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HomeMy WebLinkAboutBozemanSouthTracy-SouthBlackHD UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR WASO Form•177 {"R"June 19841 - _ _ - - � — NATIONAL PARK SERVICE /- _ 695 tSL� Ste. r7 NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES EVALUATION/RETURN SHEET O A t 5 South Tracy—South Black Historic District Bozeman MRA - - - - - S E P "8 1987 Gallatin Count �" �.. Working No. MONTANA - 'e ', Fed. Reg.Date: Q(;J zf �8T Date Due J Action: __ACCENT ❑ resubmission TURN o - ❑ nomination by person or local government REJECT ❑ owner objection Federal Agency: ❑ appeal Substantive Review: ❑sample ❑request ❑appeal NR decision Reviewer's comments: /'1�:e �ev�dc '- Jam, d �"C' S,3ri•{,c.•r�. r rti P/.mot JJ `a• Ax7 c.�k;,A c{,I�e.,Pe..c�1 T' 1f�+ c6+.�57�vC.Y4»n :.� Recom./Ciriteria /YET�rr1 t'1,aF. (IJ ax�w/ d t:kl cl Jr�)- Reviewer O/V.)6IF_- el rtu J !43 r ... .ld haw .: .�ie� �kC4 a.�es .. 6yiP S rra.1 >� fv 9 u. /wr . Discipline 6i 1, ` ~� fi_., 5 0 �,er)fc -Abs , ;atr fr C Date �z `o, w^h:J .i•Jx. ,_ h.r. .ram �b. rds+.+�L 4x..A_.%s Hw-/�- n�� ��I<.� �•. /� ,/ I" f` see continuation sheet •...� Tc y�! 'u v'17 rti� r,'•�1t• r 4:ncQ. of zC•.� �cr, Nomination returned for: technical corrections cited below Q"-> {tirt '""�"""'!'o '" .r�'J �t•_..,� substantive reasons discussed below - nJT a A .r C I L_G r 1. Name Z Location 3. Classification - Category Ownership Status Present Use Public Acquisition Accessible 4. Owner of Property 5. Location of Legal Description S. Representation in Existing Surveys Has this property been determined eligible? ❑ yes ❑ no 7. Description Condition Check one Check one ❑excellent ❑deteriorated ❑unaltered ❑original site ❑good ❑ruins -- ❑altered - ❑moved date 0 fair ❑unexposed Describe the present and original (if known)physical appearance ❑summary paragraph completeness clarity - ❑alterationsi"integrity - ❑dates 0 boundary selection aW-7A175.5 _-W-S Form 10406+ _ -- - 048 Agpvrl rva 1Jisonil United States Department of the Interior _ National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District Section number 8 Page 45 --- Historic Name:South Tracy - South Black Historic District Location: 200-600 blocks of S. Tracy and S. Black Avenues, Bozeman, Montana (030) Gallatin County (031) Classification: Historic District - public ownership public acquisition: n/a occupied restricted access private residence Ownership: - multiple Location of Legal Description: Gallatin County Courthouse, Main Street Bozeman, Montana .. y Representation in Existing Surveys: Historic Resource Survey of Bozeman, Montana 1982 - 1986, sponsored by the .Bozeman City-County Planning Office. Depository of Survey Records: Montana State Historic Preservation Office 102 S. Broadway, Helena, MT PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION: South Tracy - South Black Historic District - Contributing buildings: 78 -- - - Non-contributing buildings: 15 The South Tracy - South Black Avenue Historic District consists of 93 diverse, vernacular houses lining S. Tracy and S. Black Avenues between Olive and Alderson Streets, as well as a large school building, and a neighborhood grocery store. It is distinct from the two large, adjacent residential historic districts in --Bozeman due to its greater building density and its high concentration of - - significant architecture of generally more modest scale and ornamentation. Many of the most significant buildings occur in pairs or groups of three, which heightens the overall visual impact of the district. Although many 19th century houses are found here, the numerous excellent examples of the Bungalow style are visually predominant. Overall, a continuous rhythm of regularly spaced houses along tree-lined streets acts as a strong unifying element in the district. As one of the first residential areas in the city to develop south of Main Street, the northern part of the South Tracy - South Black Historic District contains several, fine examples of the earliest residential architecture in Bozeman. Most unusual are the Lewis Houses (209 and 211 S. Tracy) - a