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United Stat sAD6 astment of the Interior
National Park Service_ti 4 "
National Register of Historic Places
Gontinuatjon Sheet 9�1 G f7 7�c
,``rv; '• South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Section number Page 89
Historic-Nam e: South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Common Name: 800 block of South Tracy Avenue �-
-,Location: 802-824 South Tracy Avenue
Bozeman, Montana (030)
= -" Gallatin County (031)
Classification: historic district
private ownership
public acquisition: n/a
" occupied
restricted access
residential use
Ownership: multiple
Location of Legal Description: Gallatin County Courthouse, Main St. , Bozeman, Mr.
.: Representation in Existing Surveys: Historic Resource Survey of Bozeman,
Montana, 1982-1986, sponsored by the City-County Planning Office, Bozeman, Mr.
Depository of Survey Records: Montana State Historic Preservation Office, 102 S.
Broadway, Helena, MT.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION: South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Contributing structures: 6
Non-contributing structures: 1
The South Tracy Avenue Historic District, a compact and cohesive group of seven
small, one-story, gable front, Bungalow style houses, stretches for one block
between College and Harrison Streets, along the east side of S. Tracy Avenue, In
the context of this architecturally diverse southeastern section of the city, the
district is an especially notable island of architectural consistency. The
cohesiveness of the district is enhanced by its location atop a slight hill.
Although the ridge lines of the houses in the district vary, all houses present
gables to the street, topping either the main blocks, porches, or both, which
together establish a strong unifying rhythm. The predominant house form is that
of a broad gable front with a projecting, gable front porch occupying either the
left or right half. Common original materials and architectural motifs lend
further visual cohesion to the district, such as clapboard and wood shingle
sheathing, often in combination, exposed rafter tails, projecting purlins, cross
Cables, cottage windows, or grouped windows, and concrete foundations.
Within this context of consistency of form, scale and materials, 802 S. Tracy,
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United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Section number 8 Page 90
possibly designed by local architect Frcd F. Willson, is outstanding for its
slightly higher degree of architectural detailing, and its distinctively lower
pitched roof. 'By virtue of its taller and more massive proportions, 810 S. Tracy
also stands out in the district. The single non-contributing building, 820
S. Tracy, is the only house to have lost its original porch and fenestration. It
nevertheless retains much of its original massing, material and detailing, and
therefore maintains the rhythm of the streetscape.
Small garages at the rear of the lots match the main houses to which they are
associated in architectural detailing. Being visible from the street, they
contribute to the visual cohesiveness of this small district.
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STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Period of Significance: 1916-1923
Areas of Significance: Architecture
An island of Bungalows from the time of its initial construction in 1917 and well
into the 1930's, the South Tracy Avenue Historic District remains a cohesive
architectural unit, and a particularly vivid example of Bozeman's rapid early
20th century expansion. The seven similar, modest Bungalow style residences that
make up the district, each of which has a separate garage behind it, represent
the work of four local carpenters. One of the houses, in addition, may have been
designed by Fred F. Willson - Bozeman's prolific early 20th century architect.
The district encompasses land in Block 1 of the Butte Addition, which was platted
in 1890 along with the Capital Hill Addition and several others. These additions
reflect, in part, the prevalent optimism associated with the city's bid to become
chosen as the location for the state capital in a statewide vote in 1892.
Despite the residents' high hopes of winning the capital, which, it was felt,
would surely have triggered a building boom in the new plats and elsewhere,
Bozeman instead was allocated the Montana State College of Agriculture and
Mechanic Arts - today Montana State University.
The new institution was initially viewed with disappointment and skepticism, and
did little to revive an economy plagued by a depression later known as the Panic
of 1893. Butte Addition, among others, remained virtually undeveloped until well
into the 20th century. As late as 1916, with the exception of the few college
buildings erected in the Capital Hill Addition and several houses built along
southern extensions of S. Grand and S. Willson Avenues, there was still only very
sparse development south of Alderson Street. Considerable residential
construction however had been occurring in the Cooper Park Historic District.
