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The George R. Newell House, also known as Chateau LaSalle, is a house in Minneapolis, Minnesota just south of downtown Minneapolis. It was originally built for Sumner T. McKnight, a businessman who had interests in lumber and real estate.[2] McKnight sold it almost immediately to George R. Newell, one of the founders in 1870 of the grocery firm Stevens, Morse and Newell. When Newell died in 1921, his son L.B. Newell inherited the company and changed its name to SuperValu.[3]
Architecture critic Larry Millett calls it, "A Romanesque Revival hunk and one of the grand houses of the city."[2] The exterior, of rusticated Lake Superior sandstone, features a terrace, an arched entrance porch, carved ornamental panels, and a crested dormer on the roof's peak. The interior, in Victorian style, is lushly decorated with oak and sycamore woodwork, Tiffany & Co. lighting, and gold-leaf scrollwork.[2] The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.[1]
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