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Show Architect/Builder: IU unknown, perhaps Albert E, Larsen Building Materials: brick, stuccoed Building Type/Style: vernacular Description of physical appearance & significant architectural features: ________ (Include additions, alterations, ancillary structures, and landscaping if applicable) The house was extensively remodeled in 1970, but basically the original design was a one-and-a-half story gable-facade house in a "T" shape. Statement of Historical Significance: ^ O <JJ I D Aboriginal Americans D Agriculture IT Architecture D The Arts D Commerce D D D D D Communication Conservation Education Exploration/Settlement Industry D D D D D Military Mining Minority Groups Political Recreation • D D D D Religion Science Socio-Humanitarian Transportation The house is important as an example of late nineteenth-century architecture and as a twentieth-century continuation of an older adding and. remodeling process on Spring City houses. The estate of Lauritz Larsen was settled in 1897 and lot 3 block 9 was divided n in three equal parts between his widow, Minnine M. Larsen, and the two sons, Lauritz 0. and Albert E. Larsen. Albert E. Olsen by 1900 had bought out the others and owned the entire lot. Albert sells the west part of the lot, including the old Larsen house, to a Janis Anderson in 1900, In 1901, Albert sells the east part to John Bunnel for $150. BunneL divides the lot in 1910 and sells to Fergus Johnsen for $900. John Bunnel built the house in the 1901-1910"period, probably about 1901., |