Bozeman's emerging role as the economic and cultural center of the Gallatin
Valley had created by 1916 a substantially swelled middle class, which in turn
created a demand for inexpensive housing. t
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United States Department of the Interior af(cl 7(
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
91 South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Section number _S____ Page
At the end of 1916 and the beginning of 1917, four local carpenters, William
C. Smith, Elmer L. Bartholomew, George M. Wimmer, and Guy A. Ensinger, owned land
in what is now the South Tracy Avenue Historic District, and began construction
of small, modest houses, intended for sale when completed. All the land was
purchased from J.H. Baker, an assistant cashier as the Commercial National Bank
(104 E. Main St.) , acting as a trustee for an unknown land owner. According to
Mrs. Hurlburt C. Cheever, a resident of the block since the late 1920's, there
was no pre-arranged plarr among the four builders to develop the lots. It was,
rather, mere "happenstance" that this small isolated development took shape.
The first houses to be built, which went up soon after the land purchases, were
802, 814, 820, 818, and 824 S. Tracy Ave. , located in the middle and at the ends
of the one-block long district. Around 1923 the other three ;houses in the
district were constructed on the remaining lots in between. Mrs. Cheever (who
lived in 824 S. Tracy Ave.) , recalls the district from the 1920's and early
1930's as a distinct, isolated residential block, but noted that there was no
particularly unique sense of community among the residents. Until the 1940's,
open fields buffered the district to the south and east, and for one block to the
north and west.
Occupants of the houses in general have changed frequently over the decades, and
have represented a cross-section of Bozeman's middle class. Among them were
D. Harvey Budd, who awned and probably lived temporarily in 806 S. Tracy Ave.
Budd ran the leading early 20th century plumbing and heating company under his
name at 30 W. Main Street, which installed the plumbing in a large number of
houses in this district, the Cooper Park Historic District, and elsewhere in the
city. Charles M. Fisher, whose brother-in-law Fred F. Willson may have designed
his house, 802 S. Tracy Avenue, was Secretary/Treasurer of both Owenhouse
Hardware Co. (see 36 E. Main Street) and Retail Merchants Exchange.
H.F. Judevine, 1920's resident at 806 S. Tracy Avenue, was President/Manager of
the Gallatin Valley Creamery (see 25 S. Tracy Avenue) , while Harrison Keyser,
Judevine's neighbor at 810 S. Tracy Avenue, ran Keyser's Auto Repair shop at 23
N. Wallace Avenue. Because of its proximity to the college, at least five
Montana State College professors had owned houses and/or lived in the district
during the 1920 's and 19301s. Other residents have included insurance and real
estate salesmen, an auto mechanic, 'and a missionary.
Despite the extensive construction occurring throughout the city in the early
20th century (particularly in the Cooper Park Historic District) , this district
remained an isolated unit, as shown on the 1927 Sanborn Fire Insurance map, until
the mid-19301s, when construction finally began filling in the surrounding
blocks.
The two houses on the corner lots opposite the district, 801 and 823 S. Tracy
JAvenue, were both standing by 1922, but have since been severely altered. The
latter is a two-story Bungalow style house, more elaborate than any in the
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United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
) National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Section number Page 92 ---
district, and was built by Edwin T. Rich, president of the Standard Construction
Co. , and manager of Brackett Creek Lumber Co.
Houses comparable to those found in this district are found on S. 5th and S. 6th
Avenues north of College Street, and scattered in the area of S. Black Avenue.
The builders of the South Tracy Avenue Historic District, who are representative
of the numerous carpenters and builders listed in the city directories of the
1910's and 19201s, were men of modest means, and changed their places of
residence frequently, Often they lived temporarily in one of the houses they had
built, before it was sold.
i
George M. Wimmer was listed in 1927 as living iri the Bon Ton Apartments, on the
second floor of 34-42 W. Main Street. Similarly, Guy Ensinger resided in modest
quarters in the Oxford Hotel, a rooming house on the second floor of the
E.L. Benepe Building (104 W. Main St.) . Elmer L. Bartholomew, one of the most
important early 20th century architect/builders in Bozeman (see the Cooper Park
Historic District) , had various residences between 1916 and 1927, including 221
S. 3rd and 602 S. 6th Avenues. He also lived for a few years in one of the
houses he built in this district, 810 S. Tracy Ave. , until-it was sold.
Guy Ensinger, who was praised by Tbq Weeklx Courier newspaper in 1918 as having
been "one of Bozeman's leading contractors and builders" between 1912 and 1918,
ran into financial difficulties in 1917. Unable to complete the construction of
824 S. Tracy Avenue then underway, he retired from carpentry, selling the
unfinished house to P.C. White. Ensinger had helped to usher in the era of the
automobile in Bozeman by the construction of numerous houses with compatible,
detatched garages, including the one at 824 S. Tracy. Ensigner was also noted in
a national magazine, American Builder in 1917, for the construction of five
Bungalows, probably on S. 6th Avenue (see Cooper Park Historic District) . Upon
his retirement, Ensinger played a role in pioneering mechanized farming in
Montana by cultivating 1500 leased acres in Big Horn County without the use of
horses - termed an "experiment" by T12a Weekly Courier in 1918.
