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- Marley Zielike
Myron & Sarah Shepard House
When Elizabeth Churchill and Socrates Nelson donated land to the county to build a new courthouse, they were not being altruistic. In the 1840s, 50s and 60s, access to the South Hill was difficult, requiring a journey up a rugged ravine (Nelsons Hollow) and surmounting a steep bluff. Churchill and Nelson knew that convenient access was crucial to selling their many lots on top of the hill, and they rightly surmised that if a new Courthouse (now the Historic Courthouse) crowned the hill, the city would have to provide a good road. And so began one of Stillwater largest public works projects, laboriously filling in the ravine and grading down the bluff to create what is today the South Third Street hill rising from downtown._x000D_ _x000D_ With the street completed, and a new courthouse and public school at the top of the hill, Churchill and Nelsons building lots sold quickly indeed. By 1874, the South Hill had become a "suburb."_x000D_ _x000D_ No one took a greater interest in this public works project than Myron Shepard who became the city engineer in 1870. And it makes perfect sense that when Shepard purchased his building site in August of 1874, the lot was on the South Hill. Within months, Myron and his wife, Sarah had completed the building of their house at 612 South Third Street. It appears from an historic map that this early $1,000 house sat back on the lot with its gable end to the street. In 1884, a $650 front addition completed the house we see there today. _x000D_ _x000D_ Myron Shepard was born in Livingston County, New York, in June, 1832. At the age of 19 he began working as a civil engineer for various railroad companies, moving west to Ohio in 1852. By 1856, he resided in Stillwater for awhile working as a surveyor. After fighting in the Civil War, he settled in Missouri working as a county surveyor, but returned to Stillwater for health reasons in 1870. He served as the city engineer and building inspector for Stillwater from 1870 to 1881, and then again in 1893. He also served as the Treasurer of Washington County from 1873-1879 and was a member of the school board for many years. The obituary in the newspaper at the time of his death in 1920 recalls him as "kindly, pleasant, courteous and obliging; loving and devoted to his family, living an exemplary life, one that could well be a model for the young."_x000D_ _x000D_ In 1908, Ludwig and Laura Simonet purchased the home; he was one of the owners of the Simonet Funeral Home and the Simonet Furniture Company, both old established Stillwater companies still in business today. In 1940, Laura Simonet sold the house to her daughter, Loretto OBrien, who lived there with her husband Joseph OBrien and their five children. After her husbands death, Mrs. OBrien continued to occupy the house until her death in 1980. The present owners, Dwight and Rebecca Cummins, purchased the house in 1997. In the last decade they have expended a good deal of thought, energy, and money preserving the original features of this historic house, including the addition of the attractive entry portico designed to match the details of the original residence._x000D_ _x000D_ The house is Italianate in style, with brackets and dentils under the eaves, paired rounded windows with hoods above them, a side window bay, and a peak in the center of the roof. _x000D_ _x000D_ The home also has a remarkable basement carved out of the limestone. It has an eight-foot ceiling under the whole house. (Most houses of this period in Stillwater have only a small six-by six-foot root cellar under the house.) And, as befitting a structure built by a building inspector, the house is notable for its structural soundness. ... Read More Read Less
Myron & Sarah Shepard House
When Elizabeth Churchill and Socrates Nelson donated land to the county to build a new courthouse, they were not being altruistic. In the 1840s, 50s and 60s, access to the South Hill was difficult, requiring a journey up a rugged ravine (Nelsons Hollow) and surmounting a steep bluff. Churchill and Nelson knew that convenient access was crucial to selling their many lots on top of the hill, and they rightly surmised that if a new Courthouse (now the Historic Courthouse) crowned the hill, the city would have to provide a good road. And so began one of Stillwater largest public works projects, laboriously filling in the ravine and grading down the bluff to create what is today the South Third Street hill rising from downtown._x000D_ _x000D_ With the street completed, and a new courthouse and public school at the top of the hill, Churchill and Nelsons building lots sold quickly indeed. By 1874, the South Hill had become a "suburb."_x000D_ _x000D_ No one took a greater interest in this public works project than Myron Shepard who became the city engineer in 1870. And it makes perfect sense that when Shepard purchased his building site in August of 1874, the lot was on the South Hill. Within months, Myron and his wife, Sarah had completed the building of their house at 612 South Third Street. It appears from an historic map that this early $1,000 house sat back on the lot with its gable end to the street. In 1884, a $650 front addition completed the house we see there today. _x000D_ _x000D_ Myron Shepard was born in Livingston County, New York, in June, 1832. At the age of 19 he began working as a civil engineer for various railroad companies, moving west to Ohio in 1852. By 1856, he resided in Stillwater for awhile working as a surveyor. After fighting in the Civil War, he settled in Missouri working as a county surveyor, but returned to Stillwater for health reasons in 1870. He served as the city engineer and building inspector for Stillwater from 1870 to 1881, and then again in 1893. He also served as the Treasurer of Washington County from 1873-1879 and was a member of the school board for many years. The obituary in the newspaper at the time of his death in 1920 recalls him as "kindly, pleasant, courteous and obliging; loving and devoted to his family, living an exemplary life, one that could well be a model for the young."