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Kirkwood Community College

Buildings and structures in Cedar Rapids, IowaCommunity colleges in IowaEducation in Benton County, IowaEducation in Cedar County, IowaEducation in Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Education in Iowa County, IowaEducation in Johnson County, IowaEducation in Linn County, IowaEducation in Washington County, IowaNJCAA athletics
Kirkwood Aerial
Kirkwood Aerial

Kirkwood Community College is a public community college in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Kirkwood has a secondary campus in Iowa City, and several additional regional and county centers located in Belle Plaine, Coralville, Hiawatha, Monticello, Tipton, Vinton, Washington and Williamsburg.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kirkwood Community College (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kirkwood Community College
C Street Trail, Cedar Rapids

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Wikipedia: Kirkwood Community CollegeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.911111111111 ° E -91.651666666667 °
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Kirkwood Community College

C Street Trail
Cedar Rapids
Iowa, United States
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Kirkwood Aerial
Kirkwood Aerial
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Jan F. and Antonie Janko Farmstead District
Jan F. and Antonie Janko Farmstead District

The Jan F. and Antonie Janko Farmstead District is an agricultural historic district located west of Ely, Iowa, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000. At the time of its nomination it consisted of seven resources, which included five contributing buildings, one contributing structure, and one non-contributing structure. The historic buildings include a two-story, wood frame, side gable house (1887); a gabled basement barn (c. 1887); a gabled barn (1893); chicken house (1880s, with additions from the 1940s or 1950s), and a single-stall garage (1910s-1930s). The corncrib (1910s or 1920s) is the historic structure. A three-stall garage (1972) is the non-contributing structure. The farmstead is located on a hilltop and sideslope. The house sits on the highest elevation, with the outbuildings located down the slope to the west and southwest. The first known owners of the farm were Isaac and Nancy Cox who farmed this property from at least 1859. Jan Janko settled here in 1864 and bought the property from the Cox's in 1875. From then until at least 2000 the farm has been owned by a Bohemian immigrant or a person of Bohemian descent. While the farm no longer reflects the initial settlement of Linn County, it does reflect the early settlement of Bohemian immigrants in the county. It is also significant that the original dwelling, probably a log cabin or log house, is no longer extant. Janko replaced the older house instead of adding onto it, which was more typical of the area's Bohemian immigrants.