Theophile Bruguier Cabin
Appearance
Theophile Bruguier Cabin | |
Theophile Bruguier | |
NRHP reference No. | 00000918[1] |
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Added to NRHP | August 14, 2000 |
The Theophile Bruguier Cabin is a historic building located in
claim. Bruguier took up farming and set up his own fur-trading company. War Eagle and his two daughters, Bruguier's wives, died in the 1850s. Bruguier sold a tract of land to Joseph Leonnais in 1855, and it became the original townsite for Sioux City.[2] He built this single-room cabin for his home about 1860, and married Victoria Brunette in 1862. Bruguier and his wife moved to a farm near Salix, Iowa
, where he died in 1895.
In time the cabin was covered with a wood veneer on the outside and plaster on the inside. It was discovered when the Rev. John Hantla of the Wall Street Mission was tearing it down. Workers from the Civil Works Administration dismantled the cabin and rebuilt it in Riverside Park in 1934. Two years later it was dedicated as a memorial to the "friendly Indians of the Sioux nation who lived in peace with the early pioneers," and to "Theophile Bruguier, the first permanent white resident within the present boundary of Sioux City."[2] The cabin was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.[1]
References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- ^ a b c Gretchen E. Schalge. "Theophile Bruguier Cabin". National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-12-13. with photos