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The
Beginning
The Van Dusen mansion is one of the most flamboyant late 19th-century
residences in Minneapolis. Most of its contemporaries in the
Stevens Square-Loring Heights neighborhood have been razed.
George
W. and Nancy B. Van Dusen built the 12,000-square-foot mansion
and 3,600-square-foot carriage house. in 1892. The structure
is a mixture of Richardsonian Romanesque and French Renaissance
revival architecture, giving it the look of a castle. It was
built as an ostentatious symbol of the accomplishments of
an otherwise low-profile company president. George Van Dusen
founded Minnesotas first and most prosperous grain processing
and distribution firm in 1883.
Noted
architect Edgar Joralemon designed the mansion. Its pink Sioux
quartzite was quarried in Luverne, Minnesota. Maine slate
covers the steep copper-trimmed roof and turrets. The home
has 10 fireplaces and 144 windows. The original construction
cost of $45,000 was a fairly substantial sum in the late 1800s.
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