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Mr. Burt was the President of the Great Western Stove Company, which by 1880 was building 25,000 stoves per year. In 1915 he purchased the land to the west of the home and built a 1,500 square foot carriage house, which has since been converted to living quarters. When he died in 1923, his oldest son Nathaniel Pratt Burt inherited the home [refer to photograph]. He lived here until his death in 1960, and in 1962 it left the Burt family. This house retains a high degree of historic integrity, and is one of the most elegant homes in town.
[From the City of Leavenworth website...
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Mr. Burt was the President of the Great Western Stove Company, which by 1880 was building 25,000 stoves per year. In 1915 he purchased the land to the west of the home and built a 1,500 square foot carriage house, which has since been converted to living quarters. When he died in 1923, his oldest son Nathaniel Pratt Burt inherited the home [refer to photograph]. He lived here until his death in 1960, and in 1962 it left the Burt family. This house retains a high degree of historic integrity, and is one of the most elegant homes in town.
[From the City of Leavenworth website...
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