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The house itself had 40 rooms and sat on a lavishly landscape lot two square blocks in size. It was built for William D. Washburn, a lawyer who moved to Minneapolis in 1857 and amassed a fortune in the family milling business. Washburn lived in the house until his death in 1912, at which point he willed the mansion to the Minneapolis Park Board.
The H. Alden Smith House is a former mansion located within the Harmon Place Historic District near downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota. Designed in the Richardsonian Romanesque style by architect William Channing Whitney, it was completed in 1887 and listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. The house is the sole remnant of the ...
The George W. and Nancy B. Van Dusen House is a mansion in the Stevens Square neighborhood of Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. The owner, George Washington Van Dusen , was an entrepreneur who founded Minnesota's first and most prosperous grain processing and distribution firm in 1883.
Included on the National Register of Historic Places, Swan House was built in the 1920s for Atlanta businessman Edwin Inman and his family. Unfortunately, Inman only lived at the address for three ...
The John Harrington Stevens House is a historic structure in the U.S. state of Minnesota. Named for John H. Stevens, it was the first authorized house on the west bank of the Mississippi River in what would become Minneapolis. The house is the second oldest remaining wood-frame house in Minneapolis (the Ard Godfrey house is older).
The Gluek House is a historic Colonial Revival house in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. The house was built by John and Minnie Gluek. John was the son of the founder of the Gluek Brewing Company, a regional brewery in the Minneapolis area. [2] The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 9, 1990.
Tamara Day reimagined the first floor and filmed the process for her hit television show “Bargain Mansions,” airing in September. The home is currently for sale for $1.5 million.
Today, a historic house museum and arboretum [145] [68] more images. Poplar Hill (also known as the Dunnington Mansion) 1897: Victorian: Farmville: 8,500 sq. ft. Manor home of tobacco baron Walter Grey Dunnington that has fallen into disrepair [146] more images: Berryman Mansion: 1900: Colonial Revival: Smithfield