
Jean Marie Pepin House - Ste. Genevieve, Missouri
Posted by:
BruceS
N 37° 59.143 W 090° 02.964
15S E 759133 N 4208338
French vertical log house in the Ste. Genevieve Historic District in Ste. Genevieve, Missouri
Waymark Code: WM3X7B
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 05/29/2008
Views: 35
"Jean Marie Pepin dit Lachance House. Local name: Jean Marie Pepin House. 699
North Fourth Street, c. 1800-1806; addition c. 1989.
Property type: French vertical log house. This small house, of vertical log
construction, measures approximately 26 feet square. It has a limestone
foundation and originally consisted of a one-room cabin with wall logs rising
unbroken from sill to eaves. A chimney with fireplace was placed on the east
wall. This was removed during one of many renovations. The exterior walls are
sheathed in clapboards and asbestos siding. As typical of smaller French
vernacular houses in Ste. Genevieve, the front gallery is recessed beneath the
gable roof. This gallery features wood box columns and shelters double entry
doors. A six-over-six, double hung, sash window is placed in the north bay of
the facade. Two gabled dormers, each fenestrated with two over two, double hung
sash windows project from the front roof slope. The roof is sheathed in
cement-asbestos roof slates. In the last half of the nineteenth century, the
roof was reworked and dormers added to create a usable second floor.
Large-scale additions are attached to the rear wall of the original house.
These additions, constructed in part in 1989, include a family room, laundry
room and front-gabled garage. The garage is sheathed in clapboard siding and is
fenestrated with six-over six, double hung sash windows. Because of the massing
of these additions, they are not visible from the Fourth Street side of the
house.
The house retains much of its early interior and exterior woodwork including
two beaded, board-and-batten interior doors; random-width, hand-planed, beaded
board paneling that encloses box stairs; exposed, beaded porch ceiling joists;
and wide, random-width, porch floor and ceiling joists. Some cellar joists are
hand-hewn on all four sides, while others are hand-hewn on three sides and
retain bark on the fourth. A nineteenth century brick smoke house is
located in the rear yard of the property.
The land on which the house is located was owned in the early nineteenth
century by Nicholas Lionaise [Villainase]. He sold the property in 1809 to Jean
Marie Pepin, Jr. In that deed, the property is indicated as that "on which Pepin
lives." Jean Marie Pepin was the son of Jean Marie Pepin, Sr. and Catherine
Lalumondiere. In 1845, his siblings, Julie, John, Francois and Marie Louise
Aubuchon sold the property." ~
Historic District National Register Nomination Form
This home is included in two historic districts. It is listed as the
Jean Marie Pepin Jr. House on the earlier
National Landmark Historic District
with a construction date of 1799.