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- Marley Zielike
Alexander and Ida Johnson House
The present residence at 119 West Chestnut Street is not the first house on this splendid lot overlooking downtown Stillwater and Lake St. Croix. As pictured on the 1870 Birds Eye View Map, the first house, facing north, was a substantial two-story house with a one-story addition on the rear. In the 1870s, the owners were Edwin and Susie Root; he was a river pilot, born about 1840 in Canada. (No doubt Edwin was well acquainted with Augustus Young, his neighbor across the street at 208 South Fourth Street, who was also a river pilot.)_x000D_ _x000D_ Alexander and Ida Nelson (she was the daughter of Magnus Nelson of Marine on St. Croix) were married on October 15, 1875. In November of 1879, they purchased the house from the Roots for a price of $2,400, a substantial sum in those days. The Roots moved to New London, Henry County, Iowa._x000D_ _x000D_ The 1880 U.S. Census records the family living here: Alex, age 43, a lumberman; his wife, Ida, age 24; a son, George, age 3; and a son, Ernest, age 1; Tilly Nelson, a 20-year-old servant, is also part of the household._x000D_ _x000D_ The second owner, Alexander Johnson was born in Sweden in March, 1838. He arrived in Stillwater in 1858, a hard-working and frugal young man. By 1866, he had formed a partnership with fellow Swede, John G. Nelson. (See the house history at 604 North Fourth Street.) Three years later, in 1869, Johnson joined with Nelson, William McKusick, and James S. Anderson (See the house history at 220 West Chestnut) to establish the McKusick, Anderson, & Company, which built a sawmill on the St. Croix River across from Stillwater. Part of the appeal of Alexander Johnsons house was that he could watch the daily activity of his mill directly from his home._x000D_ _x000D_ From that beginning, Johnson continued to expand his business empire to include more logging companies, downtown commercial real estate, a clothing store, and other business interests. He did well and became a man of considerable wealth._x000D_ _x000D_ Soon after moving into his new home in 1879, he began to enlarge and change the old Root house. A two-story addition was added on the back, a bay window on the east side, and the porches were expanded. But in 1894-95, Alexander built a new house on the lot--a house of the latest Queen Anne style with all the eye-catching trimmings so popular in the 1890s. Two years later, a large barn was added to the property, a structure that remains as the garage today._x000D_ _x000D_ Writing in 1975, architectural historian Paul C. Larson claims the new house was designed by St. Paul architect, William Kingsley, but the source--and the truth--of this claim is unknown._x000D_ _x000D_ The 1900 Census lists the occupants of the house as Alexander, age 62; Ida, age 42; a son, George, age 23; a son, Ernest, age 21; a son, Alexander R. (Rueben), age 19; a son, Frank R. (Roscoe), age 16; a daughter, Lillian, age 13; a servant, Mary Johnson, age 20, and a cousin, Frank Swanson, age 24._x000D_ _x000D_ A little more than a decade after his new house was completed, Alexander Johnson died on March 20, 1905, from a heart attack. His obituary eulogized him as "a good citizen, a good friend, and a Christian gentleman." His personal property at the time of death was $104,000 plus a fair amount of real estate. Each of the five children got $14,000. Ida received $35,000 plus one-third of the real estate._x000D_ _x000D_ Ida remained in the house. The 1910 Census records her living there along with her son, Roscoe, her daughter, Lillian, and her 81-year-old mother, Marie Nelson. There were no servants._x000D_ _x000D_ By 1920, Ida Johnson was living on Hickory Street and the large family home on Chestnut was apparently rental property._x000D_ _x000D_ In the 1930 Census taken during the worst of the Great Depression, that house is a duplex. Alma Bronson was paying $40 a month to live in one unit with her daughter and son-in-law. In the other unit, Rueben Johnson is living with his wife, Clara, and her mother. The house is valued at $5,000. Ruebens occupation is listed as a salesman._x000D_ _x000D_ In the same Census taken on April 3, 1930, Ida is recorded as living with her daughter, Lillian, a public school teacher, in a rented unit at 921 South Fifth Street. Six months later, Ida Johnson died on October 18, 1930 at age 65._x000D_ _x000D_ The house remained in the ownership of the Johnson family until 1957 when it was purchased by the Peltier family. But the intervening years had not been kind to the old house. Little had been spent on maintenance, and the house was left to deteriorate. In the 1950s and 60s, old gingerbread houses like this were regarded as being in the worst of tasteuseless dinosaurs from a previous epoch. In the 1970s a disastrous fire gutted part of the house. _x000D_ _x000D_ However, in 1979, the house at 119 West Chestnut was purchased by Jeff Anderson, an attorney who had moved to Stillwater to work as a public defender. By the late 1970s, the preservation of these old Victorian houses had become popular and Jeff Anderson began the slow work of restoring the house to its former splendor. In 1987, Jeffs ongoing restoration of the house received