Langdon Street Historic District

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LocationRoughly bounded by Lake Mendota, Wisconsin Ave., Langdon, and N. Lake Sts., Madison, Wisconsin
Area19 acres (7.7 ha)
NRHPreferenceNo.86001394[1]
Added to NRHPJune 26, 1986
Langdon Street Historic District
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority at 601 N. Henry
LocationRoughly bounded by Lake Mendota, Wisconsin Ave., Langdon, and N. Lake Sts., Madison, Wisconsin
Area19 acres (7.7 ha)
NRHP reference No.86001394[1]
Added to NRHPJune 26, 1986

The Langdon Street Historic District is a historic neighborhood east of the UW campus in Madison, Wisconsin - home to some of Madison's most prominent residents like John B. Winslow, Chief Justice of the state Supreme Court, and nationally recognized historian Frederick Jackson Turner. The district has a high concentration of period revival style buildings - many built from 1900 to 1930 to house Greek letter societies, and many designed by Madison's prominent architects.[2] In 1986 the district was added to the National Register of Historic Places.[3]

From Madison's founding in 1836 to the 1850s, what is now the Langdon Street district was a forested ridge west of the bustling little town around the capitol square. But in 1846 Julius T. Clark bought a block of that ridge and built the first house there. "At the time, other Madisonians felt he was foolish for living so far away from the center of the city. But Clark foresaw that this picturesque ridge of good, well-drained land would one day be in demand for house lots in a city beset by swamps and marshes on an already small isthmus between two large lakes."[3]

Proving Clark right, two of the wealthiest men in Madison built homes in what would become the district in 1851: banker, future mayor and legislator Levi Baker Vilas built an Italianate mansion at the southeast corner of Langdon and Henry Streets, and merchant J.T. Marston built a classical mansion on the southwest corner.[2] In 1853 Daniel Gorham started a steam sawmill at the end of Lake Street. By 1855 thirteen other lesser houses were added. UW faculty and their wives began to join the businessmen in the district. The neighborhood was then called "Big Bug Hill." The upper-class neighborhood continued to fill in with single-family homes until about 1890.[3]

1890 is when fraternities began to move in. Gorham's sawmill at the end of Lake Street had been replaced around 1860 by Mendota Agricultural Works, which became Madison Manufacturing Company, and did well until the Panic of 1873. Madison Manufacturing finally folded in 1890. With that, the land was subdivided into residential lots. Around the same time, the UW was growing, from 539 students in 1886 to 2,422 in 1899. Meanwhile, the UW had closed North Hall in 1885, forcing all male students to find lodging off campus. Homes near campus were converted into student housing, which made the area less appealing to the businessmen and professionals who had lived there earlier.[3]

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