Warm Springs Avenue Historic District

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Warm Springs Avenue Historic District
Charles C. Cavanah House.jpg
The Charles C. Cavanah House (1925) is a contributing resource in the Warm Springs Avenue Historic District.
LocationWarm Springs Ave., Boise, Idaho
Area53 acres (21 ha)
ArchitectMultiple
Architectural styleColonial Revival, Queen Anne, Bungalow;Tudor;Mission Rev.
NRHP reference # 80001287 [1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 22, 1980

The Warm Springs Avenue Historic District in Boise, Idaho, is a residential area with 96 contributing houses representing a variety of architectural styles constructed between 1870 and 1940. The district includes Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, Tudor Revival, Bungalow, and other styles representing the work of architects Tourtellotte & Hummel, Wayland & Fennell, Kirtland Cutter, and others. The Children's Home Society of Idaho occupies the largest structure in the district, and its buildings are the only structures that are not houses. [2]

Boise, Idaho State capital city in Idaho, United States

Boise is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Idaho, and is the county seat of Ada County. Located on the Boise River in southwestern Idaho, the population of Boise at the 2010 Census was 205,671, the 99th largest in the United States. Its estimated population in 2016 was 223,154.

Idaho State of the United States of America

Idaho is a state in the northwestern region of the United States. It borders the state of Montana to the east and northeast, Wyoming to the east, Nevada and Utah to the south, and Washington and Oregon to the west. To the north, it shares a small portion of the Canadian border with the province of British Columbia. With a population of approximately 1.7 million and an area of 83,569 square miles (216,440 km2), Idaho is the 14th largest, the 12th least populous and the 7th least densely populated of the 50 U.S. states. The state's capital and largest city is Boise.

Colonial Revival architecture

Colonial Revival architecture was and is a nationalistic design movement in the United States and Canada. Part of a broader Colonial Revival Movement embracing Georgian and Neoclassical styles, it seeks to revive elements of architectural style, garden design, and interior design of American colonial architecture.

Contents

In 1892 Christopher W. Moore built the first large house on Warm Springs Avenue. Moore owned the Boise Artesian Hot and Cold Water Company, and his house was the first residence in the United States to be heated by geothermal means. Other prominent Boise residents built homes on the avenue, and many depended on Moore's water company for heat. [3]

The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980, [2] and it was designated a local historic district by the City of Boise in 1996. [4]

National Register of Historic Places federal list of historic sites in the United States

The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the United States federal government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation for their historical significance. A property listed in the National Register, or located within a National Register Historic District, may qualify for tax incentives derived from the total value of expenses incurred preserving the property.

List of contributing properties

This list of contributing resources includes the site name, year, address, architect, and style where information is available. [2] Additional information and references are included for some properties.

South side of East Warm Springs Avenue

  • Edwin Davis House (1910), 511 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Davis Estate Rental House (1910), 525 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Clement Moore House (1912), 531 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • John D. Springer House (1897), 605 E Warm Springs Ave, Queen Anne
  • Robert Fraser House (1894), 615 E Warm Springs Ave, Queen Anne
  • Lee Estes House (1903), 635 E Warm Springs Ave, Tourtellotte & Co., Queen Anne
  • Estes Carriage House (1903), 635 12 E Warm Springs Ave
  • Benjamin and Emilie Wilson House (1895), 709 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival, Queen Anne [5]
  • Wilson Rental House (1896), 715 E Warm Springs Ave
  • Wilson Rental House (1898), 739 E Warm Springs Ave
  • Wilson Rental House (1898), 741 E Warm Springs Ave
  • White Rental House (1900), 805 E Warm Springs Ave
  • White Rental House (1901), 807 E Warm Springs Ave
  • John White House (1900, 1923), 809, 809 12 E Warm Springs Ave
  • F.H. Brandt House (1916), 815 E Warm Springs Ave, Prairie Style [6]
  • Craig Coffin House (1919), 829 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Colonial Revival
  • Walter Cranston House (1935), 905 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Jack Skillern House (1909), 915 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Bungalow
  • C.C. Anderson House (1925), 929 E Warm Springs Ave, Kirtland Cutter, Jacobean Revival
  • Charles O. Davidson House (1916), 945 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Colonial Revival
  • William Regan House (1911), 1009 E Warm Springs Ave, Tourtellotte & Hummel, Mission Revival
  • George Russell House (1869), 1035 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • J.E. Clinton House (1906), 1037 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Colonial Revival
  • Moore-Cunningham House (1892), 1109 E Warm Springs Ave, James King, Queen Anne
  • Frank H. Parsons House (1925), 1127 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Tudor Revival
  • Roger M. Davidson House (1901), 1205 E Warm Springs Ave, W.S. Campbell, Colonial Revival
  • Julius Steinmeier House (1907), 1215 E Warm Springs Ave (moved from First and Idaho Sts), John Smith, Colonial Revival
  • S.B. Kingsbury House (1897), 1225 E Warm Springs Ave, James King, Queen Anne
  • Joseph Dollard House (1938), 1305 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • J.B. Lyon House (1899), 1311 E Warm Springs Ave, Queen Anne, Colonial Revival
  • Thomas Finnegan House (1901), 1321 E Warm Springs Ave, Queen Anne
  • (1905, 1920), 1403 E Warm Springs Ave, Bungalow
  • Jesse Jackson House (1906), 1415 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • John K. Enboe House (1903), 1419 E Warm Springs Ave, Campbell & Wayland, Queen Anne
  • Thomas K. Little House (1922), 1433 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival [7]
  • Eugene Brasie House (1920), 1503 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Connor House (1919), 1505 E Warm Springs Ave, Bungalow
  • 1525 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Robert Davidson House (1920), 1609 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Charles Rathbun House (1919), 1615 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Colonial Revival
  • C.H. Nixon House (1922), 1621 E Warm Springs Ave, Bungalow
  • John W. Maynard House (1879), 1703 E Warm Springs Ave [8]
  • (1930s), 1707 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
Moore-Cunningham House historic house in Boise, Idaho, USA

