| OCR Text |
Show u, oc -5 [jj H I o 5 Architect/Builder: Building Materials: brick Building Type/Style: vernacular --------------------------------•-~-----------------•-----------"------- Description of physical appearance & significant architectural features: (Include additions, alterations, ancillary structures, and landscaping if applicable) - This hall and parlor, three-opening symmetrical facade house underneath the turquoise aluminum siding, is constructed of, fired brick lined with adobe. The walls are about one-foot thick. The house has a rear "T" kitchen area which was part of the original structure. Statement of Historical Significance: > O w I D D (jT D D Aboriginal Americans Agriculture Architecture The Arts Commerce D D S q D Communication Conservation Education Exploration/Settlement Industry Q D D a a Military Mining Minority Groups Political Recreation D D a q Religion Science Socio-Humanitarian Transportation Beneath the twentieth-century disguise, this house is a historically signifi cant example of nineteenth-century vernacular architecture in Spring City. 1870 patent deed to Issac N. Allred. 1876 to Jensens E. Petersen $80, 1891, Anders P.C. Thompson buys house in 1891 for $20; Charles W. Petersen buys lot in same year $150. Anders "Chris" Thompson builds the house after 1891. |