an enormous impetus when he married Julie, a woman who shared his enthusiasm for the old house. Meanwhile, his work as a private attorney had earned him a national reputation, allowing him to devote more funds to the restoration._x000D_ _x000D_ For the next 15 years, the couple worked to furnish and restore the house to a condition that equaled or even excelled its original condition. Jeff and Julie have been remarkably generous in sharing the beauty of their home, which has been a favorite in many local history tours and featured in several national magazines._x000D_ _x000D_ This Queen Anne style house is striking both for its design and its location on the ridge of the hill. The tower, the spindle work porches, the lavish surface decoration embellished with 15 different colors, the extraordinary collection of stained glass and art glass, the woodwork and inlaid wooden floors all make this perhaps the most prominent and carefully restored of all the Stillwater homes. There are three original fireplaces, curved windows, quarter-sawn oak parquet floors, and molded plaster ceilings. So many and fine are the details of this home that the visitor might not notice the panoramic view of downtown and Lake St. Croix out the east windows._x000D_ _x000D_ Over the years, this hill above downtown has been known by several names. It was once Courthouse Hill in reference to the first courthouse on the northeast corner of Fourth and Chestnut Streets. For awhile it was known as the West Hill; today it is most commonly known as Chestnut Hill. But to the historian, it may well be known as Anderson Hill for the fact that the houses at 119 West Chestnut, 220 West Chestnut, 306 West Olive, and 206 South Fifth Street have all been owned by Andersons. ... Read More Read Less
Alexander and Ida Johnson House
The present residence at 119 West Chestnut Street is not the first house on this splendid lot overlooking downtown Stillwater and Lake St. Croix. As pictured on the 1870 Birds Eye View Map, the first house, facing north, was a substantial two-story house with a one-story addition on the rear. In the 1870s, the owners were Edwin and Susie Root; he was a river pilot, born about 1840 in Canada. (No doubt Edwin was well acquainted with Augustus Young, his neighbor across the street at 208 South Fourth Street, who was also a river pilot.)_x000D_ _x000D_ Alexander and Ida Nelson (she was the daughter of Magnus Nelson of Marine on St. Croix) were married on October 15, 1875. In November of 1879, they purchased the house from the Roots for a price of $2,400, a substantial sum in those days. The Roots moved to New London, Henry County, Iowa._x000D_ _x000D_ The 1880 U.S. Census records the family living here: Alex, age 43, a lumberman; his wife, Ida, age 24; a son, George, age 3; and a son, Ernest, age 1; Tilly Nelson, a 20-year-old servant, is also part of the household._x000D_ _x000D_ The second owner, Alexander Johnson was born in Sweden in March, 1838. He arrived in Stillwater in 1858, a hard-working and frugal young man. By 1866, he had formed a partnership with fellow Swede, John G. Nelson. (See the house history at 604 North Fourth Street.) Three years later, in 1869, Johnson joined with Nelson, William McKusick, and James S. Anderson (See the house history at 220 West Chestnut) to establish the McKusick, Anderson, & Company, which built a sawmill on the St. Croix River across from Stillwater. Part of the appeal of Alexander Johnsons house was that he could watch the daily activity of his mill directly from his home._x000D_ _x000D_ From that beginning, Johnson continued to expand his business empire to include more logging companies, downtown commercial real estate, a clothing store, and other business interests. He did well and became a man of considerable wealth._x000D_ _x000D_ Soon after moving into his new home in 1879, he began to enlarge and change the old Root house. A two-story addition was added on the back, a bay window on the east side, and the porches were expanded. But in 1894-95, Alexander built a new house on the lot--a house of the latest Queen Anne style with all the eye-catching trimmings so popular in the 1890s. Two years later, a large barn was added to the property, a structure that remains as the garage today._x000D_ _x000D_ Writing in 1975, architectural historian Paul C. Larson claims the new house was designed by St. Paul architect, William Kingsley, but the source--and the truth--of this claim is unknown._x000D_ _x000D_ The 1900 Census lists the occupants of the house as Alexander, age 62; Ida, age 42; a son, George, age 23; a son, Ernest, age 21; a son, Alexander R. (Rueben), age 19; a son, Frank R. (Roscoe), age 16; a daughter, Lillian, age 13; a servant, Mary Johnson, age 20, and a cousin, Frank Swanson, age 24._x000D_ _x000D_ A little more than a decade after his new house was completed, Alexander Johnson died on March 20, 1905, from a heart attack. His obituary eulogized him as "a good citizen, a good friend, and a Christian gentleman." His personal property at the time of death was $104,000 plus a fair amount of real estate. Each of the five children got $14,000. Ida received $35,000 plus one-third of the real estate._x000D_ _x000D_ Ida remained in the house. The 1910 Census records her living there