pair of small, originally identical, 3xl bay, jerkin head-roofed I-houses built in 1879, - United States Department of the Interior National Park Service -National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District Section number $ Page 46 one of which retains its original Victorian period detailing. Two years later, two business partners built a pair of simpler, virtually identical I-houses for themselves nearby, the Perkins House (320 S. Black) and the Stone House (408 S. Black) . One of these has a pair of gable dormers, while the other has a pair of shed dormers. The Nichols House (301 S. Black) , built around 1880, represents a typical, more refined configuration of this house type in Bozeman. It is - punctuated by a broad, central cross gable above a one-bay entry porch, and a bay window in one of the narrow gable ends. Two examples of another house type typical of Bozeman's earliest permanent residences are the Morrill House (401 S. Black) , built in 1879, and the Catlin House (217 S. Tracy) , in 1881. Both are one--and-one-half story, gable front houses with polygonal baytwindows toward the - street. Anticipating the more diverse architecture that would follow these relatively simple gable front and eaves front houses was the large, brick Vivion House (304 S. Tracy) , which was built in 1884 in a "T" configuration. The most ornate 19th century house in the district, it displays intricate brickwork, shingle work, and stained glass. Two fine examples of the vernacular Queen Anne style, which were built curing a period of very little construction in Bozeman, are the frame Niles/Langohr House . (315 S. Tracy) and the brick Hanly/Rose Story House (318 S. Tracy) . These houses face each other across the street, and were built in 1890 and 1892, respectively. Unlike the late 19th century, the first decade of this century saw the construction of several Queen Anne-influenced houses in the district, such as 326 and 402 S. Black -- a pair of aesthetically similar houses which originally stood adjacent to one anothor on large lots before being separated by later infill. These two houses, which were built by the Gary brothers, are marked by towers and bay windows, and are two of the most prominent houses in the district. Less pretentious but of equal visual impact is a group of three virtually identical pattern book Queen Anne style houses built by J.A. Bartholomew, 412, 416 and 420 S. Tracy.By the second decade of the 20th century, the Queen Anne style had given way to the Colonial Revival and Bungalow styles. The district contains an especially rich array of the latter. Two virtually identical Bungalows, 429 and 430 S. Black, which convey J.A. Bartholomew's unique personal style, face each other with reverse plans. Bartholomew's own house, 433 S. Black, is particularly striking, and represents one of the highest developments of the Bungalow/Craftsman style in the city. Other outstanding examples of the Bungalow style in the district include the Flint House (519 S. Tracy) , which displays an intricate porch, the stuccoed Clark House (218 S. Black) , which is fronted by large battered porch piers and has staggered brick trimming all windows, doors r and corners, and a group of three very similar, boldly executed houses, 401, 405, and 407 S. Tracy, probably all built by Guy Ensinger. - - dycaA7:a7 UPSF«mSacoa. owe�w.rna. f024-Wu lssa} - United States Department of the interior National Park Service I National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District Section number 8 .Page 47 Local architect Fred F. Willson designed three houses in the district, 501, 505, and 509 S. Tracy, which form another distinct architectural group. All are vernacular examples of the Colonial Revival style, and are prominently located on a slight hill, at the head of E. Story Street. The Longfellow School, a large Art Deco style building opposite these houses, which was also designed by Willson, forms a strong termination for the south end of S. Tracy Avenue. Although constructed after the historic period, the Longfellow School is an integral and important