Peirce Mansion

John Peirce Mansion

View from the east
Location 2901 Jackson St., Sioux City, Iowa
Coordinates 42°31′15″N 96°24′8″W / 42.52083°N 96.40222°W / 42.52083; -96.40222Coordinates: 42°31′15″N 96°24′8″W / 42.52083°N 96.40222°W / 42.52083; -96.40222
Built 1893
Architectural style Romanesque revival
NRHP Reference # 78001273[1]
Added to NRHP December 12, 1978

The Peirce Mansion is a 23-room mansion located in Sioux City, Iowa. From 1960 until 2011, the mansion was home to the Sioux City Public Museum with exhibits relating to the history of the region. It is still owned by the Sioux City Public Museum and has now been restored to a Victorian-era appearance.[2] It is open to the public for quarterly open house events and is available for rental.

The mansion is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[3]

History

The mansion was built for financier John Peirce, who built the Romanesque home out of Sioux Quartzite with 23 rooms[4] in 1893.[3]

First purchased by a group called the Junior League in 1959, the opening of the mansion as a museum was in September 1960.[5] There was a robbery of a saddlebag from the museum in 1996 that was part of a string of museum thefts which involved stealing Native American artifacts.[6]

A new museum location was opened in 2011 in Sioux City's downtown at a former J. C. Penney store.[7]

References

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