The South Tracy Avenue Historic District, despite its small size, remains a
strong, clearly defined group of buildings representing both the earliest period
of automobile use, and the period of near doubling of the size of the city.
Being surrounded by houses of much later and more diverse time periods, many of
which have undergone extensive alteration in the past 20 years, the historic
district retains a sense of its original isolation on South Tracy Avenue.
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United States Department of the interior AC-1A7LCL
National Paris Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Section number S— Page
BIBLIOGRAPHY: South Tracy Avenue Historic District
1. TQ,t. views
Mrs. Hulburt C. Cheever, 9/24/85
Gardner C. Waite, 9/24/85
Louis Spain, 9/4/85
2. Tba Weekly Can, , March 27, 1918, pp. 1,10.
3. City directories, 1916-17, 1922, 1925, 1927, 1933, 1935-36.
4. Bird's Eye Views, 1884, 1898.
5. Sanborn Map, 1927.
6. "Model Homes: This Type Found Popular in the West, " 6a�rica Builder"
(June, 1917) , p.77, as quoted in: Kingston Heath, "Striving for Permanence
on the Western Frontier: Vernacular Architecture as Cultural Informant in
Southwestern Montana, " Ph.D. dissertation presented to the Department of
American Civilization of Brown University, February, 1985.
BOUNDARY DESCRIPTION AND JUSTIFICATION: South Tracy Avenue Historic District
The boundary for the South Tracy Avenue Historic District is drawn along the
centerlines of W. College Street, South Tracy Avenue, and W. Harrison Street, and
includes lots 1-13 of Block 1 of the Butte Addition to the City of Bozeman,
Montana.
UTM REFERENCES: ACREAGE: approximately 2 acres
W(1) : 12/497120/5057400
X(1) : 12/497120/5057350
Y(l) : 12/497100/5057350
Z(1) : 12/497100/5057100
South Tracy Avenue Historic District
Street Date Architect/Builder 1.9
802 S. Tracy Charles M. Fisher c.1916 Fred Willson (attr.) contributing
806 S. Tracy D.H. Budd House c.1920 Wm. C. Smith contributing
810 S. Tracy H. Keyser House c.1923 Elmer L. Bartholomew contributing
814 S. Tracy Geo, Wimmer House 1917 George W. Wimmer contributing
820 S. Tracy 1917 Elmer L. Bartholomew non-contributing
822 S. Tracy Bartholomew House c.1923 Elmer L. Bartholomew contributing
824 S. Tracy Ensinger/Waite 1917-18 Guy Ensinger contributing
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United States Department of the interior q
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Paces
Continuation Sheet
Bozeman Multiple Resource Area
Section number 9 Page 1
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alderson, Matt.W. , a
March, 1883, Montana State University, Special
Collections.
Bozeman Chamber of Commerce, The Gallatin Way to Yellowstone Pal, QQZema
CrhrQnicle, 1942, Montana State University, Special Collections.
Bozeman City and Gallatin- -County Directory, Helena, Montana, R.L. Polk and Co. ,
1900-01► 1902-3, 1904-5, 1906-7, 1910-11, 1912-13, 1914-15, 1916-17, 1918-19,
1922, 1925, 1927, 1931, 1935-36, 1940, 1942,
Bozeman City Ordinances, compiled by F.H. Mehlberg, 1905, and revised with WPA
assistance in 1941.
Bozeman Outlook League, "Bozeman in the Rockies, " Tourist Promotion booklet,
early 1900's.
Brister, Marjorie, and Minnie Paugh, Touc of Historic Sit,g5 of Bozeman, May,
1969, Montana State University, Special Collections.
Burlingame, Merrill, "John M. Bozeman, Montana Trailmaker, " Gallatin County
Tribune, original in the Mississippi Valley Historic Review, V. 27, no. 4, March
1941.
Centennial History of Bozeman Lodge, no. 18, A.F. & A.M. , 1872-1972,
Montana State University, Special Collections.
, "The Un-natural History of Bozeman, " 1975 speech to Q/K Club, Nov. 18,
1975, Bozeman, Montana.
