Henry S. and Magdalena Schwedes House

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Location230 E. Main Street,
Wabasha, Minnesota
Coordinates44°22′56″N 92°1′47″W / 44.38222°N 92.02972°W / 44.38222; -92.02972
AreaLess than one acre
Built1882
Henry S. and Magdalena Schwedes House
The Henry S. and Magdalena Schwedes House from the northeast
Henry S. and Magdalena Schwedes House is located in Minnesota
Henry S. and Magdalena Schwedes House
Henry S. and Magdalena Schwedes House is located in the United States
Henry S. and Magdalena Schwedes House
Location230 E. Main Street,
Wabasha, Minnesota
Coordinates44°22′56″N 92°1′47″W / 44.38222°N 92.02972°W / 44.38222; -92.02972
AreaLess than one acre
Built1882
Architectural styleItalianate
MPSRed Brick Houses in Wabasha, Minnesota, Associated with Merchant-Tradesmen MPS
NRHP reference No.89000371[1]
Designated May 15, 1989

The Henry S. and Magdalena Schwedes House is a historic house in Wabasha, Minnesota, United States. It was built in 1882, part of a unique trend among the city's merchant class for brick houses.[2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989 for its local significance in the theme of architecture.[3] It was nominated for typifying Italianate architecture in its peak year of popularity in Wabasha, and for inaugurating a second generation of the town's merchants living in brick homes.[2]

The Schwedes House is a brick building originally consisting of a cubical two-story front section and a one-and-a-half-story section at the rear. A remodeling around 1910 added a one-story wing to the back of the house and a bay window to the southeast corner of the main section. The house exhibits classic elements of Italianate architecture in its cubic massing, the shallow hip roofs of each section, the widely overhanging eaves, and the tall windows with hood molds. The circa-1910 additions maintained the style of the original sections, even matching the distinctive window hoods.[2] The ornamental brackets that once decorated the eaves have been removed since the house's National Register nomination.

The front door is set into a projecting brick entry with a gable roof. The south corner of the house has a wraparound veranda off the kitchen. At the rear of the lot is a 20th-century detached garage, which is considered noncontributory to the historic listing.[2]

History

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References

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