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Roy and Leola Gangware House

1932 establishments in OregonHouses completed in 1932Houses in Multnomah County, OregonHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in OregonNational Register of Historic Places in Multnomah County, Oregon
Oregon Registered Historic Place stubsPortland Historic LandmarksTudor Revival architecture in OregonUse mdy dates from August 2023
Roy and Leola Gangware House in 2013
Roy and Leola Gangware House in 2013

The Roy and Leola Gangware House, is a historic house in Multnomah County, Oregon, United States, just outside the Portland municipal boundary. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Roy and Leola Gangware House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Roy and Leola Gangware House
Southwest Humphrey Boulevard, Portland Southwest Hills

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Wikipedia: Roy and Leola Gangware HouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.504596 ° E -122.726419 °
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Address

Southwest Humphrey Boulevard 4848
97221 Portland, Southwest Hills
Oregon, United States
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Roy and Leola Gangware House in 2013
Roy and Leola Gangware House in 2013
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Nearby Places

E. J. O'Donnell House
E. J. O'Donnell House

The E. J. O'Donnell House in Multnomah County, Oregon, just outside the Portland municipal boundary, was designed in 1938 by architect Richard Sundeleaf for dairyman and cattle breeder Edward J. O'Donnell. It was completed in 1940.The single-story house was designed to be wheelchair-accessible for a child of the O'Donnells'. It has a "multiplicity of steeply-pitched cross gables at the east end and a variegated exterior of brick, lapped weatherboards as gable cladding, and secondary siding of boards and molded battens." It has bays and projections on its faces, and on the northeast has a kitchen/utility wing and on the southwest has a garage/bedroom wing. Its NRHP nomination describes that:The house displays the essential qualities for which Sundeleaf's Arts and Crafts architecture is admired. Porches have heavy post and beam framing. Solid craftsmanship emphasizes interior wood paneling and trim. A square module is used for division of window space, including sidelights for view windows on which such premium is placed in Portland's west hills. Building volumes are stepped down to the landscape through sheltered terraces and projecting window bays. The architect brings forward from earlier projects (see Clarence Francis House) a rear gallery—an updated screens passage which in archetypical manor houses leads to private compartments from the great hall or circulation core. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.