History Background for the Crow Indian Treaty of 1868, Montana State
University, Special Collections.
Davis, Beatrice, "From Plain to Plane", 1967 (291 p., illustration)
Davis, Evan V. (photographer) , Souvguj_r_of Bozeman and the GallatinV_alley,
Bozeman, Montana, 1908.
DeHaas, John N. , "Footlights and Fire Engines- Story of Opera House and City
Hall, " gazine_of_ Western History, Vol. XVI, #4, Oct. 1967.
Dunbar, Robert G. , "The Economic Development of the Gallatin Valley, " Pacific
vol. 47, October, 1956, pp.117-123.
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NPS FWM t04004
United States Department of the Interior 4 7(a-q.
National Paris Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Bozeman Multiple Resource Area
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Section number .. q_ Page �—
St. James Episcopal Church, Bozeman, Montana, 1948,
Montana State University, Special Collections.
Ellsworth, W.E. , A patory of the Gallatin Valley & the City of @Q,zgman, Avant
Courier Publishing Company, Bozeman, Montana, 1898.
Cenntennial Edition, June 1872-1972, Montana State
University, Special Collections.
Freeman, Cortland,
Montana State University, Special Collections. .
Gallatin County Gazetteer_and Bozeman_City Directory, 1892-1893, Bozeman, New
Issue Publishing Co. (J.D. Radford & Co. , 1893.
"The Gallatin Valley, Montana, " in The Coast, Seattle, 1908, Vol. 15, #6, June.
# Gallatin Valley Club, The Cal.lgitin ydiley, the Egypt of America, ca.1906, Bozeman
Chronicle, Montana State University, Special Collections. .
Heath, Kingston, "Striving for Permanence on the Western Frontier: Vernacular
Architecture as Cultural Informant in Southwestern Montana, " Ph.D. dissertation
presented to the Department of American Civilization of Brown University,
February, 1985.
Hill, Benton S. , "Bozeman and the Bozeman Trail", in Annuals of Wyoming
Historical Society, Oct. 1964, Vol. 36, no. 2, p. 204-233.
Hodgson, Fred T. , Practical Bungalows and CQktaggs for Town and. County, Chicago,
Illinois, Frederick J. Drake and Co. , 1908
Rededication, Montana State University, Special
Collections.
Houstan, Mrs. Elizabeth Lina, Early History of Gallatin County, Bozeman
Chronicle, Bozeman, Montana, 1933.
Kirkpatrick, James, "A Reminiscence of John Bozeman", edited by Paul C. Phillips,
1929, Montana State University, Special Collections.
Jacobson, Bruce Carl, A Historic Study of the Bozeman Opera House, 1969, thesis,
Ph.D. University of Montana.
Johnson, Dorothy M. , "The Bloody Bozeman, Perilous Trail to Montana's Gold, " no
date, Montana State University, Special Collections.
NPS Form 10-9004 Que Approvd,b, IOJ,-OON
(aaW
United States Department of the Interior 0?4 C-)A 7&q
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet
Bozeman Multiple Resource Area
Section number 9 Page 3
Leeson, Michael, HistQr_y of Montana.__l739-1.8_85, Chicago, Illinois, Warner, Beers
and Company, 1885.
Linfield, F.B. , "The Egypt of America, " Montana Homeseeker, vol.1 No.l, June 15,
1906.
McDonald, James R. , 8gzemao's Historig Resources, Bozeman, Bozeman City-County
Planning Board, August, 1984.
Niebel, Esther C. A Century-of Service. : History -of the First_Methodist_Church.
Bzgona Montanan 856-1966, Artcraft Printers, Bozeman, Montana, 1966.
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Park, Daniel, "Adaptability Architecture", thesis, University of Montana, 1978.
Putnam, James Bruce, "The Evolution of a Frontier Town: Bozeman and It's Search
for Economic Stability, 1864-1877", M.A. thesis, Montana State University, 1973.
"St. James' Episcopalian Church, 80 Years, 1 868-1948", no date, Montana State
University, Special Collections. .
Story House, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, Bozeman, Montana, August, 1983,
Montana State University, Special Collections.
Westman, James G. , "Adaptive Re-use of the Baxter Hotel in Bozeman, undergraduate
thesis in architecture, Montana State University, 1976.
Willson, Fred F. , "Job List, 1913-1956, " Montana State University, Special
Collections.