_x000D_ _x000D_ In 1908, Ludwig and Laura Simonet purchased the home; he was one of the owners of the Simonet Funeral Home and the Simonet Furniture Company, both old established Stillwater companies still in business today. In 1940, Laura Simonet sold the house to her daughter, Loretto OBrien, who lived there with her husband Joseph OBrien and their five children. After her husbands death, Mrs. OBrien continued to occupy the house until her death in 1980. The present owners, Dwight and Rebecca Cummins, purchased the house in 1997. In the last decade they have expended a good deal of thought, energy, and money preserving the original features of this historic house, including the addition of the attractive entry portico designed to match the details of the original residence._x000D_ _x000D_ The house is Italianate in style, with brackets and dentils under the eaves, paired rounded windows with hoods above them, a side window bay, and a peak in the center of the roof. _x000D_ _x000D_ The home also has a remarkable basement carved out of the limestone. It has an eight-foot ceiling under the whole house. (Most houses of this period in Stillwater have only a small six-by six-foot root cellar under the house.) And, as befitting a structure built by a building inspector, the house is notable for its structural soundness. ... Read More Read Less


Myron & Sarah Shepard House
When Elizabeth Churchill and Socrates Nelson donated land to the county to build a new courthouse, they were not being altruistic. In the 1840s, 50s and 60s, access to the South Hill was difficult, requiring a journey up a rugged ravine (Nelsons Hollow) and surmounting a steep bluff. Churchill and Nelson knew that convenient access was crucial to selling their many lots on top of the hill, and they rightly surmised that if a new Courthouse (now the Historic Courthouse) crowned the hill, the city would have to provide a good road. And so began one of Stillwater largest public works projects, laboriously filling in the ravine and grading down the bluff to create what is today the South Third Street hill rising from downtown._x000D__x000D_
With the street completed, and a new courthouse and public school at the top of the hill, Churchill and Nelsons building lots sold quickly indeed. By 1874, the South Hill had become a "suburb."_x000D_
_x000D_
No one took a greater interest in this public works project than Myron Shepard who became the city engineer in 1870. And it makes perfect sense that when Shepard purchased his building site in August of 1874, the lot was on the South Hill. Within months, Myron and his wife, Sarah had completed the building of their house at 612 South Third Street. It appears from an historic map that this early $1,000 house sat back on the lot with its gable end to the street. In 1884, a $650 front addition completed the house we see there today. _x000D_
_x000D_
Myron Shepard was born in Livingston County, New York, in June, 1832. At the age of 19 he began working as a civil engineer for various railroad companies, moving west to Ohio in 1852. By 1856, he resided in Stillwater for awhile working as a surveyor. After fighting in the Civil War, he settled in Missouri working as a county surveyor, but returned to Stillwater for health reasons in 1870. He served as the city engineer and building inspector for Stillwater from 1870 to 1881, and then again in 1893. He also served as the Treasurer of Washington County from 1873-1879 and was a member of the school board for many years. The obituary in the newspaper at the time of his death in 1920 recalls him as "kindly, pleasant, courteous and obliging; loving and devoted to his family, living an exemplary life, one that could well be a model for the young."_x000D_
_x000D_
In 1908, Ludwig and Laura Simonet purchased the home; he was one of the owners of the Simonet Funeral Home and the Simonet Furniture Company, both old established Stillwater companies still in business today. In 1940, Laura Simonet sold the house to her daughter, Loretto OBrien, who lived there with her husband Joseph OBrien and their five children. After her husbands death, Mrs. OBrien continued to occupy the house until her death in 1980. The present owners, Dwight and Rebecca Cummins, purchased the house in 1997. In the last decade they have expended a good deal of thought, energy, and money preserving the original features of this historic house, including the addition of the attractive entry portico designed to match the details of the original residence._x000D_
_x000D_
The house is Italianate in style, with brackets and dentils under the eaves, paired rounded windows with hoods above them, a side window bay, and a peak in the center of the roof. _x000D_
_x000D_
The home also has a remarkable basement carved out of the limestone. It has an eight-foot ceiling under the whole house. (Most houses of this period in Stillwater have only a small six-by six-foot root cellar under the house.) And, as befitting a structure built by a building inspector, the house is notable for its structural soundness.
Posted Date
Sep 27, 2021
Source Name
Heirloom Homes and Landmark
Source Website
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