Sixth and Nemaha streets of Seneca
(population of 2,000), Nemaha County, Kansas. The one
hundred and twenty-four year old building maintains a high
degree of interior and exterior “Italianate” style
architectural integrity and has the unique status as one of
the oldest sheriff’s residence and jail standing in Kansas
today. The red brick, two-story structure rests on a
foundation of limestone blocks, laid in mortar and a natural
bed of sand. A renovation in 1907 enlarged the jail, added a
tower and built a second floor to the jail. Today, the
sheriff’s residence and jail are connected with a modern brick
addition, a museum annex.
The original jail and sheriff’s
residence is described in Andreas’s History of State of
Kansas (1883), as follows: It is a two-story brick structure
with an L, the main building, 32x25 feet, containing six rooms
conveniently arranged for the residence of the jailor. The L,
29x26 feet, contains three of J. Pauley's patent steel cells,
each of sufficient size to accommodate four persons, while
above the jailor's residence are two rooms used for the
incarceration of female prisoners and those retained for minor
offenses. In connection with the building is a large cistern
and facilities for using the water to the best advantage in
case of fire. The building cost $9,965, and is in every way a
credit to the (Nemaha) county.
The “L” shaped building has a
western façade orientation. The four panel doors are two
feet and eight inches by six feet and eight inches, and 3/8
inches thick. All of the doors are box framed with
galvanized iron trim. The windows are double-pane
seventy-seven inches by thirty-four inches with pulleys and
weights. The doors have transoms above them to equalize
the height with the windows. Basement windows pierce the
western façade, the north and south elevations. Stone
extends over basement windows eight inches longer than width
of opening to form a cap. The six jail windows are
covered with steel bars. The exterior walls
are eight to twelve inches in thickness covered with uniform
dark, red brick. The building is surmounted by the
simple-hipped, slightly sloping roof over the sheriff’s
residence and a flat roof over the jail. Rising from the
northern elevation of the Sheriff’s residence is a chimney,
Italianate style. Terns of galvanized metal are set in
pairs around the sheriff’s residence, garnish the windows and
cornice line. Full hooded arches of tin each exterior
window. Several large, old cedar trees and deciduous
trees are located on the property. A school bell from a
rural school, a hitching post, a flagpole and sign designating
the building as a museum stand on the front (west) lawn.
A column of the former Seneca high school (1878) is displayed
on the northeast corner of the lawn. The cistern, which was
located on the northern façade, has been filled with
dirt. |
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North side of Jail |
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Kitchen |
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Jail Cell |
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Open Stairs |
A wooden portico,
extending only one story was built under the porch on the
north bay of the western façade. This wooden
portico was moved to the mid section of the north side of the
building in the 1907 renovation. Four turned posts supported a
hipped roof. The floor is one-inch thick white pine, cut
tongue and groove to fit. Supporting the hipped roof of the
portico, ten inch by ten inch chamfered posts have molded caps and
bases. The roof is covered with white pine sheathing
boards. All the woodwork is thoroughly seasoned to protect
from weathering.
The stairway
leading to the second floor has seven-eighth inch risers and one and
one-fourth inch treads resting on two strong carriages. The
handrail on the stairs is plain and measures two inches by four
inches with one and three eighths inch turned baluster.
The three rooms on the second floor were originally a chamber room
and two rooms with grating for holding female prisoners and insane
prisoners.
The basement cellar
under the Sheriff’s residence has four rooms: on the north,
the furnace rooms which measures a total of eleven feet six inches
long by thirteen feet eight inches wide and on the south, the fuel
rooms, which are eleven feet eight inches by thirteen feet eight
inches. The stairs, located to the east of the fuel room, lead
up to the first floor. The stairway has open risers with
two-inch plank treads.
