Brattain-Hadley House (Springfield, Oregon)
- Title
-
Brattain-Hadley House (Springfield, Oregon)
- LC Subject
-
Architecture, American
Architecture--United States
- Description
-
National Register of Historic Places (Listed, 1995; removed, 2012)
In 1997, fire destroyed much of the Brattain-Hadley House and in 2012 it was demolished. Paul Brattain, an 1852 pioneer, obtained a 160-acre donation land claim soon after moving from Iowa to Oregon. The Brattain farm was entirely within modern Springfield city limits. When Brattain died in 1893, his descendants built the Queen Anne style house. Paul Hadley, Brattain's grandson, was the last of Brattain's descendants to occupy the house in the 1940s. Hadley's daughter, Mary Hadley Callis, allowed vagrants to occupy the house until the 1997 fire. The house was removed from the National Register on May 8, 2012. Source: Wikipedia.
- View
-
exterior: north elevation
- Provenance
-
Design Library, University of Oregon Libraries
- Temporal
-
1890-1899
- Work Type
-
architecture (object genre)
built works
views (visual works)
exterior views
dwellings
houses
- Latitude
-
44.045995
- Longitude
-
-123.00771
- Location
-
Springfield >> Lane County >> Oregon >> United States
Lane County >> Oregon >> United States
Oregon >> United States
United States
- Street Address
-
1260 Main Street
- Date
-
1893
- Identifier
-
pna_00618
- Item Locator
-
VRC Slide 726 AmO Sp84 4B-1; 97-04877
- Rights
-
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
- Rights Holder
-
Oregon State Historic Preservation Office
- Source
-
Oregon State Historic Preservation Office, http://www.oregon.gov/OPRD/HCD/SHPO/
- Type
-
Image
- Format
-
image/tiff
- Set
-
Building Oregon
- Primary Set
-
Building Oregon
- Institution
-
University of Oregon
- Citation
-
National Register of Historic Places, http://www.nps.gov/nr/
- Note
-
This image was included in the documentation to support a nomination to the National Register of Historic Places, a program of the National Park Service. The image is provided here by the Oregon State Historic Preservation Office and the University of Oregon Libraries to facilitate scholarship, research, and teaching. For other uses, such as publication, contact the State Historic Preservation Office. Please credit the Oregon State Historic Preservation Office when using this image.