East Residence and Garage - Savenac Nursery Historic District - Haugan, MT
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 47° 23.125 W 115° 23.708
11T E 621129 N 5249244
Within the nursery are a pair of cottages with attached garages, each a mirror image of the other. This is the east cottage.
Waymark Code: WMWQHK
Location: Montana, United States
Date Posted: 10/02/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Math Teacher
Views: 1

Started in 1907 by Elers Koch, then supervisor of the Lolo and Bitterroot National Forests, Savenac Nursery was named for the one time owner of the land, a German settler named Savennach. Savennach abandoned the homestead, for reasons unknown, and Koch saw it as an excellent location for a tree nursery, on a major road with railroads nearby, with ample flat land and access to water for irrigation. Irrigation water was available from three separate waterways, Savenac Creek, Big Creek, and the St. Regis River, as well as two sloughs. It happened that Koch located the abandoned homestead while traveling the Mullan Road to the west coast on his honeymoon.

By 1908 there were nine buildings or structures at the Nursery, all destroyed two years later by the The Great Fire of 1910, which burned not only the nursery, but many other towns in Idaho and Montana, also claiming a total of 85 lives, 78 of them firefighters unable to escape the fast moving fire.

Rebuilding began that winter, with the nursery being completely rebuilt and repopulated with the structures and buildings necessary for its operation. In 1932 a complete renovation of the nursery began, seeing the replacement of all existing buildings and a great many other structures. All of this construction took place using CCC labour, taking place between 1932 and 1948. As a result, the only pre 1930 contributing objects which remain are the Weather station, first installed in 1919, the Yellowstone Trail Bridge, built in 1919-1920, a House and Garage Foundation from the 1920s and the Mullan Road/Yellowstone Trail, which passes through, first built 1859 and upgraded in 1914. The majority of the extant buildings are from the late 1930s.

Savenac became the largest tree nursery in the northwest, producing up to twelve million trees annually. Savenac Nursery remained operational until reorganization in the forestry department resulted in its closure in 1969. The buildings remain in excellent condition with some, the bunkhouse, cookhouse and the west cottage, available to rent in the summer months.

Today the historic district consists of 10 Buildings, 6 Sites, 16 Structures and 2 Objects, for a total of 34 contributing objects. As the Registration Form states: "Savenac Nursery contains features that are not typically counted in National Register nominations. These include the seed and transplant beds and the formal landscape plantings of exotic specimen trees such as the Siberian larch behind the Administration Building and the two sugar maples in front of the Administration Building. These features and the overall layout and organization of the site are important parts of the integrity of design, setting, feeling, and association for this property".

At the entrance to the nursery, centered in the property, is the old administration building, now the welcome centre and museum. Directly east of that is the east cottage, with the cottage at the front and the garage at the rear. The garages of the two cottages are each attached by way of a covered walkway or breezeway about fifteen to twenty feet in length. Though the west cottage is available for rent in the summer on a nightly basis, this one is not. Both cottages were the work of the CCC, the west cottage being built first, in 1937, and this one second, in 1938.

The east cottage is denoted by the letter on the "B" interpretive trail brochure, a copy of which can be seen below.
East Residence and Garage East Residence and Garage (#1021), 1938. Contributing Building:
These two buildings with their semi-attached garages are mirror images of each other. They face each other from opposite sides of the visitor/administration area, just behind the administration building. Each residence is a rectangular, one story, steeply pitched gable roof building with a full basement, a concrete foundation, clapboard siding, narrow boxed eaves, a brick chimney, and asphalt shingle roofing. The main facades, facing into the compound (i.e.: the west side on the east residence and the east side on the west residence), have a six-panel door, transom lights, two double hung, 6x6, windows to the north, and a single double hung, 6x6, window to the south. Each door has a three step concrete stoop. The door on the east residence has a decorative pediment or crown supported by paired columns while the west residence has a shallower crown un-supported by columns or pilasters.
From the NRHP Registration Form
Name of Historic District (as listed on the NRHP): Savenac Nursery Historic District

Link to nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com page with the Historic District: [Web Link]

Address:
100 Savenac Creek Loop Haugan, MT 59842


How did you determine the building to be a contributing structure?: Narrative found on the internet (Link provided below)

Optional link to narrative or database: [Web Link]

NRHP Historic District Waymark (Optional): Not listed

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