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Published - Sunday, August 19, 2007

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Ask the Trib: Cargill House was finished in 1883


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Q: What is the history of the old Cargill House that was once located at West Avenue and Cass Street in

La Crosse? I understand that after the Cargill family vacated the house that it was used for public functions such as card parties, club meetings, weddings, etc.
A: According to city tax records and newspaper accounts, construction on the Cargill residence was started in late 1881 and finished in early 1883. The residence, which was located at 235 West Ave. S., was home to William and Ellen Cargill. Although the Cargill name is most often associated with the Cargill grain business, William Cargill was active in many other businesses and was one of the great philanthropists in La Crosse.

A major remodeling project was begun on the house in 1896 that would completely change the architectural style of the house. This remodeling project took more than 10 years to complete.

William Cargill died on Oct. 17, 1909, and Ellen died on March 25, 1910. After her death, the house remained empty for several years, but the Cargill family employed a caretaker for the residence. In 1927, the Cargill estate gave the home to First Presbyterian Church as a gift. The church held a formal dedication of the home as its new parish house on June 21, 1927. The house was used for weddings, receptions, club meetings and conventions until about 1952. Then it was used almost exclusively as a Sunday school for the church.

By 1974, years of neglect had left the Cargill house in a state of disrepair. The First Presbyterian congregation, unable to afford the $100,000 needed to bring the structure back to a usable standard, decide to have the building razed and make the site into green space and gardens. The Cargill house was razed in February 1975. The iron fence, which was likely constructed during the remodeling, and the coach house, which was built after the original one burned down around the turn of the century, still remain on the property.

In cooperation with the La Crosse Public Library, the Tribune invites readers to call or e-mail questions of local interest. We’ll try to find the answers and publish them. The phone number for Ask the Trib is (608) 791-8450. Send questions by e-mail to news@lacrossetribune.com.
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1231 wrote on Oct 19, 2007 1:50 PM:

" In 1927, Austen Cargill, youngest son of William and Ellen, gave the house to the the First Presbyterian Church.A gold leaf ceiling for the library cost $40,000.Hand-cut red velvet, from France, covered the walls of the drawing room at a cost of $18.00 per yard.A special loom, madein Belgium, wove seamless-one-piece carpet. Carpet tht covered hand inlaid parquet.Mahognay panels reached from floor to ceiling in the large library.Hand tooled leather coverthe the ceiling of the lower hall. A carved wooden ceiling, requiring two and a half years to complete, was the glory of the dining room.Red Silk tapestry blanketed the walls. Interior door knobs were cut glass. For 30 years the Cargill famly called this castle home,The wrecking ball reduced the castle home to rubble in 1970. The home boasted of 8 fireplaces,some inlaid with gold and pearl;and seven bathrooms.The way it was!! "

1231 wrote on Oct 19, 2007 1:41 PM:

" In 1927, Austen Cargill, youngest son of William and Ellen, gave the house to the the First Presyberian church.A gold leaf ceiling for the library cost $40,000.Hand-cut red velvet, from France, covered the walls of the drawing room at a cost of $18.00 per yard.A special loom, madein Belgium, wove seamless-one-piece carpet. Carpet tht covered hand inlaid parquet.Mahognay panels reached from floor to ceiling in the large library.Hand tooled leather coverthe the ceiling of the lower hall. A carved wooden ceiling, requiring two and a half years to complete, was the glory of the dining room.Red Silk tapestry blanketed the walls. Interior door knobs were cut glass. For 30 years the Cargill famly called this castle home, The wrecking ball reduced the castle home to rubble in 1970. The home boasted of 8 fireplaces, some inlaid with gold and pearl; and seven bathrooms.The way it was!! "

Monasterio wrote on Aug 19, 2007 8:33 PM:

" The elevator was parked inoperative at the 3rd floor in the 1950s - I believe the elevator was a balance type using water to raise and lower - then the hall to the kitchen, the kitchen had a very elaborate pantry space - to the southeast of the kitchen a large (back) living room with many windows - west and on the south side of the first floor another large (front) living room - in between the kitchen and the back living room was the servant staircase which went up to the 2nd and 3rd floors - ceilings height on the first floor must have been well over 12 feet - it seemed ceiling heights on the first floor were not all the same - that the ceiling in the library was lower "

Monasterio wrote on Aug 19, 2007 11:03 AM:

" First floor - as you entered the Cargill House from the west (front door) the library was off to the left - north of the library was a covered patio which was under the master bedroom deck - going east, then the door to the basement - at the foot of the basement stairs (which turned to the west) was a very elaborate pool and billiard room - while the table was gone (early 1950s) the wainscot and the wall cue racks remained - after the door to the basement was the elaborate "U shaped" staircase leading to the second floor - the stairs were about 5 feet wide with a large landing half way to the second floor- to the south of the landing a very decorative alcove - after the stairs a door to the outside (north) - from there to the east was the elevator "

Monasterio wrote on Aug 18, 2007 9:29 AM:

" Cargill "Coach House" - the church Boy Scout Troop would meet there - one evenings skill to be learned was compass reading - almost all the scouts were having problems getting their compass to point north - as it turned out when the original Coach House had burned the carriage and wagon turn table had not been removed prior to the new building going up - as the metal turn table was quite substantial it raised havoc with a compass ..... there was a Russian imigrant family that lived upstairs in the Coach House during the late 1950s ..... I was told that when the original Coach House burned it had contained several early American automobiles "

PAL Member wrote on Aug 18, 2007 6:37 AM:

" I would only amend the previous comment to say that the First Presbyterian Church of La Crosse certainly did not display good stewardship of the Cargill House that they were given in good faith by the Cargill family. The church ownership of the house from the 1950s to 1974 is a classic case of "demolition by neglect". The concern of many neighbors and community members is that the ownership of the Colman/Skaff House by the First Presbyterian Church of La Crosse would have a similar result. "

monasterio wrote on Aug 18, 2007 3:10 AM:

" Sunday school classes were conducted in the first floor library. The library had a gold (something) ceiling. The largest upstairs bedroom bath had gold fixtures. The church Boy Scout troop used a basement room to build kayaks. There was a copy of the Blueboy painting stored in the attic along with the blueprints of the exterior decorative facade. The church youth group on one occasion used the basement for a October 31st "haunted house". There was an elevator. "

oz wrote on Aug 13, 2007 11:33 AM:

" That church is not to be trusted as caretakers of residential property. "


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