The story of the Twentieth Century
Club’s meeting place is long and convoluted, its start with the
home of Joel Mead, a lumberman and partner in the Mead and Ripley
Company. Mr. Mead built his Italianate house circa 1860 on the
corner of Wisconsin Ave. and High Street, his partner Sylvanus Ripley
built his house around the corner on Algoma Blvd. In 1900 the heirs
of Joel Mead either sold or bequeathed the house to The Ladies
Benevolent Society. The group had been around for many years and
maintained the Home for the Friendless a home for elderly and
indigent old women. The home was a small old house located on Main
Street and it was the hope of some the club members to convert the
Mead place into the groups’ headquarters and home for the
friendless. The leaders of the society even went so far as to hier
William Waters to draw plans for an eight room addition and other
improvements. The next monthly meeting was poorly attended but the society voted any way to move ahead with the renovation plan. The
next week there was yet another meeting where it was reviled that a
$10,000 bequest from the estate of the Senator Sawyer was only good
if a new building were to be constructed. The senator’s son Edger
assured the ladies that an endowment of $10.000 would be set aside
should the society ever decide to build a new home. A few days later
those members against the plan made their opposition known.
So great was the argument stated that
Ladies Benevolent Society abandoned plan to renovation the Mead House
and sold it to the Twentieth Century Association for $5,000. The
Twentieth Century Association was formed in 1898 to promote music and art in the community. Their plan was to renovate the house,
making it into a modern club house to be used by various clubs. By
April of 1901 the firm of William Waters & Son had drawn plans
and bids were let for the remodeling which was expected to cost
$10.000. The club house was completed by mid October of 1901 with the first use coming on the last day of that month. The club sold the building in 1968 and has since been converted to student housing.
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