Louis Hirsig House Explained

Louis Hirsig House
Location:1010 Sherman Ave.
Madison, Wisconsin
Coordinates:43.0872°N -89.3758°W
Area:less than one acre
Built:c. 1913
Architect:Alvan Edmund Small
Architecture:Prairie School
Added:December 2, 1974
Refnum:74000072

The Louis Hirsig House is a small Prairie Style house designed by Alvan Small and built in 1913 in Madison, Wisconsin. In 1974 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.[1]

History

Louis Hirsig was born in 1876 forty-five miles south of Madison in Monroe. Starting at age 14 as an apprentice tinsmith in Monroe, he worked his way into the retail business in Madison.[2]

About 1913 Hirsig commissioned Madison architect Alvin Small to design a home. Small designed the house in the compact-cubicle form of Prairie Style, with a brick foundation, with stucco walls, with broad eaves that emphasize the horizontal, and with a side-gabled roof covered with flat red tile. The bands of windows are typical Prairie style. The trim-boards give a hint of half-timbering. A shed roof porch shelters the front door and echoes the main roof above.

Alvin Small was born nearby in Sun Prairie, and began work for the architects Allen Conover and Lew Porter, then a year for Louis Sullivan in Chicago, then back to Madison for several partnerships. Small also designed the stylistically very different Grimm Book Bindery.[3]

By 1934 Louis was partnered in a hardware store called Wolff-Kubly & Hirsig Co. on the capitol square, at 17 South Pinckney.[4] A charter member of Madison Rotary, Louis was involved in many civic organizations, including Red Cross, and the Chamber of Commerce. He died in 1959.[2]

In 1974 the Hirsig house was added to the NRHP as a locally significant, good example of compact-cubical Prairie Style. The following year it was designated a landmark by the Madison Landmarks Commission.[1] It is located within the Sherman Avenue Historic District.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hirsig House. Historical Marker Database.org. 2012-02-04.
  2. Web site: Louis Hirsig. Find a Grave. 2022-06-28.
  3. Web site: Grimm Book Bindery. Wisconsin Historical Society. 2022-06-28.
  4. Web site: Wolff-Kubly & Hirsig Hardware Store. Wisconsin Historical Society. 2022-06-28. Includes a photo of Hirsig's store in 1934.
  5. Web site: 1010 SHERMAN AVE. Wisconsin Historical Society. 2018-05-29. January 2012.