AKA: Stewart-Brew House, Puyallup, WA;
Structure Type: built works - dwellings - houses
Designers: [unspecified]
Dates: [unspecified]
2 stories, total floor area: 3,000 sq. ft.
The Stewart-Brew House was built circa 1889 for William A. & Elizabeth “Laddie” Stewart. The house is slightly altered, but still serves as a representative example of the Queen Anne style as found in Puyallup. The 3,000 sq. ft. wood framed house has a clipped, front-facing gable roof. Like many Queen Anne Houses it boast multiple cladding types; drop, tongue & groove siding, the vertical siding in the gable ends and decorative scroll in the gable end. It is just the third home listed on the Washington Heritage Register in Puyallup. William A. and Elizabeth "Laddie" Stewart erected this Puyallup, WA, house around 1889. The house featured a cross gabled configuration, with the two of the main gables being of the clipped or jerkinhead type. Like many houses of the Queen Anne Era of the 19th century, this house demonstrated a variety of cladding materials, (seen in its various types of siding), its unusual roof lines, and its varied fenestration. The first floor entry was sheltered by a long, front porch trimmed with turned balusters also typical of late Victorian houses in the U.S.
The Stewart House was listed on the Washington Heritage Register.
A second-floor, shed-roofed addition was placed to the right (as one faces the dwelling) of the main gable.
Washington Heritage Register: ID n/a
PCAD id: 15436