architectural component of the neighborhood and a building that makes a positive contribution to the historic character of the district. Due to the scale, rhythm, and high concentration of significant historic architecture found along S. Tracy and S. Black Avenues, this district is visually distinct from all other residential areas in Bozeman. Only 15 buildings are listed as non-contributing due either to age or alteration, although most of them nevertheless make some contribution to the architectural and historical cohesiveness of the district. Only two of those fifteen are buildings that once made substantial contributions to the district. One is the Luce House (307 S. Black) , a high style example of the Shingle style in Bozeman which as been severely compromised by the irreversible enclosure of the porch. And the other at 434 S. Black was once a fine tri-gabled vernacular Queen Anne which has been completely altered, except for an original gable screen. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: South Tracy - South Black Historic District - - Period of significance: 1872 — 1939 Areas of significance: settlement, architecture The South Tracy - South Black Historic District, one of the first contiguous residential areas in Bozeman to develop off of Main Street, contains most of the oldest remaining historic houses in the city. The district is equally notable however, for its particularly fine collection of early 20th century residential architecture, and its high overall cohesiveness and integrity. Several houses in this district, dating from both the late 19th and early 20th centuries, rank among the most individually significant buildings in the city. The Lewis House - (209 S. Tracy) , the Vivion House (304 S. Tracy) , the Kopp House (401 S. Tracy) and the Bartholomew House (433 S. Black) are just four examples. Augmenting the considerable architectural significance of the district is its unique pattern of development which is distinguished by several houses that occur in pairs or groups of three, and that are either very similar or identical to one another. Two particularly notable such groupings are three striking Bungalows, 401, 405, and 407 S. Tracy, and three pattern book Queen Anne houses, 412, 416 and 420 S. Tracy. t' . Just prior to 1872, Col. L.M. Black platted Black's Addition, as a southern extension of the "Original Townsite", in which most of the district is located. -=- _ a4�A955 Hn FWM 104%4 OWS Axvmr„e rossmre United States Department of the interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District Section number 8 Page 48 At about the same time, W.W. Alderson platted A lderson's Addition next to it, which contains, of this district, the west side of S. Tracy Avenue. These plats were made during a brief period of active commercial growth in Bozeman, relative to the town's sluggish pre-railroad economy. In 1872, Black collaborated with Walter Cooper and several other Bozeman entrepreneurs to build what was by far the most impressive building to be erected in the city until the arrival of the railroad in 1883 - a large brick commercial block, most of which is still standing at 118 E. Main Street. Construction of that block coincided with the construction of several houses in Black and Alderson's new additions. The very first issue of the Avant C91 r; gr newspaper conveyed the optimism associated with this growth in 1871 with the report: "From early dawn till the setting of the sun, the hammer of the builder makes the welcome ring [of] cheerful notes of industry and progress. Several handsome new buildings are being erected on Black Street, . . .and others will be commenced as soon as lumber can be procured. Black's Addition is becoming the most attractive part of our beautiful city and is rapid improvement is due to the enterprise of Col. L.M. Black. . . " Thus, development of this district began at a very early period in Bozeman history. In 1872, the newspaper published a bird's eye view of the town, which shows that S. Tracy Avenue, which was lined by regularly spaced houses and was the only break from the east-west oriented commercial area of Main Street. Although none of the houses in the drawing within the South Tracy - South Black Historic District remain today, the McDonald House, 308 S. Tracy, a .very simple I-house which was built by a freed slave shortly after the drawing was done, is probably typical of those earliest S. Tracy Avenue houses. The drawing also shows two pair of small, identical houses lining the west side of S. Tracy. _ These houses may have inspired Samuel W. Lewis, a black barber, to add another similar pair to that side of the street in 1979: 209 and 211 S. Tracy. These Lewis Houses were originally small, identical, jerkin head-roofed I-houses, of which 209 S. Tracy retains its extensive High Victorian Gothic style ornament. - Both were apparently of special note from the time they were built, for Leeson's 1885 HiatorX 4f M ta= contains an etching of the pair. While Lewis was constructing this fine pair of houses on S. Tracy for rental, Lewis J.P. Morrilll was erecting his own house, 401 S. Black, on the other street in Black's Addition. The Avant =Li= noted that the simple, well preserved gable front house, which displays slight Italianate style detailing, was the . . .largest and most imposing structure on Black,Street. n2 It was probably also 1 $Yant C.QSlI<.i€t•:, Sept. 13, 1871, p. 3 i 2 C%l i=, Oct. 13, 1879, p. 3 WS Poem 14004A - - �Appmal va rou-M14 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service -) National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District Section number 8 Page 49 - - one of the first, as this residential area began its expansion west of S. Tracy. The newspaper noted that Morrill paid $600 for his one acre lot ". ..which is considered very cheap, as the ground is excellently situated, and one of the most desirable sites for a residence in the town. " In the following year, George Nichols, an insurance and real estate salesman, built another, more formal house nearby in this choice section of the town at 301 S. Black - a 3x1 bay 1-house with a central cross gable and gable end bay window. Nichol s financial success by 1880 is evidenced by this fine house which cost $3000 when built - a large sum at the time. He may have chosen to built in anticipation of the brisk real estate sales to be triggered by the impending arrival of the railroad. -Indeed, the next bird's eye view of the city, published in 1884, the year following the completion of the railroad, shows a town several times larger than that in the 1872 view, with the bulk of the residential development centered upon S. Tracy, S. Black, and S. Willson Avenues. The latter, included in the Bon Ton Historic District, apparently began to develop during the early 1880 's after the two streets in this district were well established. Development throughout the city, especially on Main street, had taken on a new sense of permanence by 1883, with the construction of a large number of brick buildings, reflecting the renewed confidence in Bozeman's economic future. Indeed, Bozeman became an incorporated city in 1883 - the same year that the railroad established a permanently forged link with the rest of the world. Representing this period in the district is 308 S. Black, a vernacular, one-story, T-plan brick house. Of special note is the more urban, two-story brick house built in 1884 by R.P. Vivion, a lawyer and county judge, at 304 S. Tracy. Although Bozeman's "building boom", as often described in the Avant CQULi= in the early 18801s, was indeed substantial, it subsided by the end of the decade, as the city approached the economically depressed period of the 1890's. Vast areas of streets, platted when the railroad arrived, consequently remained virtually devoid of any structures, as vividly shown in the third and last bird's- eye view of the city that was drawn in 1898. While several notable houses were built in the city during the 1890's, extensive growth would have to await the early decades of the next century. Two fine houses in the district from the 1890's are 315 S. Tracy, a frame, vernacular Queen Anne built in 1890 by George J. Niles, a tinsmith, and, across