- Source: Edward F. Niehaus House
The Edward F. Niehaus House is a historic private residence built in 1889 in the West Berkeley neighborhood of Berkeley, California, U.S.. It is listed by the city as a Berkeley Landmark (no.11), since June 21, 1976.
History
It was built for Edward F. Niehaus (1852–1910), a German-born lumber businessman, who was active in local politics and was elected to the Berkeley Board of School Directors.
The Edward F. Niehaus House was built in 1889, in an Stick-Eastlake style with decorative relief patterns. It is considered as "West Berkeley’s grandest surviving Victorian residence". Between 1890 and 1892, Niehaus built seven additional speculative wooden houses on the same block, and the "Niehaus Bros. West Berkeley Planing Mill"; but unfortunately fires destroyed all of them.
See also
List of Berkeley Landmarks in Berkeley, California
Concatenated Order of Hoo-Hoo
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Edward F. Niehaus House
- Niehaus
- List of Berkeley landmarks
- List of artwork at the United States Capitol complex
- Statues of the National Statuary Hall Collection
- List of film score composers
- Brodiaea
- Ohio House of Representatives membership, 125th General Assembly
- Architecture of Buffalo, New York
- List of 20th-century religious leaders