A Brief History of Our Home

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In
the 1870’s, the home of Dr. Lewis Pagin sat on this site. James Oliver (of Oliver
Chilled Plow and
tractor fame), acquired the house in 1885 and moved it to South Scott
Street
for use as the St. Hedwig Parish Church rectory.
He then proceeded to build the present house. On January 4, 1897, as
reported in the Real
Estate Transfers in the South Bend Times,
“James Oliver to Josephine Oliver Ford---one acre on the
corner of Scott and
Washington. Consideration:
$1.00 and
love.” Josephine’s
husband, George
Ford, was a prominent South Bend attorney,
prosecuting attorney from 1873-1884, elected to the
Forty-ninth Congress
1885-1887, and was made a Superior Court Judge in 1912.
He was also the vice President of the
Indiana Northern Railway and an original member of the Northern Indiana
Historical Society. After
the death of her Aunt Josephine, Gertrude Oliver Cunningham and her
husband,
Frederick, moved into the house in 1918.
After Gertrude’s death in 1987, at the age
of 99, her children donated
this home, as well as the home of their grandparents
“Copshaholm”, to the
Northern Indiana Historical Society.
The Cunningham home was sold to help establish an
endowment for the maintenance
of Copshaholm, the family mansion, as a museum of the Society. The
current Queen Anne style structure has notable features: a corner
turret, two
curved-glass bay windows in the front, turned spindles and balustrades
on the
porches, a porte cochere as well as ornately carved bas
relief flora designs in the front gable, in the pediment over
the front porch stairs and on inset panels on the turret. A winged griffin supports
the front porch
roof. In
1912, a two-story, three-bay
carriage house was constructed at the back of the property in a Tudor
Revival style. This
imposing Queen Anne home was built for
entertaining. The
downstairs rooms are
spacious and inviting with its 7 fireplaces and original Waterford
crystal
sconces. |

