510 3rd St N
Stillwater, MN 55082, USA

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Property Story Timeline

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  • Marley Zielike

James & Elizabeth Roney House

James and Elizabeth Roney purchased the lot at 510 North Third Street in September of 1867. The lot size has remained the same over all these years: 100 feet facing Cherry Street, and 150 feet facing Third Street. _x000D_ _x000D_ Soon after their purchase, the Roneys built the smaller east-facing north part of the house. In the 1874 tax assessors records, the total value of the lot and structure soared from $800 to $2,880, indicating construction of the much grander south-facing part of the house. The Assessors records for 1877 indicate a value of $2,000 for the combined house and lot, and the 1879 Birds Eye View map represents the house that is there today. (These facts seem to contradict the information provided by James Roneys son, Edgar who wrote that the large south-facing front portion of the house was built in 1877.) The conclusion must be that the north end of the house was built sometime between 1867 and 1870, and the much grander southern addition to the house was built sometime between 1874 and 1877._x000D_ _x000D_ James Roney was born in New Richmond, New Brunswick, Canada on October 14, 1829. He left there at the age of 23, traveling to Bangor, Maine, which was then considered "the lumbering capital of the world." Two years later Roney--along with numerous other residents of Bangor--followed the lumber industry west to Stillwater, arriving here on November 7, 1854. He went to work in the northern lumber camps cutting the timber, and in the spring he helped float the logs down the river to the saw mills. After a couple of years in the camps, he returned to Stillwater to continue working in the thriving lumber business. In 1863, he married Elizabeth McGuire, and together they raised a family of seven children._x000D_ _x000D_ On October 15, 1881, the Stillwater newspaper, the Messenger, announced that James Roney was retiring at age 52: _x000D_ _x000D_ "James Roney is one of the few lumbermen who have been able to retire with a competence. After a season of almost unprecedented prosperity he has disposed of his entire logging interests, including pine lands, to Sauntry & Tozer, and will in future enjoy the fruit of his labors. He has an elegant home which commands a fine view of the lake, and a bank account which, though not sufficient to buy more than a dozen railroads, is large enough to afford himself and family every comfort during his life and a snug patrimony to his children when he shall have passed away." _x000D_ _x000D_ _x000D_ James Roney lived in his elegant residence another twenty-four years until his death November 25, 1905. The home passed to his son, Edgar Roney who lived in the house until his death in 1969. Edgars two daughters continued to reside in the house until 1983 when Randall and Ann Knudsen purchased the property from one of the daughters, Betty Roney. In the 1920s, the home had been duplexed, and one of the tenants in 1930, paying a rent of $30 month, was Dr. Henry Van Meier and his wife, Katherine who, a few years later, bought the landmark Mower house at Arcola built in 1846. _x000D_ _x000D_ Over the past 25 years, Randy has done a great deal of maintenance on his 130-year-old house, including a new basement under the older northern portion of the house. He has also made new woodwork to match the old. And Randy has demonstrated the greatest respect for the original features and the remarkable integrity of the house, which still has its original windows and storm windows, shutters, skillfully grained woodwork and doors, and the double front door with a dramatic transom, newel post and stairway. On the north end of the house he has preserved four six-pane-over-six-pane windows that date from the earliest days of the house._x000D_ _x000D_ Sitting high on a hill, this stately house has a commanding view of the city and river, both south and east. It is an excellent and well preserved example of an Italianate style house. The brackets and dentils under the eaves, the decorative hoods over the windows, the second-floor exterior door so common in the nineteenth century, the paired windows, and projecting window bay, are all characteristic of many of the larger Stillwater homes built in the 1870s and 80s. The property is bordered by a nineteenth century wrought iron fence. It is also said that the oldest gingko tree in the U.S. grows on this piece of property. This is an outstanding and well-preserved example of an Italianate style house and estate._x000D_ _x000D_ See also the John Roney house at 663 S. 2nd, and the Malinda Roney house at 231 N. Everett St. ... Read More Read Less

