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Casa Grande Woman's Club Building

Buildings and structures completed in 1924Cobblestone architectureHistory of women in ArizonaNational Register of Historic Places in Pinal County, ArizonaPueblo Revival architecture in Arizona
Women's club buildings in ArizonaWomen's clubs in the United StatesWomen's organizations based in the United States
Casa Grande Woman's Club 1
Casa Grande Woman's Club 1

The Casa Grande Woman's Club Building, at 407 N. Sacaton Street in Casa Grande, Arizona, USA, is an historic women's club building which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Casa Grande Woman's Club Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Casa Grande Woman's Club Building
West Florence Boulevard, Casa Grande

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Wikipedia: Casa Grande Woman's Club BuildingContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 32.87933 ° E -111.754888 °
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Address

West Florence Boulevard 201
85122 Casa Grande
Arizona, United States
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Casa Grande Woman's Club 1
Casa Grande Woman's Club 1
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Nearby Places

Cruz Trading Post
Cruz Trading Post

The Cruz Trading Post at 200 W. Main St. in Casa Grande, Arizona was built around 1888. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.It is a stuccoed adobe building, Pueblo Revival in style since it was modified into that style, around 1937: Built by Thomas Tomlinson around 1888, it was originally a one-story rectangular adobe building with double entries and functioned as a general store and post office until 1897. Between 1897 and 1898 the building was operated as Ben Bible's Saloon. It continued to be used for general stores, offices for doctors, the telephone office, a lodge meeting hall, and as the Casa Grande Valley Bank building until 1937, when Ramon Cruz purchased it for his trading post. The building was remodeled around that time into its current Pueblo Revival style, and served as an Indian trading post until 1955. In 1985, it was a tavern. Ramon Cruz, Sr., was a well-known Casa Grande businessman. After operating a trading post in Sacatan he moved to Casa Grande in 1905 and opened a trading post. After his death in 1924, his sons continued the family business for man years. Cruz was a respected Casa Grande citizen and a member of the first elementary school board. This building is one of Casa Grande's oldest commercial buildings, is in sound condition, and retains its stylistic vigas and pressed tin ceiling. It is the only example in Casa Grande of a commercial building executed in a Pueblo Revival Style. Both the age of the building and the building's unique style contribute to its significance. It was listed onto the National Register as part of a study of historic resources in Casa Grande.AZCentral identified it as one of "Historic Pinal County properties you need to see" in 2016.

Building at 400 East Third Street
Building at 400 East Third Street

The Building at 400 East Third Street, in Casa Grande, Arizona, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. It was built around 1950 in a simplified Romanesque Revival style.The building was commissioned by a local Church of Christ that had been meeting in a grammar school auditorium and was built with hired and volunteer labor; the first services were held on January 3, 1943, though the building was unfinished due to wartime restrictions on building materials. The Church of Christ moved to 805 E. Racine in 1985. After moving out, the building has been home to a succession of churches, with the building being owned by the Church of God of Prophecy (Spanish: Iglesia de Dios de la Profecia, also known as Templo Bethel and later Comunidad Cristiana Bethel). Other users have been Indian Trails Missions, which was authorized to use it as an office to assist immigrants applying for U.S. citizenship) and Living Waters Church, a Pentecostal church.Its 2001 National Register nomination states that it was created as a religious facility, but does not identify the name or the type of religious facility which built it. It further states that at the time of nomination it was in use as a church, again without identifying its name or denomination.It was deemed significant as an example of simplified Romanesque Revival style, and also for its use of brick as construction material. It was the only public building of brick construction in Casa Grande and one of only 13 brick buildings of any type; the others were residences or commercial buildings.