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William Wagner House

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Construction started
  
1855-1858

Architectural style
  
Antebellum architecture

William Wagner House wwwhistoricpreservationmiamicomimagessitespho

Type
  
Hand-hewn lumber with mortise and tenon joints

Location
  
Lummus Park 404 Northwest 3rd Street Miami, Florida

Similar
  
Fort Dallas, Gesu Church, Venetian Causeway, Freedom Tower, Venetian Pool

The Wagner Homestead was built c. 1857 by William Wagner, who came to Miami with his Creole wife Everline. Wagner, a U.S. Army veteran, had joined the army in 1846, fought in the Mexican War under General Winfield Scott until he was wounded in the Battle of Cerro Gordo, and sent to Charleston S.C. to recuperate. When Wagner's former military unit was sent to reopen Fort Dallas in 1855, he came to the Miami area and decided to move to South Florida. Wagner died in 1901 on his homestead. He was one of the area's first permanent residents and was actively involved in local political and community affairs. The Wagner home reflects the early days of settlement along the Miami River during the nineteenth century and is the only known house in Miami which remains from this period. It is a rare example of vernacular wood frame architecture and is unique in its use of Balloon frame construction.

Map of William Wagner House, Miami, FL 33128, USA

The home is located in Lummus Park on the north side of the Miami River at NW 4th Avenue and NW 3rd Street. It is the oldest known home still standing in Miami.

References

William Wagner House Wikipedia