Built 1908 NRHP Reference # 89000049 Area 850 m² | Built by Jack Shipp Opened 1908 Added to NRHP 21 February 1989 | |
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Architectural styles Arts and Crafts movement, Colonial Revival architecture, American Queen Anne style People also search for Crook County Bank Building, A. R. Bowman Memorial Museum, Ochoco Creek |
The Marion Reed Elliott House is a historic house in Prineville, Oregon, United States. Built in 1908, it is the largest and best-preserved Queen Anne style house in Prineville. It is also significant as one of a handful of surviving structures that were built by prominent local contractor Jack Shipp (1858–1942). Marion Elliott (1859–1934), an educator and successful attorney, lived in the house from its construction until his death. Both men's careers benefited from the economic boom that occurred in Prineville in the first decades after railroads began reaching Central Oregon around 1900, the period when the Elliott House was built.
The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.
References
Marion Reed Elliott House Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA