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H.E. Fledderjohann Property

Historic house museums in OhioHouses in Auglaize County, OhioHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in OhioItalianate architecture in OhioKitchen
Museums in Auglaize County, OhioNational Register of Historic Places in Auglaize County, OhioQueen Anne architecture in Ohio
H.E. Fledderjohann House front and side
H.E. Fledderjohann House front and side

The H.E. Fledderjohann Property is a complex of five historic buildings in the village of New Knoxville, Ohio, United States. Three of these structures — a house, a doctor's office, and a standalone kitchen building — were owned and used by Fledderjohann, a prominent New Knoxville physician in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article H.E. Fledderjohann Property (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

H.E. Fledderjohann Property
South Mill Street,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.493333333333 ° E -84.315555555556 °
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Address

South Mill Street 236
45871
Ohio, United States
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H.E. Fledderjohann House front and side
H.E. Fledderjohann House front and side
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Nearby Places

Julius Boesel House
Julius Boesel House

The Julius Boesel House is a historic house near the village of New Bremen in the northwestern part of the U.S. state of Ohio. Located in German Township in southwestern Auglaize County, it is a well-preserved Queen Anne mansion.Said to be designed by J.A. Chapin of Lima, the design of the house is based heavily on Design No. 53 from George Franklin Barber's Cottage Souvenir #2. The house was built for Julius Boesel, a leading member of New Bremen society. The design mixed brick and frame construction, sitting atop a stone foundation, to produce this twenty-room, two-and-a-half story house. When Boesel and his family moved into the house in late October 1895, the local newspaper spoke favorably of the new building, calling it "one of the finest in the county" and observing that the "view of the building while coming from Lock Two almost makes a person feel as though he were entering the suburb of a big city.": 217  Included on the property was a massive carriage house.After being extensively modified in the third quarter of the twentieth century, the house was purchased in 1976 by Donald and Jacqui Kuck, who began a long-term restoration program. Included in their program was the removal of intrusive elements such as lowered ceilings and carpets on the walls.: 217  The Kucks were able to restore the house to the point that it qualified for addition to the National Register of Historic Places,: 219  and it was listed on the Register on March 30, 1985.