along with her son, Roscoe, her daughter, Lillian, and her 81-year-old mother, Marie Nelson. There were no servants._x000D_ _x000D_ By 1920, Ida Johnson was living on Hickory Street and the large family home on Chestnut was apparently rental property._x000D_ _x000D_ In the 1930 Census taken during the worst of the Great Depression, that house is a duplex. Alma Bronson was paying $40 a month to live in one unit with her daughter and son-in-law. In the other unit, Rueben Johnson is living with his wife, Clara, and her mother. The house is valued at $5,000. Ruebens occupation is listed as a salesman._x000D_ _x000D_ In the same Census taken on April 3, 1930, Ida is recorded as living with her daughter, Lillian, a public school teacher, in a rented unit at 921 South Fifth Street. Six months later, Ida Johnson died on October 18, 1930 at age 65._x000D_ _x000D_ The house remained in the ownership of the Johnson family until 1957 when it was purchased by the Peltier family. But the intervening years had not been kind to the old house. Little had been spent on maintenance, and the house was left to deteriorate. In the 1950s and 60s, old gingerbread houses like this were regarded as being in the worst of tasteuseless dinosaurs from a previous epoch. In the 1970s a disastrous fire gutted part of the house. _x000D_ _x000D_ However, in 1979, the house at 119 West Chestnut was purchased by Jeff Anderson, an attorney who had moved to Stillwater to work as a public defender. By the late 1970s, the preservation of these old Victorian houses had become popular and Jeff Anderson began the slow work of restoring the house to its former splendor. In 1987, Jeffs ongoing restoration of the house received an enormous impetus when he married Julie, a woman who shared his enthusiasm for the old house. Meanwhile, his work as a private attorney had earned him a national reputation, allowing him to devote more funds to the restoration._x000D_ _x000D_ For the next 15 years, the couple worked to furnish and restore the house to a condition that equaled or even excelled its original condition. Jeff and Julie have been remarkably generous in sharing the beauty of their home, which has been a favorite in many local history tours and featured in several national magazines._x000D_ _x000D_ This Queen Anne style house is striking both for its design and its location on the ridge of the hill. The tower, the spindle work porches, the lavish surface decoration embellished with 15 different colors, the extraordinary collection of stained glass and art glass, the woodwork and inlaid wooden floors all make this perhaps the most prominent and carefully restored of all the Stillwater homes. There are three original fireplaces, curved windows, quarter-sawn oak parquet floors, and molded plaster ceilings. So many and fine are the details of this home that the visitor might not notice the panoramic view of downtown and Lake St. Croix out the east windows._x000D_ _x000D_ Over the years, this hill above downtown has been known by several names. It was once Courthouse Hill in reference to the first courthouse on the northeast corner of Fourth and Chestnut Streets. For awhile it was known as the West Hill; today it is most commonly known as Chestnut Hill. But to the historian, it may well be known as Anderson Hill for the fact that the houses at 119 West Chestnut, 220 West Chestnut, 306 West Olive, and 206 South Fifth Street have all been owned by Andersons. ... Read More Read Less


Alexander and Ida Johnson House
The present residence at 119 West Chestnut Street is not the first house on this splendid lot overlooking downtown Stillwater and Lake St. Croix. As pictured on the 1870 Birds Eye View Map, the first house, facing north, was a substantial two-story house with a one-story addition on the rear. In the 1870s, the owners were Edwin and Susie Root; he was a river pilot, born about 1840 in Canada. (No doubt Edwin was well acquainted with Augustus Young, his neighbor across the street at 208 South Fourth Street, who was also a river pilot.)_x000D__x000D_
Alexander and Ida Nelson (she was the daughter of Magnus Nelson of Marine on St. Croix) were married on October 15, 1875. In November of 1879, they purchased the house from the Roots for a price of $2,400, a substantial sum in those days. The Roots moved to New London, Henry County, Iowa._x000D_
_x000D_
The 1880 U.S. Census records the family living here: Alex, age 43, a lumberman; his wife, Ida, age 24; a son, George, age 3; and a son, Ernest, age 1; Tilly Nelson, a 20-year-old servant, is also part of the household._x000D_
_x000D_
The second owner, Alexander Johnson was born in Sweden in March, 1838. He arrived in Stillwater in 1858, a hard-working and frugal young man. By 1866, he had formed a partnership with fellow Swede, John G. Nelson. (See the house history at 604 North Fourth Street.) Three years later, in 1869, Johnson joined with Nelson, William McKusick, and James S. Anderson (See the house history at 220 West Chestnut) to establish the McKusick, Anderson, & Company, which built a sawmill on the St. Croix River across from Stillwater. Part of the appeal of Alexander Johnsons house was that he could watch the daily activity of his mill directly from his home._x000D_
_x000D_
