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Historical Survey Report 1992
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Historical Survey Report 1992
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Last modified
4/21/2024 8:52:24 AM
Creation date
4/16/2024 11:28:06 AM
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Template:
CITYWIDE
Doc Type
Historical Records
Signed Date
8/1/1982
Record Series Code
50.000
Record Series Name
Historical Records
Quality Check
4/21/2024
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Dr. Wolfer's office, (Le Nan Collectibles), offers a good unal- <br />tered example of this refined cornice treatment. <br />Reflecting the improved economic status of the town's grow- <br />ing "gentry", (mine superintendants, public officials, and even <br />saloon keepers), Louisville's most • imposing domestic architec- <br />ture was constructed at this time. The DiFrancia House, (1045 <br />LaFarge), was built in 1904, and exhibited Queen Anne detailing <br />with its complexity of intersecting gables, poly -chrome brickwork <br />and quoins, and scalloped shingles under the eaves. Eusebio Di- <br />Francia was a saloon owner, and therefore revealed the lucrative- <br />ness of his profession at that time in the construction of this <br />house. Queen 'Anne features are also found on the frame Tobey <br />House (1100 Jefferson), built in 1905, and the Taylor -Williams <br />House (1101 Jefferson), built in 1908. These include various <br />applications of scalloped eave shingles, bay windows, asymetri- <br />cal floor plans, and offset gables. <br />The topography of the townsite had a definate bearing on <br />this new period of construction. The ground rises gently yet <br />prominently towards the northwest, making the desirability of <br />living "on the hill" a symbolic expression of personal financial <br />success. The developers of the Louisville Heights, Pleasant Hill, <br />and Capito3.:Hill additions, correspondingly were able to sell <br />lots in the neighborhood for upwards of one hundred dollars, while <br />lots in the less desirable Murphy Place, for example, were selling <br />for forty to sixty dollars in 1909 because of their location near <br />the tracks in the southern part of town. <br />Additionally, the Louisville Fault runs diagonally across <br />the town from southwest to northeast. Coal, and consequently <br />undermining, was found to the south of this line,within the town <br />limits, providing an extra incentive for the more fortunate to <br />build north of the fault. <br />Even though trees, (apparently watered from wells), are evi- <br />dent in early photos of:the town, the construction of the Louis- <br />ville Reservoir in 1895 and the completion of the $30,000 water <br />works: brought aum increased capability to plant numerous trees, <br />shrubbery and gardens; a significant feature of the 'built en- <br />vironment". The tree -lined streets broadcast the fact that the <br />
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