209 N Martha St
Stillwater, MN 55082, USA

Architectural Style:
N/A
Bedroom:
3
Bathroom:
1
Year Built:
1883
Square Feet:
1,700 sqft
County:
Washington County
Township:
City of stillwater
National Register of Historic Places Status:
N/A
Neighborhood:
Greeley Addition
Lot Size:
5,815 sqft
Parcel ID:
74304534
District:
N/A
Zoning:
N/A
Subdivision:
THOMPSON PARKER AND MOWERS 2ND ADD
Lot Description:
SUBDIVISIONNAME THOMPSON PARKER AND MOWERS 2ND ADD LOT 14 BLOCK 2 SUBDIVISIONCD 11221 EXC THAT PORTION LYING W OF E LINE OF THRONES ADD THOMPSON PARKER & MOWERS 2ND ADD
Coordinates:
45.0563633, -92.8152367
Some data provided by Zillow.
Neighborhood Resources:

Property Story Timeline

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  • Marley Zielike

Adam Johnson House

This modest, Queen Anne style house was constructed circa 1883. The one-and-a-half-story, frame building has a limestone foundation, clapboard siding, one-over-one double-hung windows, and a cross-gable roof with a brick chimney centered on the ridgeline. The prominent front facing gable, patterned shingles in the gable, and wraparound porch are characteristics of the Queen Anne style that was popular in the United States in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The hipped-roof porch, which is now enclosed, has square Tuscan columns, which indicates that this house is an example of the Free Classic subtype of Queen Anne architecture, which is more commonly associated with turned spindles. A one-story, front-gabled ell is located on the rear elevation. This house was built by carpenter Adam Johnson circa 1883, who resided in the house for a short period of time. According to the 1892 city directory, Johnson and Frank Anderson, a rafter, were the primary residents of the house. Jenney Linn, a clerk, was a boarder in the house in 1892. Adam Johnson lived in this house for over thirty years. ... Read More Read Less

Adam Johnson House

This modest, Queen Anne style house was constructed circa 1883. The one-and-a-half-story, frame building has a limestone foundation, clapboard siding, one-over-one double-hung windows, and a cross-gable roof with a brick chimney centered on the ridgeline. The prominent front facing gable, patterned shingles in the gable, and wraparound porch are characteristics of the Queen Anne style that was popular in the United States in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The hipped-roof porch, which is now enclosed, has square Tuscan columns, which indicates that this house is an example of the Free Classic subtype of Queen Anne architecture, which is more commonly associated with turned spindles. A one-story, front-gabled ell is located on the rear elevation. This house was built by carpenter Adam Johnson circa 1883, who resided in the house for a short period of time. According to the 1892 city directory, Johnson and Frank Anderson, a rafter, were the primary residents of the house. Jenney Linn, a clerk, was a boarder in the house in 1892. Adam Johnson lived in this house for over thirty years. ... Read More Read Less

1883

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