Former building in Farmington, Minnesota, United States
Gazebo on the Dakota County Fairgrounds built from the dome of the Horticulture Building after its demolition in 1988
The Horticulture Building was a building at the Dakota County Fairgrounds in Farmington, Minnesota, United States. It was built in 1918 and demolished in 1988.
Dakota County Fair
[edit]
The Dakota County Fair began in 1858 when the Dakota County Agricultural Society was organized. Henry H. Sibley, the first governor of the state of Minnesota, was guest speaker at the first fair which was held in Nininger. The fair moved to Hastings, the county seat, and then to permanent grounds near Farmington in 1918.[1][2]
The Horticulture Building
[edit]
When the permanent fairgrounds were established in 1918, one of the first structures built was the Horticulture Building.[2] The building, designed and built by C. S. Lewis, had a central section flanked by two 40-foot wings. The central section was topped by a wooden octagonal dome which was painted silver. The building was constructed of wood and red clay tiles, and was considered an example of early twentieth-century fairgrounds architecture.[3] In 1980, the Horticulture Building was added to the National Register of Historic Places.[1]
By 1984, the dome had begun to lean to one side and it was feared that it could blow over in a storm. County fair officials decided that the cost of restoration would be too high and the building was razed in 1988. A replacement building was constructed and the old dome was turned into a gazebo on the fairgrounds.[1][3]
In 1993, the Exhibition Hall was removed from the National Register of Historic Places.
See also
[edit]
National Register of Historic Places listings in Dakota County, Minnesota
Municipalities and communities of Dakota County, Minnesota, United States
County seat: Hastings
Cities
Apple Valley
Burnsville
Coates
Eagan
Empire
Farmington
Hampton
Hastings‡
Inver Grove Heights
Lakeville
Lilydale
Mendota
Mendota Heights
Miesville
New Trier
Northfield‡
Randolph
Rosemount
South St. Paul
Sunfish Lake
Vermillion
West St. Paul
Map of Minnesota highlighting Dakota County
Townships
Castle Rock
Douglas
Eureka
Greenvale
Hampton
Marshan
Nininger
Randolph
Ravenna
Sciota
Vermillion
Waterford
Unincorporated communities
Castle Rock
Etter
Eureka Center
Waterford
Ghost towns
Lewiston
Nininger
Indian reservation
Prairie Island Indian Community‡
Footnotes
‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties
Minnesota portal
United States portal
People
Pierce Butler, U.S. Supreme Court justice
Natalie Darwitz, Olympic Silver Medalist
Ignatius Donnelly, Minnesota's 2nd Lt. Governor
Craig Kilborn, comedian
John Kline, U.S. Representative from Minnesota's 2nd congressional district
Paul James Krause, NFL Hall of Famer
Joan Kroc, philanthropist
Laura Osnes, actress
Tim Pawlenty, Minnesota's 39th Governor
Alexander Ramsey, Minnesota's 2nd Governor
Coleen Rowley, former FBI agent
Henry Hastings Sibley, Minnesota's 1st Governor
Harold Stassen, Minnesota's 25th Governor
Geography
Mississippi River: Adjacent to South St. Paul, Inver Grove Heights, Rosemount, and Hastings
Minnesota River: Adjacent to Mendota Heights, Mendota, and Burnsville
Vermillion River: From Farmington through Eureka Township to Hastings
Historic Sites
Byron Howes House
Church of Saint Mary's-Catholic
Church of the Advent
Dakota County Courthouse
Daniel F. Akin House
District No. 72 School
East Second Street Commercial Historic District
Emil J. Oberhoffer House
Exchange Bank Building
Fasbender Clinic
First Presbyterian Church, Hastings
Fort Snelling
Fort Snelling-Mendota Bridge
George W. Wentworth House
Good Templars Hall
Hastings Foundry-Star Iron Works
Hastings Methodist Episcopal Church
Henry H. Sibley House
Holz Family Farmstead
Ignatius Eckert House
MacDonald–Todd House
Mendota Historic District
Minneapolis Saint Paul Rochester & Dubuque Electric Traction Company Depot
Ramsey Mill and Old Mill Park
Reuben Freeman House
Rudolph Latto House
Serbian Home
St. Stefan's Romanian Orthodox Church
Stockyards Exchange
Thompson–Fasbender House
VanDyke–Libby House
West Second Street Residential Historic District
William G. LeDuc House
Industry
Pine Bend Refinery
Thomson West
Northwest Airlines
Attractions
Big Rivers Regional Trail
Chimney Rock SNA
Fort Snelling State Park
Lake Byllesby Regional Park
Lebanon Hills Regional Park
Miesville Ravine Park Reserve
v
t
e
U.S. National Register of Historic Places in Minnesota
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Other lists
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History of the National Register of Historic Places
Property types
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Contributing property
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