The jail and sheriff’s
office share such a close proximity, that importance is placed
equally between them now, but in 1879, the jail was the impressive
feature to the editor of the Seneca Tribune as he describes the new
facility in The Seneca Tribune article of October 1,
1879, headlined, A Model Prison:
The main structure
is two stories high, the front portion being designed as the
jailer’s residence, and the rear extension arranged as a
prison. The most attractive feature, however, is
the construction of the jail. The cells are made on the plan
of Pauly’s celebrated patient steel-clad jail cells. There are
three of the cells, each capable of accommodating four prisoners,
and all provided with hammocks and bunks, giving them a look
that would seem
inviting were the formidable bolts and bars removed. The cells
are arranged in a row, with excellent means of ventilation at the
rear, while in front is a corridor, separated from the center
corridor by open latticework, all made of the famous patented
hardened steel that defies files, saws, or cold chisels. The
entire top and bottom, all the outer walls of the cells, the rear
and the corridor and the partition between the corridor and cells
are made of plate work, hardened by the best process known, and are
absolutely saw and file-proof. The sanitary arrangements are
the most thorough that could be desired, the lattice work and the
foul air ducts affording ample ventilation, white water closets,
water-tank, pump, hose supply pipe, soil-pipe, etc., enable the
jailer to always keep his prison clean.
The original jail
was only one-story and paved with brick laid in two inches of sand.
All the floors, ceilings and partition walls in the jail cells were,
and remain, 3/16-inch thick jail plate. The lathing and
lattice sections were made of the patent hardened steel bars of two
by 3/8 inches. Each cell had four twenty-eight
inch wide hammocks, hung from angle irons set in the ceilings and
iron loops on the sides of the cells. Each cell was six and half
feet wide, eight feet deep and seven feet high, opening into a
five-foot wide corridor. There was a privy and a sink in the rear of
the corridor and a water tank outside the corridor. The cells,
doors, locks and corridors are P.J. Pauley of St. Louis, Missouri,
patented equipment.
The
building was used until 1905 when deterioration of the floors of the
jail began to raise concerns, complaints and jail-breakouts.
Some escaped through the roof. One prisoner succeeded in
making his escape by walking out the brick wall. The Nemaha County
Commissioners accepted the bid from Shaul & Assenmacher on June
5, 1907 to renovate the building for $9,851. A new second
floor was added to the jail section with concrete floors and windows
mirroring the first floor windows. The new, second floor jail
addition added an exercise room and two more steel clad,
maximum-security P.J. Pauley cells. Since the foundation of the jail
needed restoration, the first floor jail building was enlarged by
twenty feet and rearranged with a utility room and the original
three P.J. Pauley cells, steel floors repaired.
All the new windows
constructed for the renovation were built with rusticated stone
sills and topped with vertical placed bricks, but the first floor
jail windows and the sheriff’s residence windows built with cast
iron sills are the original. The roof received a face-lift
during the renovations and a dormer added to the western facade in
tune with the pure Italianate style.
The angle of pitch
was increased over the sheriff’s residence and the roof over the
jail was built flat across. A tower with cupola was
added to the intersection of the sheriff’s residence and the jail on
the south side of the building. In the new tower, cement
steps were added which lead to a small covered porch on ground level
and a bathroom on the second floor. Nestled back into
the nook created by the tower on the south, a new porch was
built. A western façade porch was extended to cover the full
side of the building with cement arches decorating the stone
railing. The terrazzo floor of the porch extends inwards
to the foyer, but is currently cracking due to poor support
framework. Four brick pillars rise from the porch railing to the
centered gabled roof. The entire building was re-bricked from the
Seneca Brick Factory.
The first
floor of the residence was remodeled, keeping the original nine-foot
ceilings in the three rooms, central hall, open stairway and a
foyer. The hallway from western façade to stairway was
removed, opening the parlor. A wall was removed in the north
room allowing a larger dining room. The kitchen, sheriff’s office
and a small lavatory were added in the enlarged jail sector
building. The sheriff’s office was now centrally located with
entrances to the kitchen, hall, foyer and the only passage into the
jail. The renovated windows of the sheriff’s office were built
wider. The doors are wood paneled with glass windows.
Screen doors were added.
The interior walls
of the two-story Sheriff’s resident are lathed with white pine, two
coats of brown mortar and finished with Plaster of Paris. The
floors throughout the residence are 7/8-inch thick mill worked oak
wood. The second story hall and three rooms and the first
story living room have been overlaid with two inch oak
flooring. On the first floor of the residence are two
rooms: the dining room and living room, which have four inch wood
flooring. Leading into each room is a four-paneled door with
ogee molding. On the south side of the residence is the living
room, measuring twelve feet by fifteen feet, and on the north side
is the twelve by ten feet dining room.
The major change in
the second story residence was the removal of the female and insane
cells. These rooms were transformed into family rooms.
