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Show 197 5 Architect/Builder: Henming Edward Hansen Building Materialsframe________Building Type/Style: pattern book tr 3 Description of physical appearance & significant architectural features: (jj o < (Include additions, alterations, ancillary structures, and landscaping if applicable) This house is a gable facade frome "T" plan house. Frame siding was locally planked at Ole Peterson's Mill. Statement of Historical Significance: > O In I D Aboriginal Americans D Agriculture ^Architecture D The Arts D Commerce a D D d a Communication Conservation Education Exploration/Settlement Industry n D D a a Military Mining Minority Groups Political Recreation D D a a Religion Science Socio-Humanitarian Transportation Excellently maintained home from the later nineteenth-century. Such a home repre sents transition periods between older folk housing style and modern pattern book design. The "T" gable facade house can be traced back to Greek Revival influence in New England folk tradition in the early nineteenth-century. The house plan was also widely disseminated in mid-century patter book house plan manuals. The gable facade "T" was both an old and new form. Henming E. Hansen was one of the sons of Henming and Annie Hansen who also lived on this block. 1870 patent deed to Samuel E. King. 1877 Hansen buys for $70. |