Burton-Rosenmeier House

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Location606 1st St. SE, Little Falls, Minnesota
Coordinates45°58′15″N 94°21′53″W / 45.970872°N 94.364747°W / 45.970872; -94.364747
Arealess than one acre
Built1903 (1903)
Burton-Rosenmeier House
Exterior of the house
Burton-Rosenmeier House is located in Minnesota
Burton-Rosenmeier House
Burton-Rosenmeier House is located in the United States
Burton-Rosenmeier House
Location606 1st St. SE, Little Falls, Minnesota
Coordinates45°58′15″N 94°21′53″W / 45.970872°N 94.364747°W / 45.970872; -94.364747
Arealess than one acre
Built1903 (1903)
Architectural styleNeoclassical
NRHP reference No.86000328[1]
Added to NRHPMarch 13, 1986

The Burton-Rosenmeier House is a historic house in Little Falls, Minnesota. Built in 1903 by businessman Barney Burton, the house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 13, 1986, for both its architectural and historical significance.[2][3]

The house is currently part of Maple Island Park.[4]

The house is located along Little Falls' First Street Southeast, south of the Little Falls Commercial Historic District and northeast of the Charles A. Weyerhaeuser and Musser Houses. The house faces east and features a ravine and an oxbow lake in the back, as well as a carriage house. It is of the Classical Revival style and contains two stories, an attic, and a basement. The frame of the house is constructed of wood with foundation walls of stone. The exterior is covered with clapboard siding. The house's rectangular main body is covered with a hipped roof, with sections of gable roof over a bay window at the front of the house and an extension in the back of the house. The windows' frames are corniced. Most of the windows are double-hung sash windows, though an oval window is on the south facade, near the front entryway. The front facade of the house is where the most dominant visual feature is. The front porch extends the whole length of the facade with circular pavilions at both ends. Tuscan columns on either way of the front stairs support a flat balcony protruding from the main body. The balcony has a balustraded rail and doubles as a roof, covering a screened porch on the second story of the house. Protruding from this porch are the roofs of the circular pavilion, which are connected by Ionic columns. Yet another porch can be found in the southwest corner of the house, by the kitchen. This porch is glass-enclosed.[5]

History

References

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