Hoover–Minthorn House

The Hoover–Minthorn House is a museum in Newberg, Oregon, United States, created from the residence of Herbert Hoover, thirty-first President of the United States. Hoover lived there from 1885 to 1891, with his uncle and aunt John and Laura Minthorn. The Minthorns were administrators of the Quaker school Friends Pacific Academy, now George Fox University, which Hoover and his brother Tad attended.

Dr. Henry J. Minthorn House
(Herbert Hoover House)
West side of home
Hoover–Minthorn House is located in Oregon
Hoover–Minthorn House
Hoover–Minthorn House is located in the United States
Hoover–Minthorn House
Location115 S. River Street
Newberg, Oregon
Coordinates45°17′59″N 122°58′08″W
Area0.2 acres (0.081 ha)
Built1881
Architectural styleItalian Villa, Vernacular Italian Villa
NRHP reference No.75001602[1]
Added to NRHPDecember 19, 2003

The house, an Italianate design built in 1881 by Jesse Edwards, a Quaker merchant, is the first residence Edwards built and the oldest house still standing in what is now Newberg, Oregon. Representing vernacular design in the Willamette Valley, it was restored and opened to the public in 1955. It is located on 115 South River Street. Owned and operated as a house museum by the Oregon chapter of The National Society of the Colonial Dames of America, it has been furnished with late 19th-century period furnishings, including the bedroom furniture used by Hoover as a boy.

The house was placed on the National Register of Historic Places (as the Dr. Henry J. Minthorn House aka Herbert Hoover House) in 2003.[2]

References


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