The Octagon House Museum
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Location: | 1004 3rd Street Hudson, Wisconsin |
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Built: | 1855 |
Architect: | Andrews Brothers |
Architectural style: | Greek Revival, Octagon Mode, Other |
Governing body: | Private |
NRHP Reference#: | 74000124 |
Added to NRHP: | July 18, 1974[1] |
The Octagon House House Museum, or also known as the John Moffat House, is a stucco octagonal house in Hudson, in the U.S. state of Wisconsin, located at 1004 3rd Street.[2] The home was built in 1855 by John (1814 Etna, New York-1903 Hudson, Wisconsin) and his wife Nancy Bennet (1822-1894), who moved to Hudson from Ithaca, New York the previous year with their ten-year-old daughter. Typical for the time, the Moffats traveled by train to Galena, Illinois where they took a steamboat to Prescott, Wisconsin. Then they traveled by horse and wagon, north to Hudson, which was a prosperous frontier town on the Saint Croix River, benefiting from lumber and flour mills. Two of Nancy's sisters already lived in the town when they arrived. Moffat initially was clerk of the United States Land Office for the Chippewa District and later practiced law before being elected a Saint Croix County judge in 1869.[3] Their home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The house is now owned and operated by the St. Croix County Historical Society as the Octagon House Museum, a historic house museum furnished for the mid 19th century. The Society purchased the home in 1964.
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