Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Residences in Green Bay & De Pere

William Waters had two residential commissions in the cities of Green Bay and De Pere. The first was the home of banker  and philanthropist Rufus Kellogg.  My research was sketchy at best, there was no comprehensive biography of him to be found, on line.  I do know he was of the Amherst Massachusetts Kellogg's and he was born in 1837 and past away in Green Bay in 1891.      
There was also precious little information on his dwelling; it is mention in an article about architect Waters published in the Oshkosh Weekly Northwestern dated June 25, 1891.  The house was in the Stick Style and may  have been designed in the late 1870's or early 1880's.  There was a large wing of the house to the right which looked like the foursquare houses of the turn of the century.  To the left was the front door and small porch and behind it and even future to the left  was tower like portion which may have held the stair case.  This tower was capped by bell cast roof with an iron work finial at it's peak, all the the roof ridges were adorned with iron work.  Just behind the tower was a portion of the house which rose to a third floor gable and in that gable was a double window and small balcony.  In 1908 the house was purchased by the Sister of St. Joesph of Carondelet and became St. Joesph Academy for Girls.  It severed in that capacity until the late 1950's when it was replaced and demolished.    
On North Broadway, along the Fox River in De Pere was the home of E.E. Bolles the owner and operator of a wooden ware mill in that city.  The only reference to this dwelling and William Waters was the Northwestern Weekly article from June of 1891.  The house was an early Queen Style and was designed perhaps around 1881.  It was a large house with many porches and bay windows on the first floor and an abundance of windows on the second floor.  Gables, dormer and towering chimneys crowned the house on the attic level.  At sometime the house was remolded and the Queen Anne details were removed in an effort to update the building.

2 comments:

  1. I have not read the book but there is a biography on Rufus Kellogg. I believe Kellogg bank has morphed into today's Associated Bank but I am not positive.

    https://www.amazon.com/That-Place-that-time-Remembering/dp/0964149974

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  2. Regarding the R. B. Kellogg house in Green Bay -- it was completed c. 1877. (ref. Green Bay Press Gazette, 01 June 1877, page 6, "...just south of Mr. R. B. Kellogg's fine new residence...". Circumstantially, 05 June 1877, p. 4, Mrs. R. B. Kellogg is hiring both a cook and a laundress (suggests that the new household was taking shape). Related, the house at 711 Eliza (Green Bay) was an out-building of the Kellogg home and relocated and rehabilitated as a house in c. 1909.

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