The renovations provided five rooms on the second floor, two closets
and a bathroom for the Sheriff’s residence. The building had steam
heating until electricity and city water became available. In
the 1907 renovation, the portico was moved from the western façade
to the mid-section of the north side of the building, running east
and west. This relocated portico now provides two entrances
from the north through the original door to the dining room and a
new door to the kitchen.
In 1977, the Nemaha
County Commissioners moved the jail facilities to another location
in an attempt to maintain a centralization of county government
agencies and meet new requirements for jail facilities. The Nemaha
County Historical Society, Inc. purchased the building in 1978 for a
museum. At that time the Historical Society renovated the
interior and removed all the heating and plumbing except in the
kitchen and lavatory. All of the rooms were returned to their
original early 20th Century style.
In 1995, the Harry
C.M. Burger Memorial Annex, a non-contributing building, was
added. The annex is located on the east side of the building,
running north to south. The addition is one story high with
cement foundations and the walls are brick. The windows are
box-framed with brick sills. The entrance to the annex is
through a door created from a former window opening from the jail.
Statement of
significance:
The Nemaha county jail and sheriff’s
residence (1879) is being nominated for National Registry in
Criteria A and C for its historical association with the growth and
development of Nemaha County and for its architectural significance
as the modified Italianate style of the late Nineteenth and early
Twentieth Centuries. The building served as the county jail and
sheriff’s residence until 1976 when the Nemaha County Historical
Society purchased the building for use as a museum. The
building maintains a high degree of architectural integrity and is
the oldest sheriff’s residence and jail standing in
Kansas.
Nemaha County is rich with history, dating back to
when Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, a Spaniard who mentions the
area, Quivera, north of Kaw: I
found prunes (wild plums) like those in
Spain. Indeed, the deep, black,
sandy soil of Nemaha County was unsurpassed by any other community
in Kansas. Fremont in his second journey across Kansas
in 1842 crossed Nemaha County in attempt to find any feasible
crossing over swollen streams. Immigration to the area began
in 1854 when Kansas was organized and given a government. The
most prolific crops of corn, oats, and wheat interspersed with
well-watered streams and well-timbered land prospered the new Kansas
farmers. In
1858, the
population of Seneca was only six residents. In less than ten
years, the population swelled to three hundred one. By 1882,
the area’s population was one thousand, five hundred, and nineteen
citizens. The Atchison & Pike’s Peak, now the Missouri
Pacific railroad, began to pass through Seneca in 1866, causing a
rapid population growth. Many settlers moving westward would
stop in Nemaha County and buy land without looking further.
When Seneca was founded in 1857, there was
some rivalry between it and the town of Richmond, 3 miles way on the
feeder of the Oregon Trail. In order to lead traffic through
Seneca some of the settlers planted oats along a section of the
trail making it appear abandoned. Therefore a new trail took
in the enterprising town, and a few years later a Pony Express
station was established in Seneca. With slight
modifications, the Mormons used this trail in 1844, at the beginning
of their exodus to Utah. In 1849, it was the trail of the
California gold-seekers, and subsequently, the military road, along
which passed many of the troops bound for the far west. The
establishment of Seneca as the county seat of Nemaha County brought
booming economic development, but not without some conflict.
The new courthouse burned twice and after each episode, another
election was held to choose the new county seat. Seneca won
the third vote over Sabetha by promising a new courthouse as well as
a new jail and sheriff’s residence.
Prior to 1860, Nemaha County rarely needed a
jail. The few prisoners that Nemaha County detained were
lodged in various places, usually under guard, waiting on the
tedious delays of the law. The first attempt at a jail
in 1861 failed miserably as the twenty foot by thirty foot stone
jail allowed tenants to escape easily. The County
Commissioners put the proposition of a new jail on the ballot in the
1878 election. Once approved, Seneca accepted a bid from P.J.
Pauley & Brothers, St. Louis, Missouri, through their agent,
C.L. Wundt and Company of Des Moines, Iowa, to build the jail and
residence for $9,943. P.J. Pauley & Brothers were
known to have a respectable reputation for building the perfect
jail. A.W. Burnett, Chairman of the Board of Commissioners
supervised the building of the jail. Elbert Dumont, Seneca
builder, was the local contractor. The October 6, 1879
minutes of the Board of Commissioners lists a check for $9,943,
payable to P.J. Pauley & Brothers.
Mr. P.J.
