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James E. Lindsay House

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Built
  
1876

NRHP Reference #
  
84001465

Architectural style
  
Italianate architecture

MPS
  
Davenport MRA

Opened
  
1876

Added to NRHP
  
27 July 1984

James E. Lindsay House

Location
  
911 College Ave.Davenport, Iowa

People also search for
  
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The James E. Lindsay House is located on the eastside of Davenport, Iowa, United States. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1984.

Contents

James E. Lindsay

James Lindsay was a native of Essex County, New York and grew up working in his father’s lumber mill. In 1856 he moved and purchased land in Wisconsin. He moved to Davenport in 1861 where his Wisconsin timber was rafted down the Mississippi River and sawed into lumber. He went into business with John B. Phelps. The two bought a mill on the east side of Davenport, which they named the Lindsay & Phelps, Co. His interests in lumber eventually led him to ventures in Arkansas, Minnesota, Washington State, Oregon and Louisiana. In some of these ventures he joined with Frederick Weyerhaeuser from Rock Island, Illinois. In 1858 he married Mary Helen Phelps and they raised three children.

Lindsay built this home for his family in 1876. W.T. Waterman acquired the house from Lindsay's estate in the early 20th century. He was an associate in the law firm Lane and Waterman, which his father C.M. Waterman, was one of the founding partners.

Architecture

The Lindsay House is one of several Italianate style houses in the Fulton Addition. The two-story frame house is influenced by the Victorian styles of the era. It features an irregular roofscape progressive setback of projecting masses, a bracketed cornice, window trim, double-door entry and its original front porch.

References

James E. Lindsay House Wikipedia


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