Frederick Townsend Garage

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Frederick Townsend Garage
(U.S. Registered Historic District
Contributing Property)
Originally built to house "benzine vehicles", the Townsend Garage is now a restaurant.
Originally built to house "benzine vehicles", the Townsend Garage is now a restaurant.
Location: Sycamore, DeKalb County, Illinois, USA
Coordinates: 41°59′2″N 88°41′39″W / 41.98389, -88.69417Coordinates: 41°59′2″N 88°41′39″W / 41.98389, -88.69417
Area: Sycamore Historic District
Built/Founded: 1906
Added to NRHP: May 2, 1978[1] As part of the Sycamore Historic District.
NRHP Reference#: 78003104
Governing body: Private Ownership, The Towne Square Restaurant (2007).

The Frederick Townsend Garage is located in Sycamore, Illinois and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as part of the Sycamore Historic District. It sits at the base of a small incline overlooked by the large Queen Anne style Townsend House. Last a gas station, the building has been used by a number of restaurants since then. The Sycamore Historic District was listed on the Register in May 1978.

[edit] History

The distinctive stone structure was constructed in 1906 for use as a garage for the estate of Frederick B. Townsend, his former home is the Queen Anne mansion that overlooks the garage property. When it was first constructed the local newspaper, the Sycamore True Republican, stated that the building was meant to hold "benzine vehicle" owned by Townsend and his brother-in-law Elmer E. Boynton. The structure was erected at a cost of about $3,000 and made of granite rocks gathered from Townsend's farmland.[2]

After the building left private ownership the property was exploited for commercial use and became a gas station. Despite the years and the changes in function the building's historical character remains intact. The front roof, over the canopy, has seen the most change. It was originally covered with red tile, matching the building. Also, the canopy is non-original but the pillars supporting are. The last gas station at the property closed in the 1980s and it has housed a restaurant of some form ever since.[2]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ NRIS Database, National Register of Historic Places, retrieved January 22, 2007.
  2. ^ a b Bigolin, Steve. The Sycamore Historic District: Location 1, Daily Chronicle, 21 August 2006, Retrieved January 14, 2007.