Pauley, a German-American born in 1832, founded the
Pauley Jail
Building and Manufacturing Company in 1856. The Pauley family
started the small business in St. Louis, Missouri as steamboat
blacksmiths on the Mississippi River. As river traffic was heavy at
that time, the business flourished. As America pushed its western
frontier further and further after the Civil War, young P.J. Pauly,
Sr., then 33, saw the development of an enormous business
opportunity. Counties of emerging Territories and States had a
responsibility to house prisoners convicted of crimes until such
time as the prisoner could be transferred to a state prison, often a
considerable period of time. Harnessing his skills as a
mechanic and blacksmith, Mr. Pauley began manufacturing small steel
cages that were, at first, anchored to flat wagons. These cages were
drawn from place to place to serve as "gaols" or jails. Thus began
the Pauley family's involvement in the detention industry. Today
(2003), P. J. Pauley, Sr.'s great-great grandsons, Robert James
Pohrer and Joseph Pauly Pohrer III, continue the operation of the
family business.
The
Pauley Jail Building Company
pioneered
double ribbed bar and the
development of the "tool resisting steel" with Crucible Steel
Company, the 4-S approach to the correctional industry: Segregation-Sanitation-Safety,
special plumbing fixtures that could never be clogged (Noverflo),
the forerunner of the heavy hollow metal door and frame (Securidor),
and a line of detention security windows (Invisiguard and
Ventralite) which replaced the old exposed
guards.
Architect P.J. Pauley, Jr. prepared plans,
specifications and details for the jail and sheriff’s
residence. The new jail was designed to express the growth and
expanding richness of the area through a popular architectural
style, Italianate. Following the trend across the country, the
prosperous farmers of Nemaha County encouraged a building of high
style Italianate. Characterized by brackets, often
doubled, which ornament the cornice, porches and hipped roofs that
often appear flat, the building was similar to the new high school,
which had been built in 1878 across the street from the jail.
Within the concrete and brick walls of the jail, small cells were
constructed of metal lattice while common jail bars enclosed other
areas. All exterior windows had metal bars. Catwalks
(corridors) surrounded the cell areas. To open the cell doors,
the jailer entered the corridor and removed the padlocks, then
retired, closing and locking the corridor door. The jailer
removed the padlock from the lever (in the lever box) and pulled the
lever, which slides the locking bars and released all the cell
doors. The jail was seen as a model of neatness. The
Seneca Tribune reported in the September 24, 1879 issue: At first glance it appears more like a
handsome dwelling than a jail. The beauty of the building allows
Nemaha County to lay
claim to having the handsomest jail in northern Kansas.
The William G. Cutler, History of the State of
Kansas, first published by A.T. Andreas, lists the
biography of Elbert Dumont: Elbert Dumont, architect and builder, was
born in 1847, in Seneca County, N. Y.
During the Rebellion he served in the One Hundred and Eleventh New
York Volunteer Infantry, and in the Ninth Michigan Volunteer
Infantry; was discharged from the army in October, 1865; attended
school at the seminaries at Ovid and Fulton, N. Y., till the spring
of 1878, when he went to DeKalb County Mo., where he learned the
carpenter trade. After living in Missouri three years, he came to
Seneca, Nemaha County, Kan. For the last four years he has devoted
his time to draughting and superintending.
Among the jobs that he
has had charge of are the Nemaha county jail, the Firstenberger,
Settle and Williams residences, the bank of Nemaha County, Burnett
Block, the Centralia schoolhouse, and the Morris Opera House of
Wetmore. His wife was Mary E., daughter of O. C. Bruner an early
settler of Nemaha
County.
Seneca continued to grow and expand into the
1900’s, but the jail began to show signs of deterioration.
As a place of confinement,
almost any old brick building would be as good. There has been
some eight or ten jail escapes since the jail has been in use, and
several important criminals have got away. The money spent in
chasing escaped prisoners would have gone far towards making the
jail sanitary and secure, states the editor of the
Courier Democrat in the August 10, 1905 issue.
Serious health problems arose due to
unsanitary conditions in the jail. The floor in the corridor was an
ordinary plank affair that was put down some sixteen years before
over the brick and sand flooring. Time and moisture rotted the
planks. One could take a stick and stir in the mud
underneath. The cages had a steel bottom and were set on a
cement floor, but the dampness had completely rusted through the
steel bottoms in some places. Several prisoners contacted
rheumatism while in the jail. Obnoxious gases caused prisoners
to feel nauseous. Malaria was
reported to be lurking throughout the entire premises. Then
when one young man visited neighbors after being held at the hail,
his clothing contaminated the house with a foul odor. His best
shoes were covered in mildew and he looked sick. He went to
the jail the picture of health and youth, and was released pale and
sick from malaria. (Courier Democrat 11/1906.)
