Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Isaac Pollack House

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Built
  
1876 (1876)

Opened
  
1876

NRHP Reference #
  
74001581

Added to NRHP
  
16 December 1974

Isaac Pollack House

Location
  
208 W. Monument Ave., Dayton, Ohio

Area
  
Less than 1 acre (0.40 ha)

Architectural styles
  
Second Empire architecture, Second Empire architecture in Europe

Similar
  
Dayton International Peace M, Boonshoft Museum of Discovery, Temple Israel, National Museum of the Unite, Patterson Homestead

The Isaac Pollack House is a historic structure now located at 208 West Monument Avenue in Dayton, Ohio, United States. Built in 1876, this Second Empire house was originally home to the family of Isaac Pollack, a prominent Dayton businessman involved in the liquour trade. The walls are composed of a mixture of stone and brick with some wooden elements, resting on a stone foundation and covered with a slate roof.

The house ceased to be used primarily as a residence in 1913. In that year, Fenton T. Bott purchased the house and began using it as the home of his Bott Dancing Academy, as well as his residence; he remained in business until 1941. Fifteen years later, the Montgomery County Board of Elections began a twenty-year period of using the property as their offices. In 1979, the house was moved from its previous location at 319 West Third Street to a new location at the intersection of Wilkinson Street and Monument Avenue. Its new location places it on the northern edge of downtown, just one block from the Great Miami River, across from McPherson Town, and near Interstate 75. On October 14, 2005, the structure became the home of the Dayton International Peace Museum.

Two weeks before Christmas 1974, the Pollack House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, qualifying both because of its architecture and because of its place as the residence of a prominent local citizen. It is one of approximately one hundred National Register-listed locations citywide and one of four on Monument Avenue, along with the old YMCA, the Engineers Club of Dayton, and the now-destroyed Hanitch-Huffman House.

References

Isaac Pollack House Wikipedia