Hooper-Bowler-Hillstrom House

Hooper-Bowler-Hillstrom House

Infobox_nrhp | name =Hooper-Bowler-Hillstrom House
nrhp_type =


caption =
location= Court and Cedar Streets, Belle Plaine, Minnesota
lat_degrees = 44
lat_minutes = 37
lat_seconds = 36
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 93
long_minutes = 45
long_seconds = 55
long_direction = W
locmapin = Minnesota
area =
built =1871
architect= Unknown
architecture= Frame
added = April 17, 1980
governing_body = Local
mpsub=Scott County MRA
refnum=80002160cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2007-01-23|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]

The Hooper-Bowler-Hillstrom House was built in 1871 in Belle Plaine, Minnesota by Sandford A. Hooper, a local businessman and promoter of the town. In 1886, it conveyed to Samuel Bowler, a founder of the State Bank of Belle Plaine and lumber-yard owner. Bowler added a new kitchen, buttery, and a five-hole, two-story outhouse that is connected to the house via a skyway. He also added a copper-lined bathtub. When the Bowlers moved to Denver, Colorado in 1901, the clapboard frame house was sold to Alfred Hillstrom whose family lived in the house until it was purchased in 1975 by the town's Historical Society. It is now owned by the city of Belle Plaine and is open to the public. Current furnishings include three periods-1850s and 1860s, Victorian, and early 1900s. [cite web| title = Hooper-Bowler-Hillstrom House at Court Square Park| publisher = City of Belle Plaine| url = http://www.belleplainemn.com/about/HooperHouse.php| accessdate =2008-05-14] cite book|title=The National Register of Historic Places in Minnesota|last=Nord|first=Mary Ann|publisher=Minnesota Historical Society|date=2003|isbn=0-87351-448-3]

Additional features include a well-pump in the kitchen, a wood stove, and a large carriage stone on the front lawn, which acted as a step for ascending into or descending from carriages. Surviving outbuildings include a wood shed used to store coal and wood to fuel the stoves in the house and a brick smoke house. Furnishing include a "courting chair" in which young couples would sit back-to-back. [cite web| title = Historical Building: Two Story Outhouse| publisher = Brewery Creek Garden Center| url = http://www.bcfarm.com/page.html?id=11| accessdate = 2008-05-14] [cite web| last =Pouliot| first = Christopher L.| title = City of Belle Plaine Local Attractions| url = http://www.frontiernet.net/~bellepln/Local_Attractions.htm| accessdate =2008-05-14]

The home has a low-pitched roof and central chimneys; it is adorned with a long, covered front porch and is specially decorated for Christmas. In addition to the winter holiday, the home is open to the public in the summer. Visitors may see the distinctive outhouse, but may not use it. Similar to other two-story outhouses, the waste from the upper level flows behind a false wall in the lower level.

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