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Mackinaw Historic District Home Tour
Item 32 of 52
This is a contributing entry for Mackinaw Historic District Home Tour and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

Edwin S. Eldridge purchased this plot for $300 in 1888, and built the first house on newly laid out Park Avenue here. It was completed by 1890, and it appears on the property tax survey of that year. The house is in a Queen Anne style. The wall treatment of the house is a mixture of horizontal, string course, and wooden panels. The front gable has fish scale siding and a wooden wheel pattern around the multi-light window. Under the gable is an enclosed sleeping porch. The projecting east pavilion has a recessed third floor porch with a lattice frieze. The roof has imbricated design and fish scale slate. The house originally had a small porch on its east side and a large one on the southeast corner. By the 1920s a much wider rounded wrap around porch covered its entire front. The current porch contains fluted Doric order columns.


Eldridge, an evidently very successful salesman of woolens, sold the house in 1897, but by 1905 it was back in the family. The 1910 census showed Edward S. Eldridge, his wife Mary, and their two daughters living here. The 1907 directory also showed them here. At that time the address was 14 Park Avenue. In 1918, it was sold to Fred Zartman, the general manager of the Maxwell Paper Company and President of the Franklin National Bank. The 1920 census shows Zartman living here by himself and he owned the home until 1955.