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Show 103 5 Architect/Builder: not known Building Materials:brick & adobe w/ Stucc j3uilding Type/Style: vernacular. Description of physical appearance & significant architectural features: (Include additions, alterations, ancillary structures, and landscaping if applicable) H O tc g ... Hall and parlor house with a threes-opening symmetrical facade. Gable chimneys with elaborate corbelling (similar to # 65), West rooms are brick while rear "T" is adobi The adobe section was added in 1894. Aluminum porch and windows recently added . Statement of Historical Significance: D Aboriginal Americans O Communication D Military > D Agriculture D Conservation D Mining D Science O w X ^Architecture D The Arts D Commerce D Education D Exploration/Settlement D Industry D Minority Groups D Political O Recreation D Socio-Humanitarian D Transportation ' D Religion An unpretentious yet typical nineteenthsentury Spring City dwelling. Such a . house is historically significant because it helps give a complete picture of house types utilized by settlers. Joseph A. Justesen lived in this house through much of the late nineteenth-century and lived here until his death in the 1960*s. Justesen was a farmer and woolgrower and married Geneva Hyde, daughter of Orson and Ann E, Hyde, Deed in 1870 to Henning 0, Worgurmand, sells to Louis Olsen in 1883 for $150. Louis Olsen builds the house before selling to Joseph Justesen, |