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Mackinaw Historic District Home Tour
Item 37 of 52
This is a contributing entry for Mackinaw Historic District Home Tour and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

In 1890, P. H. Rue bought this lot for $600 and probably the next year built this Eastlake style home. Although all decorative and many architectural details are now hidden under the present siding, we know much about the appearance of the house from diagrams and two old photographs. The house had a porch running along its entire front and east sides. And it had a projecting bay from its southwest corner, somewhat similar in appearance to the one still present on 230 Park, except the bay here had an open second floor porch with pointed roof. The photos show the house and porch covered in rich detail, including checkerboard board pattern above the three windows in the projecting west gable. Still identifiable on the projecting front attic gable is what was once another recessed porch. P. H. Rue was a lawyer who worked on Main Street in Franklin and was responsible for many of the land conveyances that led to the development of this neighborhood. The 1907 directory lists this address as 26 Park Avenue. The 1900 and 1910 censuses show Rue’s family consisted of his wife, Alma, and three children. By 1920, only one son was living at home. In 1924, the house became the property of Rue’s son, Milton. Milton was responsible for establishing a scholarship that has enabled many to obtain an education at Miami University.