Local architect John Y. Benfer, drew up
plans for renovation of the jail. Born in 1844 in
Union County, Pennsylvania and reared in Seneca
County, Ohio, Mr. Benfer learned sign and carriage painting at an
early age. He enlisted in the One Hundred and Twenty-third
Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and served two years in the Shenandoah
Valley, participated in the Winchester and other historic battles,
served one year with the army of the James, was captured three times
and once escaped, the third time being released at the surrender of
Lee at Appomattox. At Winchester, he was wounded. After
the war, he worked at his trade in Michigan and Indiana until 1900,
when he located in Seneca, Kansas. He was a master of his
trade and had a well ordered and occupied shop. Mr. John
Benfer designed many houses and buildings in Seneca.
The renovation plans were kept on file at
the County
Clerks’ office for several months while the County Commissioners
discussed the matter of the jail. Bids were let out for
the renovation, but later called off because of the high
costs. The County Commissioners then appointed a citizen
committee whose task it was to review the plans submitted by the
architect and to determine their worth. The committee reported
that the sanitary conditions of
said jail are very unwholesome and inadequate, and in our opinion
cannot be well overcome without the alternations and repairs sought
to be made by said plans. We think the plans are good and
reasonable. The County Clerk and the County Attorney were
then assigned the responsibility of devising an advertisement asking
for bids to repair the county jail according to the plans.
After much deliberation, the County Commissioners awarded the
contract to Shaul & Assenmacher, a known and reliable
contractor, for a total of $9,851.
Joseph Assenmacher of Shaul &
Assenmacher settled in Seneca in 1867, where he made his home for
forty-five years before moving to Lincoln, Nebraska
where he could be closer to his major project of building part of
the Nebraska State capital. He was considered to be one of the
best builders in Seneca. He remodeled the old post office, was
responsible for the brick blocks of Harsh’s Drug Store and Routh’s
Shoe Store. He owned the opera house, constructed a hotel and built
more than twenty residences in the city of Seneca.
George A. Shaul of Shaul & Assenmacher
had a staunch and respected reputation in the area. He was believed
to be one of the most extensive
contractors in Seneca’s history. Before his death
in 1938, he built the Masonic Temple, city hall, the
Eley hardware building and Dr. Thomson’s office building within the
city of Seneca. He also was instrumental in the organization
and management of the Seneca Shale Brick Company, which was turning
out 20,000 brick per day in 1916. He built at least ten public
buildings in Nebraska and worked on approximately twelve federal
post offices. He was responsible for the Nebraska State Farm
Building in Lincoln, the Carnegie library at Lawrence, Kansas and
for the Feeble Minded Institute at Beatrice. Mr. Shaul
provided labor for a large number of Seneca workmen and was a
committed defender of the area.
After some delay, the renovation project was
completed on December 17, 1907. Once the sheriff took
possession of the jail, the building was a model of security and
served Nemaha County until 1977. On January 9, 1978, the
jail property, which included the residence, jail, garage and lots
were sold for $19,500. The Nemaha County Historical Society
purchased the site, funded through donations and fundraising
activities.
The Nemaha County Jail retains a high degree
of architectural integrity as an example of a turn-of-the century
jail and sheriff’s residence. The low pitched roof, widely overhanging
eaves, supported by decorative brackets, tall, narrow windows with
elaborated window crowns of inverted-U shapes identifies the
Italianate style of the late 1880’s, even to the L-shaped
compound-plan as described by Virginia and Lee McAlester
in A Field Guide to American Homes. Although the tower
was added in the renovation of 1907, it was designed to be characteristic of the Italian
Villa. Although the copula was removed by the
tornado winds of 1910, the tower continues to occupy the position
where the residence joins the jail in the L-plan
building. Future plans are underway for replacing the
cupola on the tower.
The three original 1879 P.J. Pauley steel
clad cells and the two cells installed in 1907 are in excellent
condition. The jail floors, ceiling and partition walls made
of three-sixteenths inch plate are pristine. All of the
lathing, lattice section, and steel bars of the celebrated Pauley
patent remain intact for viewing by the touring public. The
jail embraces all the latest improvements for that time and
continues today to display historical artifacts as a museum.
