Places in Seneca, Kansas
Historic Fire Truck
6th and Main. Stop at the city hall, 531 Main, and ask to see the 1922 Stutz fire engine,...Lake Nemaha Dam Guardrails
From U.S. 36, 5 miles south on K-63. Lake Nemaha was built in the 1930s by the Civilian...Masonic Temple Museum
33 N. 6th. In addition to the County Museum, the Nemaha County Historical Society operates...Nemaha County Museum
113 N. 6th Built in 1879, this two-story brick structure was once the jail and residence of...Nemaha County Veterans Memorial Wall
U.S. 36 and K-63. One of the most moving veterans memorials in the state, this 340-foot-long...Seneca City Cemetery
From U.S. 36, ½ mile north on 11th. You’ll be drawn to the unusual red-brick arched...Seneca Free Library
606 Main. This 1867 Old Stone Universalist Church was the first of its denomination in the...Seneca Historic Theatre
301 Main. Around 1885 an opera house was built on this site. In 1927 the red-brick building,...Seneca Main Street Historic District
Forty-two buildings and the brick streets on Main between 3rd and 6th (laid in 1919) are part...Seneca Painted Ladies
A painted lady is a Victorian building painted with three or more colors to enhance the...Seneca Pony Express Monument
4th and Main. A red glacial stone holds a plaque that describes the Seneca connection to the...Seneca Pony Express Museum
327 Main. Seneca had the first Pony Express home station west of St. Joseph, Missouri....Seneca Post Office Mural
607 Main. "Men and Wheat" is the title of this 1940 Section artwork, an oil on canvas by Joe...Spring Creek Golf Course
1800 Spring Creek. Spring into action at this first-class, par 71, 18-hole public course. In...The Willows Restaurant & Bar
1921 North. With the golf course in sight, you’ll feel like you’ve hit a hole in one with...Lodging
Horse Watering Fountain
301 N. 11th (City Park). A gray granite 1910 fountain stands as a testament to an early Seneca mayor who persuaded Hermon Lee Ensign, founder of the National Humane Alliance, to donate one of his fountains to the town. Between 1906 and 1911 Ensign donated 125 fountains nationwide to provide drinking water for horses and other animals. One of the few remaining in the country, the Seneca fountain originally stood at 3rd and Main.
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