Crystal 301 N.

From ENHLDWiki

Jump to: navigation, search

301 N. Crystal

301 N. Crystal
Enlarge
301 N. Crystal

Status: Contributing

Year Built: 1898

Year Lost: N/A

Style: Modified Italianate

Alt. name: The Clown House

Builder/Architect: Charles Prentice

Past Owner(s): Frank Panisko

Geocode: 01119713241300000

Lat: 46° 00' 53.87" N

Long: 112° 32' 40.02" W

Elevation: 5769'

Neighborhood: Plymouth Add.

301 N. Crystal was built in 1898 by prominent architect Charles M. Prentice. He was initially in business with Joseph S. Chevigny, but worked on his own later. He became mill foreman for the M.J. Connell Lumber Co. in 1895, and he lived at 600 W. Quartz, next door to 301 N. Crystal, until he returned from a short stay in Los Angeles (1899); he then lived in the home at 301 N. Crystal from 1900 to 1907 when he moved to 208 N. Columbia. In 1900, Charles and his wife Celia, their children Lula and George (an engineer who worked in 1904 at the Old Glory Mine in Centerville), and boarders John (a librarian) and Blanche Davies (born in Maine and Kentucky, respectively) all occupied this home. Prentice was known for his homes and apartment buildings with “inventive corbelling and interesting fenestration patterns.” Other examples of Prentice’s work are 206-212 N. Clark and row houses at 209 N. Idaho. Prentice also designed the east wing, bay, and porch for the M.J. Connell house at 301 W. Granite St.
Plan of second floor
Enlarge
Plan of second floor

The original polygonal wood frame structure is largely unchanged. Alternating panels of full and half windows include beveled, etched, and stained glass in some of the half windows. Stained glass is also found in three upstairs transom windows, as well as in a basement door. Interior wood is mostly painted wood grain, although some has been overpainted. There are paired decorative brackets under the eaves of the flat roof, and a short hipped roof provides a modification to the typical flat-roofed Italianate style. The modification may be unique in Butte. The garage is probably not original, but is a relatively early addition likely dating to the 1910s to 1920s.

The house was home to the Panisko family from 1950-2003. Owner Frank Panisko was a retired circus clown, working with Emmett Kelly at the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus. In Butte, he worked as a pump operator at the Leonard Mine. Some long-time Butte residents refer to the home as the "Clown House" because of Panisko's connection with the circus. He had a booth at Columbia Gardens and at festivals in Butte for many years.

Prior to the Panisko family, residents included

  • Larkin (painter) and Velva Bunch, 1940
  • John B. and Mary Dillon, 1930. John was a mechanic at J.T. Carlson's auto repair shop at 215 S. Main
  • Edward P. and Viola Taylor, and Walter and Abba Holliday, 1928. Edward was an assistant secretary at the U.S. Building and Loan Association, and Walter was a shift boss at the Black Rock Mine.


References

  • Montana Historical & Architectural Inventory, 6-23-81, by Mary Murphy for SHPO
  • Polk City Directories
  • Gibson, R.I., 2007 field work
Personal tools