E. William Brackett House
E. William Brackett House | |
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North face of the E. William Brackett home in Yakima Washington. | |
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General information | |
Type | Private Residence |
Architectural style | Colonial Revival |
Address | 2606 Tieton Drive |
Town or city | Yakima, Washington |
Coordinates | 46°35′33″N 120°32′39″W / 46.59243°N 120.54411°W |
Completed | 1917 |
Design and construction | |
Architect | W.H.H. Weatherwax |
The E. William Brackett House, located in Yakima, Washington, was entered into the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.[1] Originally located on 80 acres of orchards and farmland, the building is currently situated on a three-quarter acre lot, the remainder of the property having been subdivided mostly for single family homes. The interior is composed of 6,000 square feet of living space symmetrically arranged around a central entry hall.
Historical background
The home was built in 1917 for E. William Brackett, a prominent local citizen who was a pioneer of irrigation in the Yakima valley. Born in Sharon, Massachusetts, in 1869, he travelled to Washington State with his widowed father in 1890. He served as the founding President of the Natchez-Cowyche Ditch Company (precursor to today's Naches-Cowiche Canal Company) for three years from 1894 until 1897. He travelled to Egypt in the 1920s and returned with drawings of that nation's irrigation system that he shared with the Teiton-Naches project. Brackett was also involved in the civic development of Yakima, founding the Nob Hill Grange and eventually donating 18 acres to the City of Yakima for the creation of Franklin Park. Brackett remained in the home until his death in 1950; his wife lived there until her death in 1972.[2][3]
Architect
W.H.H. Weatherwax was a prominent local architect best known for the design of the Yakima Armory. He listed the Brackett house as among his most important residential works.
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References
- ↑ "Registration Form: E. William Bracket House" (PDF). National Park Service, National Register of Historic Places Archive. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
- ↑ Lyman, W.D., History of the Yakima Valley, S.J. Clarke, 1919
- ↑ Warren, Cindy, "E. William Brackett: Franklin Park was His Pumpkin Patch" in Remembering Yakima by Those Who Were There (Yakima: Valley Sun, 1976) pp. 92