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Mackinaw Historic District Home Tour
Item 11 of 52
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This house is the oldest in the neighborhood, but exactly who built it is a mystery. The traditional version is that James Chamberlain purchased 171 acres from Derrick Polemus (D. P.) Barkalow in 1847, and soon after built this house. However, property records indicate that in 1843, the northeast portion of the property passed from D. P. Barkalow to his daughter, Mariah Dubois, the wife of Peter Dubois, and they owned the property until 1855. Whoever built it, the house is a classic “I” (for being common throughout Indiana, Illinois, Iowa), and has a simple two story symmetrical façade set off by an elaborate wrought iron portico entrance.


The census does indicate the widow Mariah Dubois and seven other relatives, including her children, were here in 1850. In 1855, if not before, the lot entered the Chamberlain family. A deed at the Franklin Area Historical Society shows James Chamberlain sold off 156 acres, of this land, to L. G. Anderson, retaining 15 acres for himself. In 1875, Chamberlain sold off the lots that became today’s 205, 209, 291, and 309 Oxford Road. The 1880 census shows that the, by then very old, James and Mary Ann Chamberlain still living here. In 1887, the land passed to Sarah Emley, the widowed daughter of James and Mary Ann Chamberlain. The remainder of the Chamberlain acreage was sold to the Mackinaw Development Corporation later that year by Sarah Emley’s son, Maximo, a grocer. By 1900, the house had passed through two more of the Chamberlain daughters until becoming the property of Nancy Lane, a fourth Chamberlain daughter. The 1900 census shows Nancy, her husband Arthur Lane, and their two daughters there. In 1910, Nancy and her daughter were still there. From 1937 to 1950, the house was owned by Edwin S. Eldridge and Harry C. Eldridge (who owned other houses in the neighborhood).