Cook-Rutledge
Mansion
505 W. Grand Ave., Chippewa Falls
In September
of 1873 James Monroe Bingham, a local attorney, State Assemblyman,
and future Lieutenant Governor of the State of Wisconsin
purchased this land which had just been plotted as Block
14 of the Western Addition to the City of Chippewa Falls
for $2,500. Bingham immediately began construction of a
house completing the original structure in 1874 at a cost
of $7,600.
Bingham
died in January, 1885, but his wife continued to live in
the house until August, 1887 when the property was sold
to lumber man Edward Rutledge and his wife, Hannah for $5,500.
The home you see today is the result of the Rutledge's extensive
remodeling and additions.
After
Hannah died in 1910 and Edward in 1911, the house was empty
for a time while a lengthy search of heirs was conducted.
The mansion was then bought by the F. Weyerhaeuser Company
for $10,000 in 1914. They sold it to Christoper Sundet of
Chippewa Falls in 1915, who subdivided the southern half
of the block into eight residential lots. That same year,
Sundet sold the mansion to Dayton E. Cook, a prominent local
attorney who later served many years as county judge.
The
Cook family owned and lived in the home from 1915 until
1973 when daughter Mabel Cook sold the mansion to the Chippewa
County Historical Society.
Recognizing
its historical significance and high Victorian - Italianate
style architecture, the Mansion was listed on the National
Register of Historic Places in 1974.
Chippewa
County Historical Society
Historic Sign #14
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