the street, the brick veneer 318 S. Tracy, built in 1892 by another tinsmith, Ed Hanly. The development that did occur in the city during the 1890's is generally characterized by quite ambitious construction, in defiance of the economically 3 �� CZIUU, Sept. ll, 1879, p, 3 WS form 10-KO4 awB Appo.r JYo 10240010 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet S. Tracy - S. Black Historic Distract Section number 8 Page 50 - depressed conditions. in this district, Judge Luce, a prominent lawyer and judge, built a large Shingle style house at 319 S. Black in 1892, which has unfortunately recently been remodeled. Other individuals, who might have settled for the work of a local builder had Fargo, North Dakota architect George Hancock not been readily at hand in his Bozeman branch office, sought professional services for the designs of rather modest houses. One such house in the district is 502 S. Tracy, designed by Hancock for Rev. Davis Willson around 1892. The gambrel roofed form of the house and the distinctive hip-roofed cross dormer - features more typical of the early 20th century than the 1890's - are only visible indications that the house was architect-designed. - - - As the depression of the late 19th century, known in retrospect as the "Panic of 1893", gave way to a period of renewed prosperity, Bozeman became the undisputed economic and cultural center of the Gallatin Valley, linked with surrounding towns by the Gallatin Valley Electric Railway in 1909. The subsequent economic diversity provided numerous jobs for an expanding middle class, and the number of carpenter/builders in Bozeman increased substantially in order to meet the need for housing. Some of Bozeman's most important builders from this period, such as A.J. Svorkmoe, Guy Ensinger, Elmer and John Bartholomew, and Lou F. Sievert, as well as virtually the only architect to work in the city at the time, Fred F. Willson, helped to shape this district, and other parts of the city. Among the first to feel the effects of the renewed prosperity were those most closely associated with the main industry of the region - agriculture. Two brothers, John P. Gary and Martin Gary, proprietors of the "Gary Brothers" - a company that operated a grain elevator as well as a wholesale and retail grocery business - built two of the earliest and most impressive early 20th century houses in the district. John P. Gary built 326 S. Black in about 1903, and Martin Gary built 402 S. Black next-door about four years later. The design of the two Queen Anne-influenced houses, today separated by later infill, were probably derived from pattern books, although interpreted on a larger scale than most other pattern book houses in Bozeman, such as 412, 416 and 420 S. Tracy. The later houses were built by J.A. Bartholomew, probably according to one of the plans in Hocgson's house pattern catalog. These three are modest, Queen Anne-influenced houses built next to each other between 1906 and 1908, intended for rental or sale. John Metheney, a "rodman" and Bozeman Street Commissioner, occupied 416 S. Tracy shortly after it was built, and was probably typical of the occupants of the neighboring two houses. Nearby, Guy Ensinger built a group of three slightly more pretentious houses in the Bungalow style, 401, 405, and 407 S. Tracy, between 1912 and 1915, since by < then the Queen, Anne and other 19th century styles had been virtually eclipsed. These were occupied by people of slightly greater means than those who moved into Bartholomew's houses. John Kopp Jr. , for example, who inherited his father's C21 C,9 Y5 NTS Frm a t490" Oa,9 Mpo.N Ns 1024 to (real United States Department of the Interior r National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 8 Page 51 - S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District prominent butcher business, resided in 401 S. Tracy while his neighbor in 405 S. Tracy was Tolbert M. Perrin, proprietor of the Perrin Jewelry store. In 407 S. Tracy lived Fred B. Williams, treasurer of the Willson Co. department store. Elmer Bartholomew, perhaps the single most significant