The family lived at 4152 N. Sheridan in Chicago, Illinois.
The family maintained a second home in Pasadena designed by Frederick Roehrig in 1905. The house was cited as "the most complete example of the California (Southern Californian) interpretation of Arts and Crafts principles." William Le Baron Jenney wrote an article, "A Remarkable Dwelling," about the Eddy House in the May 1906 Inland Architect and News Record. An article about the house was published in The Craftsman magazine. The house was "one of the most important bungalow designs of the period, strongly influencing later ranch style houses throughout California and later the United States." The Pasadena house was torn down in 1973.
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Some of the above data courtesy of contributor # 46830270.
Sources:
MI Marriages
Bk 1887-1889 Vol 6 pg65
1900 MI census
The family lived at 4152 N. Sheridan in Chicago, Illinois.
The family maintained a second home in Pasadena designed by Frederick Roehrig in 1905. The house was cited as "the most complete example of the California (Southern Californian) interpretation of Arts and Crafts principles." William Le Baron Jenney wrote an article, "A Remarkable Dwelling," about the Eddy House in the May 1906 Inland Architect and News Record. An article about the house was published in The Craftsman magazine. The house was "one of the most important bungalow designs of the period, strongly influencing later ranch style houses throughout California and later the United States." The Pasadena house was torn down in 1973.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Some of the above data courtesy of contributor # 46830270.
Sources:
MI Marriages
Bk 1887-1889 Vol 6 pg65
1900 MI census
Family Members
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