Restoration and rehabilitation of the jail and sheriff’s residence
by the Nemaha County Historical Society is symbolic of the
historical pride experienced by all community residents.
A non-contributing building, called the Harry C.M. Burger Memorial
Annex was added to the back of the nominated building. Entry
to the annex from the original jail is through a door built from a
jail window opening. A recent donation of the adjoining east
lot will permit plans for increased parking.
 .htm) .
Bibliography
(Cite the books, articles, and other sources
used in preparing this form on one or more continuation
sheets.)
Books:
Annuals of Kansas, Volume
One, Topeka, KS. Kansas State Historical Society. 1954, 214,
416.
Volume Two, 1956, pg. 160.
Blackmar, Frank W.
Kansas, A
Cyclopedia of State History, Vol. 1, Chicago, IL.
1912, 342-345.
Cutler, William G. History of the State of
Kansas, A.T. Andreas,
Chicago, IL. 1883, 940-990.
Engelken, Lillian. Reflections of
Nemaha County, KS. Dallas, TX: Curtis Media
Corp. 1992.
Isely, Bliss and Richards, W.M.
Story of
Kansas, State of KS, Board of Education, Topeka, KS.
1953.
McAlester, Virginia and
Lee. A Field Guide to
American Houses, New York, 1984, 216-217.
Tennal,
Ralph. History of
Nemaha County,
Kansas. Lawrence, KS; Standard Publishing Co. 1916. 79, 81,210,
218.
Whittemore, Margaret. Historic
Kansas, A Centenary Sketchbook,
Univ. of Kansas Press, 1954. 57-58
Correspondence:
1897 Pauley Jail Museum,
Union Springs, Alabama. History of the Pauley Jail Building Company;
2003.
Documents:
Nemaha County Register of
Deeds, State of Kansas, Quit Claim Deed, Lot 13, Block
61, Book 2, page 52.
City of
Seneca, April 10, 1879; Book Ten, page 73, Lot 14 in Block 61, April
10, 1879; Book 2, page 488, Lot 12, Block 61, October 8, 1879.
Nemaha
County Commissioners Proceedings, 1878-79; 1907-1908,
Book G, pgs. 149, 156, 191.
Check Payment to P.J. Pauley Bros.
October 6, 1879.
Contracts, Specifications and Blueprints:
Residence and Jail: 1879; 1907.
Newspapers:
The Seneca
Courier; 21
September, 1877; 9 August, 1878; 21 September, 1877; 11 October,
1879; 4 July, 1879; 5 September, 1879; 1 October, 1879; 31 October,
1879.
The Seneca
Tribune; 1 June 1879;
7 August, 1879; 24 September, 1879; 1 October, 1879; 8 January,
1880; 12 September, 1912; 27 July, 1905; 6 June, 1907; 22 August,
1907.
Courier
Democrat; 27 July,
1905; 10 August, 1905; 26 July, 1906; 23 August, 1906; 16 November,
1906; 8 April, 1908; 30 May, 1907; 6 September, 1907; 12 December,
1907; 11 April, 1907, 13 January, 1905; 23 April,
1908.
Courier
Tribune; 6 October,
1977; 8 December, 1977; 12 December, 1977; 31 December,
1977;
12 January, 1978; 21 March, 1938; 6
October, 1977; 31 December, 1977; 12 January 1978.
NPS Form
10-900-a
OMB No.
1024-0018
(8-86)
United
States Department of the Interior National Park
Service
National Register of
Historic Places
Continuation
Sheet
Section number 10
Page 1
VERBAL
BOUNDARY DESCRIPTION
This building (both contributing and
noncontributing) is located on lots 12, 13, 14, 15 of block 61, City
of Seneca,
Nemaha County, Kansas. It is bounded by the
following;
·
On the west by Sixth
Street;
·
On the north by Nemaha
Street;
·
On the east by private property;
and,
·
On the south by an
alleyway.
BOUNDARY
JUSTIFICATION
The
nomination contains all property historically associated with the
Nemaha
County jail and sheriff’s residence. The location is across
the intersection from the County Courthouse, which allowed county
government offices to remain centrally located and in relative close
proximity to each other.
03/25/2007
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