From that beginning, Johnson continued to expand his business empire to include more logging companies, downtown commercial real estate, a clothing store, and other business interests. He did well and became a man of considerable wealth._x000D_
_x000D_
Soon after moving into his new home in 1879, he began to enlarge and change the old Root house. A two-story addition was added on the back, a bay window on the east side, and the porches were expanded. But in 1894-95, Alexander built a new house on the lot--a house of the latest Queen Anne style with all the eye-catching trimmings so popular in the 1890s. Two years later, a large barn was added to the property, a structure that remains as the garage today._x000D_
_x000D_
Writing in 1975, architectural historian Paul C. Larson claims the new house was designed by St. Paul architect, William Kingsley, but the source--and the truth--of this claim is unknown._x000D_
_x000D_
The 1900 Census lists the occupants of the house as Alexander, age 62; Ida, age 42; a son, George, age 23; a son, Ernest, age 21; a son, Alexander R. (Rueben), age 19; a son, Frank R. (Roscoe), age 16; a daughter, Lillian, age 13; a servant, Mary Johnson, age 20, and a cousin, Frank Swanson, age 24._x000D_
_x000D_
A little more than a decade after his new house was completed, Alexander Johnson died on March 20, 1905, from a heart attack. His obituary eulogized him as "a good citizen, a good friend, and a Christian gentleman." His personal property at the time of death was $104,000 plus a fair amount of real estate. Each of the five children got $14,000. Ida received $35,000 plus one-third of the real estate._x000D_
_x000D_
Ida remained in the house. The 1910 Census records her living there along with her son, Roscoe, her daughter, Lillian, and her 81-year-old mother, Marie Nelson. There were no servants._x000D_
_x000D_
By 1920, Ida Johnson was living on Hickory Street and the large family home on Chestnut was apparently rental property._x000D_
_x000D_
In the 1930 Census taken during the worst of the Great Depression, that house is a duplex. Alma Bronson was paying $40 a month to live in one unit with her daughter and son-in-law. In the other unit, Rueben Johnson is living with his wife, Clara, and her mother. The house is valued at $5,000. Ruebens occupation is listed as a salesman._x000D_
_x000D_
In the same Census taken on April 3, 1930, Ida is recorded as living with her daughter, Lillian, a public school teacher, in a rented unit at 921 South Fifth Street. Six months later, Ida Johnson died on October 18, 1930 at age 65._x000D_
_x000D_
The house remained in the ownership of the Johnson family until 1957 when it was purchased by the Peltier family. But the intervening years had not been kind to the old house. Little had been spent on maintenance, and the house was left to deteriorate. In the 1950s and 60s, old gingerbread houses like this were regarded as being in the worst of tasteuseless dinosaurs from a previous epoch. In the 1970s a disastrous fire gutted part of the house. _x000D_
_x000D_
However, in 1979, the house at 119 West Chestnut was purchased by Jeff Anderson, an attorney who had moved to Stillwater to work as a public defender. By the late 1970s, the preservation of these old Victorian houses had become popular and Jeff Anderson began the slow work of restoring the house to its former splendor. In 1987, Jeffs ongoing restoration of the house received an enormous impetus when he married Julie, a woman who shared his enthusiasm for the old house. Meanwhile, his work as a private attorney had earned him a national reputation, allowing him to devote more funds to the restoration._x000D_
_x000D_
For the next 15 years, the couple worked to furnish and restore the house to a condition that equaled or even excelled its original condition. Jeff and Julie have been remarkably generous in sharing the beauty of their home, which has been a favorite in many local history tours and featured in several national magazines._x000D_
_x000D_
This Queen Anne style house is striking both for its design and its location on the ridge of the hill. The tower, the spindle work porches, the lavish surface decoration embellished with 15 different colors, the extraordinary collection of stained glass and art glass, the woodwork and inlaid wooden floors all make this perhaps the most prominent and carefully restored of all the Stillwater homes. There are three original fireplaces, curved windows, quarter-sawn oak parquet floors, and molded plaster ceilings. So many and fine are the details of this home that the visitor might not notice the panoramic view of downtown and Lake St. Croix out the east windows._x000D_
_x000D_
Over the years, this hill above downtown has been known by several names. It was once Courthouse Hill in reference to the first courthouse on the northeast corner of Fourth and Chestnut Streets. For awhile it was known as the West Hill; today it is most commonly known as Chestnut Hill. But to the historian, it may well be known as Anderson Hill for the fact that the houses at 119 West Chestnut, 220 West Chestnut, 306 West Olive, and 206 South Fifth Street have all been owned by Andersons.
Posted Date
Sep 27, 2021
Source Name
Heirloom Homes and Landmark
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