John T. Woodhouse House

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Location33 Old Brook Ln., Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan
Coordinates42°24′24″N 82°53′18″W / 42.40667°N 82.88833°W / 42.40667; -82.88833
ArchitecturalstyleTudor Revival
John Thompson Woodhouse House
Interactive map
Location33 Old Brook Ln., Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan
Coordinates42°24′24″N 82°53′18″W / 42.40667°N 82.88833°W / 42.40667; -82.88833
ArchitectGeorge D. Mason
Architectural styleTudor Revival
NRHP reference No.05000715[1]
Added to NRHPJuly 20, 2005

The John Thompson Woodhouse House is a private house located at 33 Old Brook Ln. in Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.[1]

John Thompson Woodhouse was born on September 3, 1861, in Waterford, Ontario to William Thomas Woodhouse and Elizabeth Thompson, and came with his family to Detroit in 1874.[2] In 1880 he became a clerk at the M.L. Wagner Company, a small tobacco products manufacturing company. By 1881 he was a partner in the firm, and from there on the company flourished. By 1892 the name had changed to the Wagner and Woodhouse Company, and in 1901 became John T. Woodhouse & Company. By 1911, Woodhouse was the company's president and sole owner.[3]

Woodhouse had married Alice Matilda Goodyear, daughter of Nicholas Goodyear and Jane Almond, on January 30, 1884, in Detroit, Michigan; together they had six children, one of whom died in infancy. However, Alice died on March 4, 1911, in Detroit, Michigan. Woodhouse remarried on April 26, 1913, in Detroit, Michigan to his second wife, Elizabeth E. Ewing, daughter of John Timothy Ewing and Elizabeth Johnson, but the couple divorced on December 17, 1926, in Detroit, Michigan. In the meantime, John T. Woodhouse & Company continued to grow, and moved into a new headquarters in downtown Detroit where Hart Plaza is now located. In 1917, Woodhouse hired George D. Mason to construct this house. It was built between 1918 and 1920. Woodhouse moved into this house once it was built, and in the late 1920s turned his business over to his son, John Thompson Woodhouse Jr. Woodhouse remarried to his third wife Clara S. Frederick, daughter of Charles N. Frederick and Selma Dreher, on August 19, 1929, in Niagara Falls, New York, but financial losses due to the Great Depression caused him despair, and he committed suicide in this house on January 25, 1930.[3]

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