The Moore-Cunningham House is a Queen Anne style mansion designed by architect James King and constructed in Boise, Idaho in 1892. The brick house is 6326 square feet and contains five bedrooms, 4.75 bathrooms, and features a wraparound veranda and an observation tower. It is the first house in the United States to be heated by geothermal means.

North side of East Warm Springs Avenue

  • 510 E Warm Springs Ave, Queen Anne
  • 514 E Warm Springs Ave
  • 520 E Warm Springs Ave, Bungalow
  • 530 E Warm Springs Ave, Bungalow
  • 600 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • 604 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Children's Home Society of Idaho (1910, 1934), 740 E Warm Springs Ave, Tourtellotte & Hummel, Colonial Revival
  • (1898), 836 E Warm Springs Ave
  • Lola Shaw House (1917), 838 E Warm Springs Ave, Bungalow
  • (1898), 840 E Warm Springs Ave
  • (1922), 848 E Warm Springs Ave, Bungalow
  • Joseph Kinney House (1904), 904 E Warm Springs Ave, Tourtellotte & Co., Queen Anne
  • John S. Parker House (1910), 910 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Risley House, 912 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Carl J. Hill House (1913), 916 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Colonial Revival
  • W.M. Davidson House (1905), 920 E Warm Springs Ave, Tourtellotte & Co., Colonial Revival, Bungalow
  • Benjamin F. Howe (1913), 1002 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Roger C. Davidson House (1938), 1010 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • J.E. Moore House (1912), 1016 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • B.W. Walker House (1909), 1104 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Colonial Revival
  • W.A. Goulder House (1890), 1110 E Warm Springs Ave
  • C.V. Parks House (1939), 1120 E Warm Springs Ave, Tudor Revival
  • I.B. Fitchen House (1895), 1204 E Warm Springs Ave, Queen Anne
  • Charles C. Cavanah House (1925), 1302 E Warm Springs Ave, Charles Hummel, Colonial Revival [9]
  • Lindley Cox House, 1308 E Warm Springs Ave, Tourtellotte & Co., Colonial Revival
  • F.F. Johnson House (1910), 1312 E Warm Springs Ave, Wayland & Fennell, Colonial Revival
  • Leo Falk House (1922), 1320 E Warm Springs Ave, Kirtland Cutter, Mission Revival
  • J.S. Springer House (1922), 1414 E Warm Springs Ave, Tudor Revival
  • Alfred Budge House (1927), 1418 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Jacob Wagner House (1894), 1420 E Warm Springs Ave, Queen Anne [10]
  • A.H. Budge House (1931), 1424 E Warm Springs Ave, Colonial Revival
  • Edward Payne House (1899), 1504 E Warm Springs Ave, John E. Tourtellotte, Colonial Revival
  • Francis Stone House (1930), 1510 E Warm Springs Ave, Tudor Revival
  • Uriah Seaman House (1899), 1514 E Warm Springs Ave
  • Richard B. Kading House (1922), 1516 E Warm Springs Ave, Bungalow
  • Leo Falk House (1925), 1522 E Warm Springs Ave, Mediterranean Revival

Houses on streets parallel or intersecting with Warm Springs Avenue

See also

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Edward Welch House

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References

  1. National Park Service (2013-11-02). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service.
  2. 1 2 3 "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Warm Springs Avenue Historic District". National Park Service . Retrieved February 21, 2019. With accompanying pictures
  3. "Warms Springs Avenue Historic District". City of Boise. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  4. "Warm Springs Avenue Historic District". East End Neighborhood Association. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  5. "Pioneer of Note Passes Beyond". Idaho Statesman. Boise, Idaho. June 3, 1920. p. 5.
  6. "Dr. Brandt Draws Own Plans for New House". Idaho Statesman. Boise, Idaho. May 30, 1916. p. 10.
  7. See Thomas K. Little House in Caldwell
  8. Former residents included Idaho Governor Frank W. Hunt and architect James A. Fennell.
  9. See C.C. Cavanah House, adjacent to the West Warm Springs Historic District
  10. Moved from First and Jefferson Sts.
  11. Former home of Idaho governor Robert E. Smylie.