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JOSEPHINE FRANKENBERG HOUSE
Originally at 129 EAST UNIVERSITY DRIVE
Moved to
Olde Towne Square (150 SOUTH ASH AVENUE)
HISTORIC ELIGIBLE
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Survey Number: |
HPS-240 |
| Year Built: |
1910 |
| Architectural Style: |
Neo Classical |
SUMMARY
The
1910 Neo-Classical style Josephine Frankenberg House originally at 129 E.
University Drive and now moved to Olde Towne Square is significant as
representative of the first major building boom in Tempe; for its association
with its builders, James W. Woolf and Milton H. Meyer; and for its architectural
qualities as the best-preserved and largest local example of rusticated concrete
block construction in Tempe.
A: HISTORIC EVENTS
The 1910 Neo-Classical style
Josephine Frankenberg House is among the oldest of the remaining properties of
similar construction and represents the best local example of the type in both
design and craftsmanship. Built in 1910, the house is representative of the
first major building boom in Tempe which was to last until the post-World War I
depression. The builders (Meyer and Woolf) were responsible for the initial
development of the concrete block industry in Tempe. By the end of 1910, their
Tempe plant was producing building blocks of various sizes, concrete tiling, and
headgates for irrigation.
B: PERSONS
Local contractors James W.
Woolf and Milton H. Meyer began construction on the Frankenberg House began in
November of 1909. Milton J. Meyer, a local carpenter and craftsman, was the
first to introduce the use of concrete block as a construction material in
Tempe. Meyer is credited with the construction of many buildings in the Valley,
including eight churches in Glendale, Phoenix, and Tempe. He is also associated
with the first major building expansion program at the Tempe Normal School (now
ASU) as the principal carpentry contractor for buildings constructed between
1905 and 1916. With financial backing from James W. Woolf, a longtime Tempe
resident and prominent citizen, Meyer moved the concrete block industry
forward. Although built for Theodore Dickenson, the house is named for
Josephine Frankenberg, who purchased it in 1919, and continuously occupied it
until her death in 1949. Josephine nursed many
victims back to health during the Great Influenza epidemic in 1918. She
rented rooms on the second floor to boarders, mostly single teachers employed at
the Normal School. In the 1970s and 1980s, the house served as office space for
Arizona State University.
C:
ARCHITECTURE
The Josephine Frankenberg
House was dismantled and rebuilt at Olde Towne Square (150 S. Ash Avenue) in
1992. The following is the architectural description for the original intact
building prior to its move to a new location. The Frankenberg House is
significant for its architectural qualities as the best-preserved and largest
local example of rusticated concrete block construction in Tempe. The
Frankenberg House is a two-story residence built of rusticated concrete block,
and is essentially Neo-Classical in style. It is rectangular in plan, surmounted
by a moderately-pitched roof. An offset gable extension is on the north façade.
Broad gabled ventilating dormers are centrally located on the other three roof
slopes. Each gable is detailed with multiple shaped shingles. The original
shingle roof had been covered with ribbed roofing tile. A veranda with a
low-pitched hipped roof extends along the north and east facades and is
supported by eight precast concrete columns resting on a continuous low concrete
block wall. Both north and east facades have slightly projecting frame bays on
the lower level. The front door is original and features a single light with
molded and beveled panels and decorative stamped hardware.
SOURCES
Tempe History Museum
Historic Property Survey -
http://www.tempe.gov/museum/Tempe_history/properties/hps240.htm
photo
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Josephine_Frankenberg_House_(Tempe,_Arizona).jpg
photo
http://www.mytripjournal.com/pv/314471-2-1-0-0-Old-Town-Square--Frankenberg-House
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