Newspapers
842'ema RAjjy Chronicle, Bozeman Centennial, 1883/1983, special edition, March
27, 1983 - April 1, 1983.
BOzeMaU QAi1Y c nn,r-1 P, 100 Years of Progress, 1864-1964, Aug. 9, 1964.
84zema Qaily CbLQnizLa, Pioneer Days, 90th Anniversary edition, 1954.
P-OzeMn SQL, Sept. 13, 1871 (suspended between Sept. 25 - Nov. 7, 1874 and
absorbed by the Gallatin County Republican, July 7, 1905) .
, Sept. 13, 1871 - July 25, 1872
ELQzeman v , July 30, 1872 - Sept. 28, 1882
Avant , Oct. 5, 1 882-Dec. 27, 1 888
Reoublica CouriPr July 7, 1905- Feb. 4, 1913
Weekly Couri Feb. 11, 1913 - April 30, 1919
Evening Couri9r, Vol 1. ► Dec. 4, 1911
f
August 28, 1900 - June 27► 1905
, Aug. 11, 1954 - Dec. 27, 1973.
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Bozeman Multiple Resource Area
Photograph Index
Photo
NUmber Roll/Frame Y.3w Orientation
Main Street Historic District
1) #5/6 Willson and W. Main St.- Baxter Hotel NW
2) #5/2 Willson and W. Main St. Bon Ton Bakery SE
3} #5/8 Ellen Theater N
4) #5/14 Tracy and W. Main St. SW
5) #5/10 Tracy and W. Main St. Nub
6) #5/9 Tracy and W. Main St. NE
7) #5/11 Tracy and E. Main St. SE
8) #5/17 Black and W. Main St. NW
9) #5/15 Black and W. Main St. SE
10) #5/20 Bozeman and E. Main St. NW
11) #5/21 Bozeman and E. Main St. SW
12) #5/19 Bozeman and E. Main St. NE
13) #5/28 E. Main Street t NW
14) #5/24 Rouse and E. Main SW
15) #5/25 Rouse and E. Main
16) #5/30 S. Bozeman and Babcock Steam Laundry NW
17) #5/31 S. Black and Babcock Owenhouse Hardware NW
1 8) #5/34 S. Tracy and Babcock U.S. Post Office NE
19) #5/35 Babcock and S. Tracy Montana Motor N
Bozeman Brewery Historic District
1) #7/14 Bozeman Brewery NW
2) #7/12 Brewery Bottling Plant NE
3) #7/9 Lehrkind Mansion W
4) #7/8 Wallace and Cottonwood NW
Bon Ton Historic District
1) #9/8 200 Block S. Willson SW
2) #9/9 ' 222 S. Willson NE
3) #9/13 311 and 319 S. Willson SW
4) 49/14 401 S. Willson NW
5) #9/16 415 S. Willson W
6) #9/17 417-423 S. Willson SW
7) #9/20 510 S. Willson NW
8) #9/21 500 Block S. Willson SE
9) #9/22 500 Block S. Willson SW
10) #9/24 Corner Alderson and S. Willson SW
11) #9/26 600 Block S. Willson SW
12) #9/27 613 S. Willson W
13) #9/28 701 S. Willson SW
14) #9/29 700 Block S. Willson SE
15) #9/31 712 S. Willson SE
16) #9/32 800 Block S. Willson SE
17) #9/34 800 Block S. Willson SE
1 8) #9/35 811 S. Willson W
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Bon Tan Historic District (coat•)
19) #10/1 901 and 911 S. Willson SW
20) #10/3 900 Block S. Willson to
21) #10/4 1004 S. Willson Nei
22) #10/9 1000 Block S. Grand NW
23) #10/10 903 S. Grand W
24) #10/12 621 S. Grand W
25) #10/13 600 Block S. Grand NE
26) #10/14 609 S. Grand W
27) #10/17 500 Block S. Grand NE
2 8) #10/16 601 S. Grand SW
29) #10/18 419 S. Grand Nw
30) #10/19 501 S. Grand SW
31) #10/20 502 S. Grand SE
32) #10/21 420 S. Grand NE
33) #10/22 509 S. Third SW
34) #10/24 624 S. Third NE
35) 010/27 805 and 809 S. Third SW
36) #10/28 818 S. Third r E
37) #10/30 909 and 915 S. Third SE
3 8) #11/3 412 Cleveland S
3 9) #11/4 419 Cleveland NW
40) #11/6 504 Cleveland (Graf) S
41) #11/8 504 Cleveland (rear) (Graf) N
