place

Jefferson Landing State Historic Site

Missouri State Historic SitesMuseums in Jefferson City, MissouriProtected areas established in 1976Transportation museums in Missouri
Lohman Building
Lohman Building

Jefferson Landing State Historic Site is a historic district maintained by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources encompassing several state-owned properties in Jefferson City, Missouri, United States. The historic site includes the Christopher Maus House, the Union Hotel, and the Lohman's Landing Building (also known as the Jefferson Landing Building), which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1969.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Jefferson Landing State Historic Site (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Jefferson Landing State Historic Site
Jefferson Street, Jefferson City

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Jefferson Landing State Historic SiteContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.578888888889 ° E -92.170555555556 °
placeShow on map

Address

Lohman Building

Jefferson Street
65101 Jefferson City
Missouri, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Lohman Building
Lohman Building
Share experience

Nearby Places

Jefferson City station
Jefferson City station

Jefferson City is an Amtrak train station in Jefferson City, Missouri, United States. The station is located on the ground floor of the former Union Hotel, which was built in 1855 and is part of the Jefferson Landing State Historic Site. The Amtrak station was previously located at the old Missouri Pacific Railroad station before moving two blocks west to its current location in 1984. The station has neither checked baggage service nor a Quik-Trak ticketing kiosk, so tickets must be purchased in advance.The entire Union Hotel building (including the station) was closed on October 2, 2019, due to concerns that its exterior masonry was no longer structurally sound after a bulge appeared in its north wall. In December 2019, a temporary station consisting of a modular trailer was established in a nearby parking lot. While monitoring shows that the bulge is not significantly worsening, the building remains closed and has been placed on Missouri Preservation's "2021 Places in Peril" list. Planning and design for an estimated $9 million, two-year project to repair the building is scheduled to start in July 2022. In addition to stabilizing the structure and improving its waterproofing, the project will modernize the building and bring it up to code. As of December 2021, funding for the project was waiting to be appropriated in the state's FY23 budget by the Missouri General Assembly.On November 9, 2022, Amtrak confirmed that it was still planning to work on improving the station.

Missouri State Museum
Missouri State Museum

The Missouri State Museum is Missouri's showpiece museum. It was founded in 1919 and is located in Jefferson City, Missouri, inside the state capitol on the ground floor of the building.The museum's mission is to explore Missouri's history and resources to discover connections that inspire the present and enrich the future. Visitors will find a variety of cultural and natural history exhibits including temporary exhibits, stationary exhibits, traveling exhibits, and hands-on and audio interactive. The museum offers a variety of free in-house public programming, outreach programming and traveling exhibits geared toward all ages and audiences. The museum has over 30,000 artifacts in its collection, including the largest collections of Missouri Civil War battle flags and World War I flags.The history wing of the museum was originally the only part of the museum and is now in the eastern wing of the capitol building. In 1921, the Missouri Resources Museum was founded and placed in the wing directly opposite the state museum in the west wing of the capitol. The two merged in 1923 to form the Missouri State Museum. The museum was controlled by a variety of state agencies until 1978. In that year the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (DNR) took control of the museum where it has remained ever since. It is now part of DNR's Division of State Parks. The museum staff also provides tours of the capitol building itself.