Boise Capitol Area District Boise, Idaho

National Register of Historic Places Data

The Boise Capitol Area District has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places with the following information, which has been imported from the National Register database and/or the Nomination Form. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

National Register ID
76000663
Date Listed
May 12, 1976
Name
Boise Capitol Area District
Address
Roughly bounded by 6th and Bannock, N. 8th, 8th, State, 5th Ana Jefferson Sts.
City/Town
Boise
County
Ada
State
Idaho
Category
district
Creators
Tourtellotte & Hummel
Level of Sig.
state
Years of Sig.
1905
Areas of Sig.
POLITICS/GOVERNMENT; ARCHITECTURE

Statement of Significance

Text courtesy of the National Register of Historic Places, a program of the National Parks Service. Minor transcription errors or changes in formatting may have occurred; please see the Nomination Form PDF for official text. Some information may have become outdated since the property was nominated for the Register.

Boise was designated permanent territorial capital of Idaho in December 1864, a year and a half after the community was founded. Capitol Square soon became an important feature of the townsite, although the territorial capital was not actually completed until 1886.
As the center of Idaho's governmental complex, the varied buildings represented in this district have an importance and character of great interest. They are pleasingly bound
together by some of the city's finest park areas, with large old trees in great variety.
Two of these, on the Capitol grounds, were planted by visiting Presidents of the United
States: Benjamin Harrison and Theodore Roosevelt.
The greatest value to Idaho of recognizing the Boise Capitol Area District as an architecturally significant complex lies in calling attention to the worth of Moderne structures as well as more traditional Classical revival ones. The district includes the State Capitol; the Federal Building; an important adjoining hotel which served as a major
political center during the depression and for many years after that; a park and monument
dedicated to Frank Steunenberg, a former governor whose assassination in 1905 led to the
internationally famous conspiracy trial of William D. Haywood in 1907; and the Ada County
Courthouse, located on the site of the trial. The Haywood Trial, along with some earlier
significant labor cases, took place in Ada County's previous courthouse—an earlier structure in which officials of the Coeur d'Alene miners unions decided to organize the Western
Federation of Miners (a minitant industrial union which provided the primary sponsorship
for the Industrial Workers of the World in 1905) in 1893. The present Ada County Courthouse houses a representative collection of Works Prefects Administration murals characteristic of the time it was constructed. While not a politically oriented structure,
Saint Michael's Cathedral, immediately adjacent to the capitol, forms an important
architectural component of this historic district.