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Jun 01, 1871
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- Charmaine Bantugan
200-236 6th St E, Saint Paul, MN, USA
Konantz Saddlery Company Building By City of Saint Paul and the Saint Paul Heritage Preservation Commission, 1988 (Railroader Printing House) - 227-31 East Sixth Street (between Sibley and Wacouta) - - 1893, J. Walter Stevens - The Konantz Saddlery Company started making harness and saddles in Quincy, Illinois, in 1871. They opened a Saint Paul branch in 1876. Later, from the early 1920s until the 1980s, this building was the home of the Railroader Printing House, producer of thousands of tickets, menus, and railroad promotional materials. - Profiles in Prosperity - Celestia Gilbert, Alice Jackson, and Carol Currie: Women as well as men recognized the profit potential of investing in construction in Lowertown. Celestia Gilbert, Alice Jackson, and Carol Currie owned adjacent buildings (Konantz Saddlery Company Building, and Koehler & Hinrichs Company Building), which they rented to wholesale firms. Cite this Page City of Saint Paul and the Saint Paul Heritage Preservation Commission, 1988, “Konantz Saddlery Company Building,” Saint Paul Historical, accessed June 29, 2022, https://saintpaulhistorical.com/items/show/207.
200-236 6th St E, Saint Paul, MN, USA
Konantz Saddlery Company Building By City of Saint Paul and the Saint Paul Heritage Preservation Commission, 1988 (Railroader Printing House) - 227-31 East Sixth Street (between Sibley and Wacouta) - - 1893, J. Walter Stevens - The Konantz Saddlery Company started making harness and saddles in Quincy, Illinois, in 1871. They opened a Saint Paul branch in 1876. Later, from the early 1920s until the 1980s, this building was the home of the Railroader Printing House, producer of thousands of tickets, menus, and railroad promotional materials. - Profiles in Prosperity - Celestia Gilbert, Alice Jackson, and Carol Currie: Women as well as men recognized the profit potential of investing in construction in Lowertown. Celestia Gilbert, Alice Jackson, and Carol Currie owned adjacent buildings (Konantz Saddlery Company Building, and Koehler & Hinrichs Company Building), which they rented to wholesale firms. Cite this Page City of Saint Paul and the Saint Paul Heritage Preservation Commission, 1988, “Konantz Saddlery Company Building,” Saint Paul Historical, accessed June 29, 2022, https://saintpaulhistorical.com/items/show/207.
Jun 01, 1871
200-236 6th St E, Saint Paul, MN, USA
Konantz Saddlery Company BuildingBy City of Saint Paul and the Saint Paul Heritage Preservation Commission, 1988
(Railroader Printing House)
- 227-31 East Sixth Street (between Sibley and Wacouta) -
- 1893, J. Walter Stevens -
The Konantz Saddlery Company started making harness and saddles in Quincy, Illinois, in 1871. They opened a Saint Paul branch in 1876. Later, from the early 1920s until the 1980s, this building was the home of the Railroader Printing House, producer of thousands of tickets, menus, and railroad promotional materials.
- Profiles in Prosperity -
Celestia Gilbert, Alice Jackson, and Carol Currie: Women as well as men recognized the profit potential of investing in construction in Lowertown. Celestia Gilbert, Alice Jackson, and Carol Currie owned adjacent buildings (Konantz Saddlery Company Building, and Koehler & Hinrichs Company Building), which they rented to wholesale firms.
Cite this Page
City of Saint Paul and the Saint Paul Heritage Preservation Commission, 1988, “Konantz Saddlery Company Building,” Saint Paul Historical, accessed June 29, 2022, https://saintpaulhistorical.com/items/show/207.
Posted Date
Jun 28, 2022
Historical Record Date
Jun 01, 1871
Source Name
Saint Paul Historical
Source Website
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