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Added to NRHP. December 10, 2014. The Wing–Allore House is a funeral home located at 203 E. Elm Avenue in Monroe. The house was built as a private home, converted to a funeral home in the 1930s, and remains in business as the Allore Chapel of the Martenson Family of Funeral Homes. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.
1906 2.5-story Queen Anne home, with a 2-story round veranda with Neoclassical columns in place of the typical corner tower. [9] Albert and his brother William ran a hardware store/carriage shop/implement dealership, a garage, Reo dealership, and music store. [10] 3: Monroe County Courthouse: Monroe County Courthouse
Frank L. Chenoweth, a wealthy local merchant and the son of early resident Benjamin Chenoweth, built the house in 1888-89. The two-and-a-half story house has a Queen Anne design featuring a wraparound front porch with ornamental spindlework, a pediment with a sunburst design above the entrance, and a projecting bay topped by a large bracketed ...
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The Monroe Water Tower is a historic water tower built in 1889 in Monroe, Wisconsin. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. The first settlers came to Monroe in the 1830s. The community grew, adding a sawmill and other small industries. The railroad came in 1858, and Monroe incorporated as a village the same year.
June 24, 1931. New Brunswick, Canada. Died. June 9, 2016 (aged 84) Olathe, Kansas, U.S. Alma mater. Eastern Nazarene College. Fuller Theological Seminary ( D.Min.) Arnold Gordon Wetmore was an American theologian who was president emeritus of the Nazarene Theological Seminary and a former president of the Northwest Nazarene College .
The C. D. Hulburt House is a historic house at 1205 13th Avenue in Monroe, Wisconsin. History. The house was built in 1878 for Chauncey D. Hulburt, a prominent lumberman who moved to Green County from Onondaga County, New York in 1847. His father, Julius Hulburt, was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly.
75000066 [1] Added to NRHP. January 1, 1975. The General Francis H. West House is an octagon house built in 1860 in Monroe, Wisconsin. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 for its association with the historically significant West, and for its unusual combination of multiple polygons. [3] [1]