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Gardnerville Elementary School

National Register of Historic Places in Douglas County, NevadaNeoclassical architecture in NevadaNevada Registered Historic Place stubsNevada building and structure stubsSchool buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Nevada
Schools in Douglas County, NevadaUse mdy dates from August 2023Western United States school stubs
Gardnerville Elementary School
Gardnerville Elementary School

The Gardnerville Elementary School, at 1290 Toler Ave. in Gardnerville, Nevada, is a historic Classical Revival-style school that is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.It was built in 1928, and, as of 2008, was still used as a school, though other buildings on the property besides the NRHP-listed one exist. It was listed on the National Register in 2008, along with Minden Elementary School.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gardnerville Elementary School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gardnerville Elementary School
Toler Avenue,

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Wikipedia: Gardnerville Elementary SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.9398 ° E -119.744 °
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Address

Toler Avenue 1250
89410
Nevada, United States
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Gardnerville Elementary School
Gardnerville Elementary School
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Nearby Places

Gardnerville Branch Jail
Gardnerville Branch Jail

The Gardnerville Branch Jail is a historic jail located at 1440 Courthouse St. in Gardnerville, Nevada. The jail was built in 1910 and served as Douglas County's only jail from 1910 to 1915. Prior to 1910, the only county jail was in Genoa, the county seat; however, since Gardnerville was several miles from Genoa, it resorted to housing prisoners in the local judge's granary. As the granary was considered unfit for holding prisoners, the community petitioned the county to construct a new jail. However, local leaders in Minden, who wanted to move the county seat to their town, protested the move, as they suspected that Gardnerville was attempting to claim the county seat itself. Nonetheless, the county approved the construction of the new jail. The jail housed its first prisoners before construction even finished, as the Genoa jail burned down; one prisoner was briefly chained to a post until the new jail could accommodate him. Once completed, the jail served the county until 1915, when Minden became the county seat and opened its own county jail.Once it no longer served as the county jail, the Gardnerville jail took on another, racist purpose. Gardnerville was a sundown town, and it rang a bell every night to order American Indians out of town. In addition, the unemployed were considered vagrants and were not allowed on the town's streets after dark. The jail housed violators of both of these policies until it closed in the 1950s.The jail was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 16, 2003.