Inscription
William J. Kendall of the Northwest Milling and Lumber Company built this regal Queen Anne style home circa 1899. Professor Frederick C. Scheuch and his family were the longtime occupants from 1902 until 1936. Scheuch was one of the University of Montana’s first three instructors, initially teaching mechanical engineering and then French and German.
Revered by several generations of students, Professor Scheuch also served as the university’s vice president, stepping in as interim president six times. He helped found the student newspaper, Montana Kaimin, and the U of M chapter of the Sigma Chi fraternity. The professor and his wife, Jimmie, were known for their warm hospitality.
Scheuch retired in 1936, moved away, and under later owners, the home began to deteriorate. In 1987, the first of several preservation-minded owners bought the abandoned ruin. Each contributed to the home’s rebuilding, salvaging everything that could be saved. Eventually, the original features, from the stone foundation to the grand turret, re-emerged.
In 2000, the City of Missoula bestowed a welldeserved preservation award upon this magnificent, and again well-cared for, neighborhood landmark.
Location
Sources
More markers in Missoula
St. Francis Xavier Church
Missoula, MT
Jesuits arrived in the Missoula Valley in 1841 en route to the Bitterroot, where they established the first Catholic mission in the Rocky...
116 West Spruce
Missoula, MT
Missoula boasted twenty-six manufacturing enterprises by 1909, including such diverse production as candy, bricks, gas, marble, and meat...
Hardenburgh Residence
Missoula, MT
Floyd and Kathleen Hardenburgh hired prominent Missoula architect H. E. Kirkemo to design this two-story residence in 1935.
341 Keith Avenue
Missoula, MT
The decorative brackets, low pitched roof with dormers, wide overhanging eaves, and extended flared rafters mark this home as a...
Woman's Club Art Building 1937-1955
Missoula, MT
Architects designing campus buildings between 1935 and 1939 were faced with a dilemma.
