South Dakota\u27s architectural legacy bears close resemblance to that of other prairie and Plains states, with one colorful exception: the use of the region\u27s reddish stones, quartzite and sandstone. These bright pink rocks bring a distinctive glow to communities in which they are concentrated, notably Dell Rapids, Sioux Falls, and Hot Springs. How fortunate that this material was locally available and affordable at a time of extensive building around the turn of the century when talented designers Wallace L. Dow and Henry Schwartz put their stamp on the region\u27s architecture. David Erpestad and David Wood begin their survey with several forms of American Indian architecture and building materials, both indigenous and manufactured, a...
A Guide to Kansas Architecture by David H. Sachs and George Ehrlich selects representative examples ...
Review of: Folk Architecture in Little Dixie: A Regional Culture in Missouri. Marshall, Howard Wrigh...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...
America\u27s Architectural Roots is an introduction to the remarkable diversity of ethnic building t...
After the West Was Won is about pioneering in western South Dakota on land unsettled by agricultural...
A decidedly non-traditional history, the work is organized into a series of short essays arranged ge...
Review of: Great Lakes Lumber on the Great Plains: The Laird, Norton Company in South Dakota. Vogel,...
This is a modest but invaluable introduction for a larger research problem that should be attacked s...
Review of: The Spirit of H. H. Richardson on the Midland Prairies: Regional Transformations of an Ar...
The definition, surveying, and particularly the marking, with quartzite monuments, of the state boun...
The best parts of this book are the introductions to South Dakota and to each of the four regions in...
Review of: North Dakota: A Bicentennial History. Wilkins, Robert P. and Wilkins, Wynona Hutchette
In the concluding pages of this nearly fourhundred- page volume the author acknowledges previous att...
Review of: Skeletons of the Prairie: Abandoned Rural Codington County. Holien, Reid; Tuszynski, S. P...
In some academic circles today the study of governmental units-nations or states-is passe. Race, cla...
A Guide to Kansas Architecture by David H. Sachs and George Ehrlich selects representative examples ...
Review of: Folk Architecture in Little Dixie: A Regional Culture in Missouri. Marshall, Howard Wrigh...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...
America\u27s Architectural Roots is an introduction to the remarkable diversity of ethnic building t...
After the West Was Won is about pioneering in western South Dakota on land unsettled by agricultural...
A decidedly non-traditional history, the work is organized into a series of short essays arranged ge...
Review of: Great Lakes Lumber on the Great Plains: The Laird, Norton Company in South Dakota. Vogel,...
This is a modest but invaluable introduction for a larger research problem that should be attacked s...
Review of: The Spirit of H. H. Richardson on the Midland Prairies: Regional Transformations of an Ar...
The definition, surveying, and particularly the marking, with quartzite monuments, of the state boun...
The best parts of this book are the introductions to South Dakota and to each of the four regions in...
Review of: North Dakota: A Bicentennial History. Wilkins, Robert P. and Wilkins, Wynona Hutchette
In the concluding pages of this nearly fourhundred- page volume the author acknowledges previous att...
Review of: Skeletons of the Prairie: Abandoned Rural Codington County. Holien, Reid; Tuszynski, S. P...
In some academic circles today the study of governmental units-nations or states-is passe. Race, cla...
A Guide to Kansas Architecture by David H. Sachs and George Ehrlich selects representative examples ...
Review of: Folk Architecture in Little Dixie: A Regional Culture in Missouri. Marshall, Howard Wrigh...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...