James & Elizabeth Roney House

James and Elizabeth Roney purchased the lot at 510 North Third Street in September of 1867. The lot size has remained the same over all these years: 100 feet facing Cherry Street, and 150 feet facing Third Street. _x000D_ _x000D_ Soon after their purchase, the Roneys built the smaller east-facing north part of the house. In the 1874 tax assessors records, the total value of the lot and structure soared from $800 to $2,880, indicating construction of the much grander south-facing part of the house. The Assessors records for 1877 indicate a value of $2,000 for the combined house and lot, and the 1879 Birds Eye View map represents the house that is there today. (These facts seem to contradict the information provided by James Roneys son, Edgar who wrote that the large south-facing front portion of the house was built in 1877.) The conclusion must be that the north end of the house was built sometime between 1867 and 1870, and the much grander southern addition to the house was built sometime between 1874 and 1877._x000D_ _x000D_ James Roney was born in New Richmond, New Brunswick, Canada on October 14, 1829. He left there at the age of 23, traveling to Bangor, Maine, which was then considered "the lumbering capital of the world." Two years later Roney--along with numerous other residents of Bangor--followed the lumber industry west to Stillwater, arriving here on November 7, 1854. He went to work in the northern lumber camps cutting the timber, and in the spring he helped float the logs down the river to the saw mills. After a couple of years in the camps, he returned to Stillwater to continue working in the thriving lumber business. In 1863, he married Elizabeth McGuire, and together they raised a family of seven children._x000D_ _x000D_ On October 15, 1881, the Stillwater newspaper, the Messenger, announced that James Roney was retiring at age 52: _x000D_ _x000D_ "James Roney is one of the few lumbermen who have been able to retire with a competence. After a season of almost unprecedented prosperity he has disposed of his entire logging interests, including pine lands, to Sauntry & Tozer, and will in future enjoy the fruit of his labors. He has an elegant home which commands a fine view of the lake, and a bank account which, though not sufficient to buy more than a dozen railroads, is large enough to afford himself and family every comfort during his life and a snug patrimony to his children when he shall have passed away." _x000D_ _x000D_ _x000D_ James Roney lived in his elegant residence another twenty-four years until his death November 25, 1905. The home passed to his son, Edgar Roney who lived in the house until his death in 1969. Edgars two daughters continued to reside in the house until 1983 when Randall and Ann Knudsen purchased the property from one of the daughters, Betty Roney. In the 1920s, the home had been duplexed, and one of the tenants in 1930, paying a rent of $30 month, was Dr. Henry Van Meier and his wife, Katherine who, a few years later, bought the landmark Mower house at Arcola built in 1846. _x000D_ _x000D_ Over the past 25 years, Randy has done a great deal of maintenance on his 130-year-old house, including a new basement under the older northern portion of the house. He has also made new woodwork to match the old. And Randy has demonstrated the greatest respect for the original features and the remarkable integrity of the house, which still has its original windows and storm windows, shutters, skillfully grained woodwork and doors, and the double front door with a dramatic transom, newel post and stairway. On the north end of the house he has preserved four six-pane-over-six-pane windows that date from the earliest days of the house._x000D_ _x000D_ Sitting high on a hill, this stately house has a commanding view of the city and river, both south and east. It is an excellent and well preserved example of an Italianate style house. The brackets and dentils under the eaves, the decorative hoods over the windows, the second-floor exterior door so common in the nineteenth century, the paired windows, and projecting window bay, are all characteristic of many of the larger Stillwater homes built in the 1870s and 80s. The property is bordered by a nineteenth century wrought iron fence. It is also said that the oldest gingko tree in the U.S. grows on this piece of property. This is an outstanding and well-preserved example of an Italianate style house and estate._x000D_ _x000D_ See also the John Roney house at 663 S. 2nd, and the Malinda Roney house at 231 N. Everett St. ... Read More Read Less

1874

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