42) #11/9 320 and 324. S. Grand NE
43) #11/10 219 S. Grand mi
44) #11/12 __.216 S. Grand SE
45) #11/17 201 S. Third SW
46) #11/21 304 S. Third E
47) #11/22 309 S. Third I�Gd
South Tracy — South Black Historic District
1) #8/1 218 South Black SE
2) #8/2 301 South Black m
3) #8/5 402 and 326 South Black NE
4) #8/9 429 and 433 South Black IN
5) #8/13 533 South Black SE
6) #8/16 619 South Tracy NW
7) #8/17 Longfellow School (South Tracy) NE
8) #8/20 601 and 607 South Tracy al
9) #8/21 519 South Tracy W
10) #8/23 509 South Tracy NCB
11) #8/24 436 South Tracy NW
12) #8/27 423 South Tracy SE
13) #8/29 407►405,401 South Tracy NW
14) 48/31 318 South Tracy NE
15) #8/33 315 South Tracy NP
16) #8/36 221 South Tracy NE
17) #9/3 211 and 209 South Tracy '
Cooper Park Historic District
1) #6/0 Main St. and 5th Ave. SW
2) #6/1 522 West Main St. SW
3) #6/2 612 West Main St. S
4) #6/3 600 Block of W. Babcock NE
5) #6/6 W. olive and 6th Ave. NE
6) #6/5 W, olive and 6th Ave. • SE
7) #6/8 309 South 6th Ave. SW
8) #6/9 South 6th Ave. and Koch St. SE
9) #6/10 South 7th Ave. and Koch St. NW
10) #6/11 721 Koch St.. NE
11) 46/12 Cooper Park E
12) #6/15 Intersection of South 7th Ave. & Story St. SE
13) #6/18 700 Block of South Sixth NW
14) #6/19 South 6th Ave. and Alderson SW
15) #6/20 600 Block South 6th Ave. SW
16) #6/21 Intersection of S. 6th and Dickerson NW
17) #6/23 S, Sixth and W, Story SW
1 8) #6/25 S. 5th and W. Story } SE
19) #6/28 S, 5th and W. Koch NE
20) #6/30 S. 5th and Curtiss NE
21) 46/31 400 Block of Curtiss St. NE
22) #6/34 415 W. olive NE
23) #6/35 404 W. alive SE
Lindley Place Historic District
1) #7/0 317 Lindley Place NW
2) #7/2 218 Lindley Place NE
3) #7/3 200 Block Lindley Place W
4) #7/4 200 Block Lindley Place NE
5) #7/5 201 Lindley Place SE
6) #7/6 202 Lindley Place SW
7) #7/7 West olive Street bungalows NE
North Tracy Historic District
1) #7/20 North Tracy and Villard SE
2) #7/22 North Tracy and Villard al
3) #7/19 411 N. Tracy SW
4) #7/23 400 Block N. Tracy Uq
5) #7/18 400 Block N. Tracy SW
6) #7/17 501 N. Tracy NW
7) #7/16 500 Block N. Tracy SE
8) #7/15 Peach and N. Tracy SW
South Tracy Historic District
1) #12/2 800 Block South Tracy SE
2) #12/3 822 and 824 South Tracy SE
3) #12/5 814, 818, and 822 South Tracy NE
4) #12/6 814 South Tracy E
5) #12/7 805 and 810 South Tracy SE
6) #12/8 802 and 806 South Tracy E
BOZEMAN QUADRANGLE
MONTANA—GALLATIN CO.
i5 MINUTE SERIES (TOPOGRAPHIC) �y
�94 L 1610 000 FEET 'R
'LQRADE) 193 5' _ 45°45'
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1$ any.ari 17. Beck ee0000
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G. I15?� saea x :s�" _ ADDENDA TO BOZEMAN MULTIPLE RESOURCE ARI:
ti #33 Willson School 12/496750/5058150
21 r~f as 23 _ 24 4' .' #34 Harris House 12/496650/5058300
=o :; '. . • #35 Johnson House 12/497420/5058750
' I 'mot #36 Krueger House 12/497350/5058580
alley Center _ -` .r �� #37 714 N. Tracy 12/497200/5058200
0601 c c #38 Peterson House 12/497800/5058650
#39 Hines House 12/497700/5057300
• U25 r 27 '' r a634 �l� 21 #40 818 S. Eighth 12/497350/5057250
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