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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




LOG CABIN

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Log cabin on the grounds of the Ham House Museum

LOG CABIN. (Louis Arrandeaux/Wlliam Newman Log House) Now located at the HAM HOUSE Museum, the cabin is believed to be the oldest building in Iowa. Constructed in 1827, the cabin stood at Second and Locust STREETS. (1)

The cabin was built, according to best records, by Louis Arrandeaux, a miner believed married to a daughter of Chief Blackhawk. A barber, Samuel Ellmer, later lived in the cabin and used his mastery of ventriloquism to convince Native Americans in the area that he had magical powers. The building, therefore, became a place of shelter for whites who knew they were safe from attack. (2)

The cabin was constructed in a form called dogtrot. The style developed in Sweden, Germany, Finland and Russia centuries before it appeared in Dubuque. In most, the kitchen, dining room and living room existed in one portion. The other portion served as a bedroom. Each part had its own fireplace. Theories exist that the breezeway between the two parts was to provide good airflow. (3) Given the cold regions in which it was developed, however, it may just as well have given inhabitants an opportunity to escape cooking odors.

In 1834 William Newman purchased the cabin and lived in it with his guardian, Mary Smith, after her parents died of CHOLERA. Years later, he offered Augustin A. COOPER, his apprentice, the opportunity of living in the half of the cabin containing the kitchen. At the age of twenty-two, Cooper married Mary Smith on the threshold of the cabin with Bishop Mathias LORAS officiating. (4)

Postcard of the cabin in Eagle Point Park.
File:Logcabinb.png
Reverse of the postcard falsely linking the cabin to Julien Dubuque.

Clapboards painted white were eventually nailed to the cabin and disguised it until 1915 when it was discovered by Frederick Ezekiel BISSELL.

The building was moved to EAGLE POINT PARK, rebuilt and used as a park shelter. In 1957 it was recognized by the Dubuque Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution who marked it with a bronze plaque. The building was moved to the grounds of the Ham House in 1967.

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Source:

1. Larry FRIEDMAN and Katherine FISCHER, A. A. Cooper: Reinvesting the Wheel, River City Press, 2016, p. 42

2. Ibid.

3. Ibid.

4. Ibid., p. 57