Howell--Kohlhagen House - Roseburg, OR
N 43° 12.389 W 123° 20.763
10T E 471888 N 4783802
This residence is currently a bed and breakfast along SE Jackson St.
Waymark Code: WMQN21
Location: Oregon, United States
Date Posted: 03/05/2016
Views: 2
The following verbiage is taken from the NRHP Nomination Form to describes this residence's significance:
The Gothic Revival house located at 848 SE Jackson Street in Roseburg, Oregon, is
believed to have been built between 1880 and 1884 for Robert and Elizabeth Newcomb. It faces east and is situated close to the central business district. It is characterized by steeply-pitched cross axial gables with fancy vergeboard decoration and by gable-roofed wall dormers on the facade, an Italianate parlor window bay and elongated, double-hung windows, of which those having segmental arch-heads are noteworthy for finely-detailed scalloped and crested framements with crowning hood moldings. Originally, all gable peaks were surmounted by elaborate finials of turned and cut-out work. The house was made up to date shortly after the turn of the century when its porches with lacey brackets of scroll work were modified by round Tuscan columns on solid railings in the Colonial Revival vein. Other historic alterations were made in the early 20th Century as well.
The Howell-Kohlhagen House is significant to Roseburg in the category of architecture under Criterion C because it is the best preserved of Gothic Revival houses in the city's historic core. Of three houses of comparable style and period recorded in the Roseburg Cultural Resource Inventory, it is the only one remaining on its original site.
In the category of commerce, under Criterion B, the house is considered locally significant for its association with a family which occupied it for four generations. Martin Ryerson Howell, a native of New York who arrived in Roseburg in 1884, purchased the house at the opening of 1885. Howell was the proprietor of the New York Lumber Yard until his death in 1894. It was during the 1880s and 1890s that Howell's daughter Frances operated a private school in the front and back parlors. When the Howell's first daughter Marietta married George Kohlhagen in 1894, the Kohlhagens took up residence in the house along with Howell's widow and Frances Jane. George Kohlhagen (1868-1944), also a native of New York state, entered trade in Roseburg as a butcher and prospered in pursuit of a regional
livestock business and local real estate development. The house is the property most importantly associated with Kohlhagen, a leading businessman who contributed significantly in his capacities as rancher, retailer, real property developer and president of Douglas Building and Loan Association, to the economy and upbuilding of Roseburg from the turn of the century to the time of the Great Depression.
This residence is currently home to Hokanson's Guest House Bed & Breakfast.
County / Borough / Parish: Douglas County
Year listed: 1988
Historic (Areas of) Significance: Person, Architecture/Engineering
Periods of significance: 1925-1949, 1900-1924, 1875-1899
Historic function: Domestic
Current function: Domestic
Privately owned?: yes
Primary Web Site: [Web Link]
Secondary Website 2: [Web Link]
Street address: Not listed
Season start / Season finish: Not listed
Hours of operation: Not listed
Secondary Website 1: Not listed
National Historic Landmark Link: Not listed
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