early 20th century builder in Bozeman and the brother of John L. Bartholomew, another important builder, collaborated with architect Fred F. Willson on several houses in the city, probably including three vernacular Colonial Revival style ones in this district in 1914: 501, 505, and 509 S. Tracy, which stand on adjacent lots. These houses were custom designed and built for slightly more wealthy residents of this district than the occupants of Ensinger's bungalows. Eugene F. Bunker, a lawyer, built 501 S. Tracy; George Calloway, secretary of Montana wState College, built 505 S. Tracy; and Willson, himself a successful architect from the start of his career in 1910, built 509 S. Tracy. Conversely, the single most significant house of the numerous diverse early 20th century houses in the district was built not by one of the wealthiest residents of the district, but by John A. Bartholomew, as if to advertise his talent as a builder. His house, 433 S. Black, was, like all his houses, derived from a pattern in Fred T. Hodgson's pattern book. For this one however, he improvised quite a bit with the applied ornamentation. White the Great Depression hit Montana's agricultural community quite hard, the fertile and well watered Gallatin Valley in general continued to be profitable productive. The college, in addition, helped to moderate the economic climate by providing a steady market for the commercial district, and for new, modest housing. Gaines McCracken, proprietor of the "McCracken Brothers" clothing store for example, was able to build himself a new house at 307-309 S. Tracy. The house is a duplex, probably intended to offset its cost of construction through rental of half of it. Clare H. Cousins, a salesman at the "Wagner Brothers" clothing store, was also able to build a new, albeit very modest house during the Depression at 412 S. Black. A carpenter, Christian W. Wentler, built a house for himself at 407 S. Black. Lou F. Sievert, a builder who constructed several houses in Bozeman during the 1930's, built a house which remains a fine example of the Bungalow style house for himself at 311 S. Tracy. Although finished in ­1938, the Sievert House is an important integral component of the historic district, both in terms of its design compatibility as part of the streetscape and its long term association with a prominent local builder who was responsible for the construction of several historical houses in this district. The only major construction in the district during the Depression was the replacement of the original turn of the century Longfellow School, with FWA assistance. This ambitious project, a small part of the larger, controversial endeavor of rebuilding all of Bozeman's public schools, was advocated by those local historian Merrill Burlingame termed the "more progressive members of the school board. " A bond issue was defeated in 1937, but eventually passed in 1938. Fred Willson was called upon for the design of the school which, though of only moderate architectural significance today, was considered to have been quite Progressive in concept, when built. 9i NPS form 16eoo+ Moro.r xs r u.om (sae) United States Department of the Interior - National Park Service - National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District Section number 8 Page 52 - Houses from subsequent periods have filled in most of the remaining empty lots in the district, but have not substantially changed the distinctive appearance of the streetscape, which was formed primarily between about 1872 and the beginning Of the Depression. Recent pressures, however, may bring substantial change to the district. A proposal currently under review calls for construction' of a high density condominium development on the large lot occupied by 318 S. Tracy, with demolition of the existing house a likely possibility. Strong community awareness of the uniqueness of this district, and the active participation of its residents in planning decisions will be essential to the preservation of the South Tracy '- South Black Historic District, which is one of Bozeman's'most significant