Inscription
Around the mountain from the mining camp of Cable in 1866 came Polish-born merchant William Weinstein with a wagon-load of goods to sell. He became Philipsburg’s first general merchant, constructing the eastern half of this building in the late 1870s or early 1880s to house his business. Ike Sparey located his restaurant and hotel in the western half, completed circa 1887.
The structure has since served as a bank, a mortuary, and since 1950 as mining company offices for the current owner, the Taylor-Knapp Company. Second-story balconies, ornamental brickwork, and battlements complement this well-preserved example of 1880s commercial architecture.
Location
Sources
More markers in Granite
Sayr's Building
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First known as the Hyde Block, this building was constructed by banker Joseph Hyde and his wife, Mary, in 1888.
Kaiser House
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Michael Kaiser, founder of the Philipsburg Water Company, built this grand hotel in 1881.
Hynes House
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Most of Philipsburg’s original wooden commercial structures were later rebuilt of brick, but this last-remaining frame boardinghouse...
Doe's Drug Store
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In the 1880s and 1890s, masonry structures gradually replaced the frame buildings left from Philipsburg’s mining camp days.
123 East Broadway
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Local rancher Lee Degenhart financed the construction of this building in 1910.
