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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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ANDREW A. LOETSCHER--1595 MONTROSE: Difference between revisions

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(New page: left|thumb|250px|1595 Montrose. Photo in 2011.ANDREW A. LOETSCHER HOME. In 1900 Andrew A. Loetscher, a Swiss-born banker, built the 6,000 square foot, three-sto...)
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Revision as of 05:25, 16 November 2011

1595 Montrose. Photo in 2011.

ANDREW A. LOETSCHER HOME. In 1900 Andrew A. Loetscher, a Swiss-born banker, built the 6,000 square foot, three-story mansion. Woods from FARLEY & LOETSCHER MANUFACTURING COMPANY of which he was vice-president, were used including quarter-sawn oak for the foyer's paneled walls, the staircase, main living room, and the double set of pocket doors. Cherry, maple, birch, mahogany, and walnut were also incorporated. The trademark of the company, a craftsman's square, is found throughout the house on doors and woodwork.

After the Loetschers, the house was known as the "Trausch home" in the 1920s and 1930s and served as the residence of the Archdiocese of Dubuque's auxiliary bishop, Edward Fitzgerald, in the forties.