Years ago, I photographed many buildings I knew to be the
work of William Waters, also those I suspected to be by him. One of the houses
which attracted my attention was on the south-east corner of Mt. Vernon and
Dale Street. in Oshkosh. The house
exhibited many of the signature elements that could mark it as the work of
architect Waters; long narrow window in the gables and curved brackets. To look at the house now, it is hard to
imagine the beauty and grace that attended the dwelling when built in 1882.
The house was constructed for Charles Repe a stone cutter
who’s name first appears in the city directory of 1876. In those days, Mr. Repe lived at 64 Mt.
Vernon Street and his stone cutting operation was on Marion Rd. by the
river. He advertised himself as a
practical stone cutter suppling cut stone, flagging, curbing and coping work
for cemetery work. Business must have
been good for by the early 1880’s Charles was able to move his wife and family
to a large, stylish house further north on Mt. Vernon Street, he even became
involved in local politics, representing the forth ward on the city
council. Queen Anne Style was all the
rage then and the Repe house was a beauty; a porch across the front, long
narrow windows in the gables and gracefully curved bracket supporting
over-hanging roofs. There was even an
intriguing bay on the second-floor corner with several small windows and a
cartouche-like medallion.
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