historic areas. BOUNDARY DESCRIPTION AND JUSTIFICATION: Bordering the entire western boundary of the modest scale, middle class - South Tracy - South Black Historic District is the Bon Ton Historic District, with its affluent spatial arrangement and larger houses. The alley between S. 4,. Willson and S. Tracy Avenues marks a clear visual break between the two district, which are distinctly different in character. To the east is S. Bozeman Avenue, a street that is similar in scale to this district, but is not included within the boundaries of the South Tracy -- South Black Historic District due to loss of overall integrity. North of the district is the immense, monolithic Federal Building (1965) , which occupies an entire block, and three individual historic buildings, including the Episcopal Church and the Slackmore Apartments. Just north of. those is the Main Street Historic District. To the south of the district are several non-contributing buildings, some undeveloped land, unpaved streets and the small South Tracy Avenue Historic District. The northeastern corner for the South Tracy - South Black Historic District is located one lot south of Olive Street between S. Black and S. Bozeman Avenues; then, the boundary runs south to the small, unpaved alley between Story and College Streets; then, west to the alley between S. Tracy and S. Black Avenues; then, north for four Tots; then, west to the alley between S. Willson and S. Tracy Avenues; then, north to one lot south of Olive Street; then, east to the point of beginning. UTM REFERENCES: ACREAGE: approximately 32 acres I: 12/497300/505 8000 J: 12/497300/5057500 K: 12/497050/5057500 L: 12/497050/5058000 Hrs Form raaoo.. l�l dir®Appor.J Na tot r United States Department of the Interior National Park Service T National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet 8 53 S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District Section number Page _ South Tracy-South Black Historic District p: primary signficance c: contributing nc: non-contributing Address - a= - Style 5.1.der/Archif,e!;�. u= Stat:Wgi 209 S. Tracy Lewis House Stick style 1$79 P 211 S. Tracy Lewis House Vernacular 1879/c.1930 c 212 S. Tracy Wright House Bungalow c.1915 c 217 S. Tracy Catlin House Vernacular/ 1881 c Italianate r 221 S. Tracy Catlin House Vernacular - - 1890 p 222 S. Tracy Vernacular - i912 nc 303 S. Tracy Langohr House . Bungalow c.1920 c 304 S. Tracy R.P. Vivion House Vernacular/ 1884 p Queen Anne 07-9 S. Tracy McCracken Building Vernacular 1940 nc 308 S. Tracy McDonald House Vernacular Richard McDonald c.1872 c (attrib.) 311 S. Tracy Sievert House Bungalow L.F. Sievert c.1938 c 315 S. Tracy Niles House/ Queen Anne 1890 p Langohr House 318 S. Tracy Hanly House/ Queen Anne 1892 p Rose Story House 326 S. Tracy Maynard House Vernacular c.1904 c 401 S. Tracy Kapp House Bungalow Guy A. Ensinger 1912 c (attrib.) 404 S. Tracy Vernacular c.1 891-1904 c 405 S. Tracy Bungalow Guy A. Ensinger c.1913 c (attrib.) 407 S. Tracy Williams House Bungalow Guy A. Ensinger 1915 p (attrib.) 408 S. Tracy - Vernacular c.1900 c 412 S. Tracy Queen Anne John A. Bartholomew c.1906 c 415 S. Tracy Vernacular c.1898 c 416 S. Tracy Metheney House Queen Anne John A. Bartholomew c.1908 c 419 S. Tracy Bungalow c.1912- c 1916 420 S. Tracy Queen Anne John A. Bartholomew c.1907 c 423 S. Tracy Jacobs House Vernacular Fred C. Jacobs c.1904-- c � (attrib.) 1910 --Z4 S. Tracy Vernacular c.1900 c 0 S. Tracy Vernacular c.1898- c - - —- = -1904 436 S. Tracy Widener House Colonial Revival c.1905 c NPS Ram 10-WO& OUS AA rwar Ma 1024-W1/ (�1 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number 8 Page 54 S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District �_ 501 S. Tracy Bunker House Vernacular/ Elmer L. Bartholomew/c.1914 c Colonial Rev. (attributed) and Fred F. Willson 502 S. Tracy Rev. Davis Willson Vernacular/ George Hancock c.1893 c House Queen Anne/ (architect) Colonial Revival 505 S. Tracy - Calloway House Vernacular Elmer L. Bartholomew/c.1914 c Fred F. Willson 509 S. Tracy Willson House Colonial Rev, Elmer L. Bartholomew/c.1914 c (attributed) and 513 S. Tracy _ od Fred F. Willson ._ - Remeled c.1900/ nc 1975 516 S. Tracy Longfellow Vernacular/ Fred F. Willson 1939 c School Art Deco (architect) 519 S. Tracy Flint House Bungalow c.1911 P 601 S. Tracy Howard House Bungalow c.1911 ,07 S. Tracy Vernacular A.J. Svorkmoe c.1900 c 611 S. Tracy Roby House Vernacular 1951 nc 615 S. Tracy Vernacular/ John A. Bartholomew c.1911 c Bungalow 619 S. Tracy Bungalow John A. Bartholomew c.1915 c 104 E. Story Vernacular C.1900 c 108 E. Story Bungalow John A. Bartholomew 1925 C 210 S. Black Allen House Eclectic c.1930 c 214 S. Black Cain House Bungalow c.1921 c 218 S. Black Clark House Bungalow c.1920 p 222 S. Black Dawes House Bungalow c.1918 p 226 S. Black Dawes House Bungalow Vreeland & Arthur 1890 c 301 S. Black Nichols House Vernacular/ Place c.1880 p - Ttalianate 307 S. Black L.A. Luce House Remodeled 1885/ nc 308 S. Black c.1920/c. 1975 Vernacular 1884-90 c 312 S. Black Nelson House Vernacular c.1908 c 315 S. Black Eogelsong House Ranch 1955 nc 316 S. Black Nelson House Bungalow c.1921 c 319 S. Black Judge/J.A. Luce Shingle Style C.1892 c House 0 S. Black Perkins/Nelson Vernacular 1881 c House 326 S. Black John P. Gary House Queen Anne c.1908 327 S. Black Livingston House Colonial Revival c.1911 c HPS Farm 1"O44 GW®hoproval Ne.102sO0N (4D0� United States Department of the Interior National Park Service -)National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number $ Page 55 S. Tracy - S. Black Historic District .. 401 S. Black Morrill House Vernacular/ 1879 c Italiante 402 S. Black Martin Gary Queen Anne/ c,1907 p House Colonial Revival 407 S. Black Wentler House Bungalow C. W. Wentler c.1930 c {attrib.} 408 S. Black Stone House Vernacular c.1 881 nc 411 S. Black Montana Tract Vernacular c.1904 c Society School 412 S. Black Cousins House Bungalow 1936 nc 415 S. Black Seventh Day Vernacular 1900/1904 nc Adventist Church r 417 S. Black Montana Book & Vernacular c.1933 c Bible House 418 S. Black Vernacular c.1915 c 421 S. Black Enslow House Vernacular Stanley Enslow c.1910 c 122 S. Black Bishop House Vernacular (attrib.) c.1880 c 425 S. Black Hammann House Vernacular John F. Hammann c.1908 c {attrib.} 429 S. Black Bungalow John A. Bartholomew c.1910 p 430 S. Black Bungalow John A. Bartholomew c.1911 c 433 S. Black John Bartholomew Bungalow John A. Bartholomew c.1920 p 434 S. Black Remodeled c.1890 nc 503 S. Black Corner Grocery Bungalow John A. Bartholomew c.1908 c 507 S. Black Queen Anne John A. Bartholomew c.1908 c 516 S. Black Peets House Bungalow 1926 c 520 S. Black Taylor House Vernacular 1948 nc 521 S. Black Koble House' Bungalow John A. Bartholomew c.1 892/ c (remodelingcattrib.)c.1920 524 S. Black Vernacular c.1900 nc 529 S. Black Baverly House Bungalow c.1920 c 533 S. Black Bungalow c.1910 p 601 S. Black Vernacular 1898/1904 c 604 S. Black F'elsheim House Bungalow c.1921 c 605 S. Black Vernacular c.1930 nc 607 S. Black Vernacular John A. ' Bartholomew c.1935 c 609 S. Black Vernacular 1898/1904 c 610 S. Black Bungalow c.1945 nc 615 S. Black Walrath House Vernacular c.1907 c 618 S. Black Severence House Vernacular 1935 c 622 S. Black Gilleland House Bungalow Walter Gilleland c.1931 c (attrib.) —1 E. Curtiss Vernacular c.1912 c : 11 E. Curtiss __ - Vernacular 15 E. Curtiss c.1908 nc - __ - Bungalow _ c.1930 c �Z{faA955 SOUTH TRACY -- SOUTU ,BLACK HISTORIC DISTRICT Bozeman, MT 5lrrrt a 4"L'_1I FEDERAL s~ } 2 BUILDING � STREET L I:_Ilti,�y, _ v THEFT r BOGERT _ — J h -- •-- n PARK STREET _ - �Y KOCH TR 1 STREET [Ri STORY STREET f LC1NG EL *•�0-- ET i• I TR ET _ j- R STREET - -S }- -y� - VELANDT� c Red: Primary Orange: Contributing 410'. 7'rA v;t *Or. pit V WfolO. r I "M �Z;k 7D�o 4"'1" v- CUM gW4 Wo AMgh 7p p�q - .,..N ;-Av _-F;q We !Tz.PIS. nt, SL ........... eo,. kon. ? It A ZY owe V4, it gr t) y�,! a: R 'ir4 *I�aIY �f•/ •M PI:I- I- MIA NT 'r.} "•Tyt;�,rT fl d iJ�•W'Z• !aK ��`r�"�.. IFj f �r' v f r ��. f � T f C I Ali r��Y (-,1s^�T •t.'. _`M` + r �'�w• ± wilt' i' �N ri t'.2.� •t,} _ 'F y� r ti t G .�T ,r, �'"•,�� •f `,� .:� je I IRS �:;: .+�. .,. 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