HomeMy WebLinkAbout27 E Main 2014 M
MONTANA November 6, 2014
.'ATE UNIVERSITY
LIBRARIES
Ms. Courtney Kramer
Bozeman Historic Preservation Officer
City of Bozeman I
P.O. Box 1230 I
Bozeman, MT 59771
07 2014
Dear Courtney:
Thank you for speaking with me on the telephone this morning. Enclosed you will find the
photocopied research paper by Dick Storbo on the old Achilles Lamme property. As you can see,
it was a class paper fulfilling an assignment to prepare a nomination for the property with the
federal government. Since your office maintains the nomination forms for all such Bozeman
properties, we felt this material was better suited for your care.
Please contact me if you have any questions.
Very t y y rs,
im Allen cott
Professor/University Archivist
P Box 173320
nan, MT 59717-3320
www.lib.montana.edu
Tel (406)994-3119
Fax (406)994-2851
Mountains ra
THE A. LAlIE AND CO. BUILDING commonly known as the Gambles Building
prepared by Dick Storbo
for Kingston Heath arch. 480 spring 1982.
Description
Condition -- good Altered Original Site
The Lamme and Co. building is a two story brick commerial structure.
It measures 24 feet high, ( the 1891 Sanborn map shows the height
at 27 feet, this is due to the inclusion of an unornamented Gothic
centering device, reminiscence of the Castlated Gothic Style ) in
the measurments and is not the height of the facade today, and is
40 feet wide, and 146 feet deep. It is an attached structure located
at 27 east Main Street in the center of the block on the north side
of Main Street. Black Street is to the east and Tracy Street bounds
the building to the west. The structure is rectangular in form and
composed predominately of running bond brick. Concrete sills and
lintels are used by the second floor windows. The first floor is
.composed of a glass curtain wall with a central doorway. This wall
is supported by a steel I-beam spanning across the facade. A rec-
tangular skylight is the central focus of the second floor, 'and is
located at the approximate center of the roof.
The A. Lamme and Co. building was built in three phases:
Phase one -- In 1871, A. Lamme and Co. is a one story wood framed
structure with a front porch and false front. It has
clapboard siding and a shingled roof. The building
was completely detached ( as seen in the 1872 birds-
eye drawing of Bozeman and the photograph taker, from
the book Early History of Gallatin County, jAlontana
by Yrs. E. Lina Houston )
Phase two -- c. 1882, according to the book Bozeman a Guide to its
Places of Recreation by Matt Alderson in 18829 the
A. Lamme and Co, is a two story-,k_-,ick building with a
full basement for storage. A Northern Pacific Railroad
illustration, taken from the book Early History of
Gallatin County, Montana, shows that at this time the
A. Lamme and Co. building is an attached structure
located at the east end of what is called Lamme's Block.
The entire block has tin roofing, according to the 1884
Sanborn ?Jap. The front entrance is located in the center
of the facade under an unornamented centering device.
Atop this device is located an iron sign proclaiming,
" A. Lamme and Co. " , see early photo.4 The facade is
symmetrical and is marshalled vertically by rectangular.
window bays. There are three bays per floor with a cen-
tral doorway on the first floor. The second floor windows
are narrow in shape and doublehung. This is contrasted
by the first floor windows which are nearly square in
shape and contain fixed glass. The central doorway main-
tains the height of the concrete window lintels by using
a transom window as in-filling down to the doorway level.
The only interruption of the vertical window bays bet-
ween the first and second floor is an intermediate cor-
nice line appearing at the second floor level and made off
brick. The 1884 Sanborn Map shows the depth of the
building to be 110 feet. ( see the 1884 birdseye view
of Bozeman5 )
Phase three -- In 1895, according to Malcolm Story's Bozeman's
Early Buisness Men ( 1971 ), A. Lamme and Co. is
sold to H. B. McCay•Hardware. H.B. McCay Hardware adds
a two story brick addition to the rear of the building
which takes it to the full 146 foot depth. The struc-
tural system of the original building is maintained in
the addition. That system is two rows of wood posts
and beams, and based roughly on a 10 foot by 20 foot
bay, which both support the second floor and an
identical structural system supporting the roof.
This system runs the lenght of the building. At this
time the iron sign that rested atop the cornice line
of the building is changed from A. Lamme and Co. to
H.B. McCay and can be seen in the photograph taken
of the Round-Up parade dated 1918 and is on file at
the Museum of the Rockies.. The 1904 Sanborn Map
shows that the basement and access to the basement
disappear, which leads to the conclusion that for
some unknown reason the basement was sealed up. The
1891 Sanborn Map shows the function of the basement
to be storage. It is also during this period of
ownership that the first floor window bays are re-
placed by a glass curtain wall. The area directly
under the second floor structure is then opened up
with windows for backlighting. This action follows
the trend established by almost every store front on
Main Street. The central doorway is inset from the
curtain wall according to the 1918'- photograph of
Bozeman's Main Street.6
The ownership of the building, according to the 1900- 1954 Polk
Directory, was maintained by H.B. McCay until his death in 1944.
The name H.B. McCay is retained as the store name until its pur-
chase by the Gambles Co. in 1954. Gambles is a national furniture
and hardware store. In 1979 the Gambles Co. building was sold to
private investors, who are presently, invloved in renovation of the
structure. The Gambles Co. was responsible for alterations to the
facade, as seen in the photograph taken about 1960, which included:
The removal of the top portion of 'the unornamented
centering device, thus making the roof line uniform.
The removal of the H.B. McCay iron sign that was
attached to this centering device.
The addition of a steel panel over the first floor
( backlighting ) windows. The Gambles sign is located
here.
The use of a Roman facing brick, stack bond, on
either side of the glass curtain wall.
The curtain wall itself is altered to a more planar
surface that somewhat funnels you toward the central
doorway.?
The three windows on the second floor representing the
original window bays are infilled with glass block,
yet do represent the original size and shape of the
3
windows seen in 1882 in the PI.P.RR. illustration.
Significance
Historic: 1800 - 1899 Architecture
The A. Lamme and Co. building is eligible for listing on the
National Registor of Historic Places because it meets criteria
A and B of the National Registor.
Criterion B -- Significant personages of local significance:
Dr. Achilles Lamme
A. Lamme was born july 22 1822 in Warren County, Missouri.
He participated in the 1849 California gold rush, and came to the
Gallatin Valley in 1865, just one year after the town of Bozeman
was platted. Lamme is noted to be one of the early pioneer merchants
of Bozeman, and a leading citizen according to the Avant Courier
newspaper in 1888. He established himself early as a leader in
Bozeman by becoming County Treasurer of Gallatin County, in 1866.
This year is also the year Bozeman became County Seat. This action
establishes Lamme's role in the growth of the town. In 1867 Fort
Ellis is established at the Bozeman pass, which secures the Gallatin
Valley from Indian attack. In 1868 Lamme settles in Bozeman and
opens the A. Lamme and Co.. The A. Lamme and Co., as seen in the
photograph taken from the book Early History of Gallatin County,
Montana and dated 1872, is made up of Lamme, L. Harlowe ( Lamme's
stepson ) and John S. Mendenhall. In 1869 Lamme is elected to the
House of Representives, according to The History of Montana 1739-
1 85, where he established his role in the growth of the territory.
During the year of 1871 the Northern Pacific survey crew ran
lines across Bozeman Pass. It is also the year Lamme, seeing
prosperity around the corner, purchased the lot which A. Lamme and
Co. now occupies. The brick Lamme's Block is then built on the
same site as the previous wooden store, in. c. 1882 as seen in the
Northern Pacific Railroad illustration,3 just three years before
the first train passes through the Bozeman tunnel. Lamme is both
a member of the city government and a buisness man. His general
merchandise store, because it was one of the first in Bozeman,
helps establish Bozeman as a commerce center for both the agri-
culture of the county and the gold fields nearby. The 1892
]Directory states that the A. Lamme and Co. sold mining equipment,
agricultural supplies, and household items.
The parthership of the A. Lamme and Co. is shaken by the death
of L. Harlowe in 1882 and then six years later by Lamme ( as
confirmed by the Abstract of Title of the propert in 1889 ).
This leaves John Mendenhall to run the buisness until his own
death in 1896. The A. Lamme and Co. building and Lamme himself
can be seen to be tied closely to the growth and developement of
Bozeman and Southwest Montana.
John Samuel Mendenhall
J. Mendenhall was born Oct. 18, 1835 in Vevay, Indiana. Mendenhall
came overland from Salt Lake in 1862 and organized the first miningg
camp in Montana at Gold Creek. He then proceded to come over Bozeman
Pass via Emigrant Gulch with John Bozeman ( as stated in Progressive
Men of Montana ). This action establishes Mendenhall as one of the
earlest visitors of the Gallatin Valley. He travels for some years
before returning to the Gallatin Valley. In 1865,rdendenhall becomes
the first territorial sheriff of Gallatin County. This ties him to
the growth and stability of the area. Mendenhall meets Lamme in
1868 and together they form the A. Lamme and Co..
John Mendenhall remains a civic leader all his life as stated in
the book Streets and Names by Laura Coffman in 1950, and noted
to have been: • -
County Sheriff
County Commissioner
member of the Board of Directors of the Cemetery
Secretary of the Bozeman Fire Company
member of the Bozeman Board of Trade
Mendenhall takes over complete management of the A. Lamme and Co.
store after Lamme's death in 1888. Mendenhall dies in 1896.
John Mendenhall an A. Lamme and Co. can be seen as being a
vital part of the establishment, growth and stability of Bozeman
and the Gallatin Valley. Mendenhall's and Lamme's life spans the
critical developmental period when the Bozeman economy was in a
state of flux. Their death was the signal of the death of an era.
An era beginning with argiculture and mining trade, and evolving
into a commerical center, and county seat ( substantiated by the
County Courthouse built in 1882 by Vreeland and Kemma architects ) ,
the establishment of the railroad and then finally stabilizing in
1892 with the establishment of Montana State University within
the city limits. This stability has continued until today.
Criterion A -- Local Historical Significances
The local historical significance has bee established in the
previous criteria due to its close relationship to both A. Lamme
and John Mendenhall.
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