NRHP: James and Margaret Greer Farmstead

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[[Image: |thumb|right|upright=1.0|alt= |James and Margaret Greer Farmstead]]

James and Margaret Greer Farmstead

NRHP Reference #: 11000103

NRHP Listing Date: 20110321

Location

6135 202nd St, Alvo vicinity, Cass County, Nebraska

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Summary

Significant for its association with rural settlement patterns, agricultural practices, and vernacular architecture, this farmstead represents the continuous agricultural development in eastern Cass County from the late 1880s through the 1950s. Along with four siblings, James Greer emigrated from Northern Ireland in the 1880s, bought this farm from an earlier homesteader, and after surviving drought and financial panic in the 1890s, created a successful farm. Among the most important buildings on the farmstead are a gambrel-roofed barn, a monitor-roofed hay barn, a drive through corncrib, and a 1917 Craftsman-style bungalow farmhouse.

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About the National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the country’s official list of historically significant properties. To be eligible for the NRHP a property must generally retain their historic appearance, be at least 50 years old, and have the potential to be documented as historically or architecturally significant at either the local, state, or national level. The National Register of Historic Places is a National Park Service program administered by the Nebraska State Historical Society for the state of Nebraska. Visit the Nebraska State Historical Society's website to learn more about the program.