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Rose Morey Lamport House

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Rose Morey Lamport House

Address
  
322 W Washington St, South Bend, IN 46601, USA

The Rose-Morey-Lamport House is a historic home in downtown South Bend, Indiana. The home is designated a national historic landmark on the National Register of Historic Places, and a local landmark as designated by the Historic Preservation Commission of South Bend and St. Joseph County.

The home was built as the residence of Dr. George P. Morey and his wife, Frances Helen Rose Morey, between 1894 and 1896.

Dr. Morey was born in Orleans County in western New York in 1844. He served as a Private in the Union Army during the Civil War and remained active in Grand Army of the Republic gatherings in South Bend into the 20th Century.

Frances Helen Rose Morey died on July 30, 1896 having lived in the home for only a few months. A daughter, Frances Clare Morey, died as a young girl. Dr. Morey and his other daughter, Helen Rose, continued to live in the house until 1908 when Dr. Morey gave it to Helen Rose and her new husband, William Keyes Lamport, as a wedding gift. After William Lamport died in 1948, Helen Rose Lamport continued to live in her childhood home until her death in 1963.

Helen Rose’s three children sold it in 1967, and the home has since witnessed several uses – as offices, as a bed and breakfast, and currently returning to its original use as a private residence.

The two generations of family who first lived there – Dr. Morey, Frances Helen Rose Morey, their son-in-law William Lamport, and his wife Helen Rose – each contribute to the name the house is currently known as, the Rose-Morey-Lamport-House.

Among the earliest of the larger mansions in South Bend, Indiana, the local historic preservation commission refers to the home an “outstanding example of the Queen Anne style.”

The home contains a large stained glass window that was a medal winner at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. Dr. Morey purchased the window for $2,800 (approximately $74,000 in 2015 dollars) and had it installed along a west facing wall in order to catch light from the setting sun. Both it and a smaller window, known as “Mignon,” are in the home today.

References

Rose Morey Lamport House Wikipedia