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Mathias Ham House

Coordinates: 42°31′53″N 90°39′2″W / 42.53139°N 90.65056°W / 42.53139; -90.65056
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Mathias Ham House
Mathias Ham House January 2012
Mathias Ham House is located in Iowa
Mathias Ham House
Mathias Ham House is located in the United States
Mathias Ham House
Location2241 Lincoln Ave., Dubuque, Iowa
Coordinates42°31′53″N 90°39′2″W / 42.53139°N 90.65056°W / 42.53139; -90.65056
Built1856
ArchitectJohn F. Rague[2]
Architectural styleLate Victorian
NRHP reference No.76000764 [1]
Added to NRHPJuly 19, 1976

The Mathias Ham House is a 19th-century house in Dubuque, Iowa that is on the National Register of Historic Places. It is located at the intersection of Shiras and Lincoln Avenues,[2] near the entrances to Eagle Point Park and Riverview Park.[3]

Description

The house was designed by John F. Rague and built for local businessman and lead miner Mathias Ham in 1856.[citation needed] Ham had owned an island in the Mississippi River at Dubuque, called Ham's Island (which has since renamed City Island and then Chaplain Schmitt Memorial Island, after Father Aloysius Schmitt).[4] The architect, John F. Rague, who had designed the original state capitol buildings at Springfield, Illinois and at Iowa City, Iowa, designed the house in the Italian Villa style.[2]

The Mathias Ham House has been restored and transformed into a museum showcasing life during the Antebellum era; it contains American and European furnishings from that period. The property also features a double log cabin[3] in the dogtrot style, which is considered the oldest building in Iowa. The cabin was built originally at the location of 2nd and Locust Streets in Dubuque, then moved to Eagle Point Park in Dubuque before being moved to the Mathias Ham House Historic Site.[2]

Additionally, a one-room schoolhouse (the former Humke School) was relocated to the property. A replica mine shaft and "badger hole" or "badger hut" were constructed on the property to educate the public about Dubuque's lead mining history.[citation needed]

Museum

The museum is operated by the Dubuque County Historical Society, which also operates the Old Jail Museum and the National Mississippi River Museum & Aquarium.[2]

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Mathias Ham House". City of Dubuque.
  3. ^ a b "Mathias Ham House, Dubuque, Iowa". Iowa Beautiful.
  4. ^ "City Island". Encyclopedia Dubuque.