*** Welcome to piglix ***

Larson's Hunters Resort

Larson's Hunters Resort
Larson's Hunters Resort.jpg
The Larson's Hunters Resort lodge from the southwest
Larson's Hunters Resort is located in Minnesota
Larson's Hunters Resort
Larson's Hunters Resort is located in the US
Larson's Hunters Resort
Location County Highway 76, Lake Valley Township, Minnesota
Coordinates 45°49′29″N 96°34′21″W / 45.82472°N 96.57250°W / 45.82472; -96.57250Coordinates: 45°49′29″N 96°34′21″W / 45.82472°N 96.57250°W / 45.82472; -96.57250
Area 4 acres (1.6 ha)
Built 1901
Built by Alfred Setterlund
NRHP reference # 85001774
Designated HD August 15, 1985

Larson's Hunters Resort is a historic former hunting resort in Lake Valley Township, Minnesota, United States. It was in operation from the 1890s to the 1960s and became the best known hunting resort in Traverse County, while also being maintained as an active farm. Larson's Hunters Resort was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985 for having local significance in the themes of architecture and commerce. As a historic district it consists of a prominent brick farmhouse/lodge built in 1901 and eight outbuildings. It was nominated for exemplifying the important hunting industry in west-central Minnesota and the phenomenon of farmer/resort owners, while the main building was further noted as the largest and most intact farmhouse in Traverse County, and one of the few constructed of brick.

Larson's Hunters Resort is an approximately 4-acre (1.6 ha) property on the east shore of Mud Lake. The farmhouse is a two-and-a-half story building of smooth, light-brown brick on a boulder foundation. It has a hip roof with a projecting gable on the west façade. A long porch with Tuscan order columns supporting a hipped roof wraps around the west and south façades. There are smooth limestone window sills and lintels, and some simple decorative patterns in the brickwork. The interior has oak woodwork and 14 rooms.

At the time of the property's nomination to the National Register, eight additional buildings remained from the farm/resort era. Five were rental cabins for hunters and the other three were agricultural buildings. Three of the cabins stood north of the farmhouse amid a stand of trees. The largest was built in the early 20th century near the lakeshore and moved later; another was built around 1940. Southeast of the farmhouse was the Larsons' original 1891 house, which upon the completion of the larger building in 1901 was converted to a granary, then later moved and used as a wash house, then a wood shed, then converted to a guest cabin in the 1930s. Nearby was a two-car garage built around 1920 whose south wing, initially an ice house, was converted to a cabin around 1941. On the west side of the property, separated from the other buildings by a road, is a granary built around 1928. It stands one-and-a-half stories and has shiplap siding. A hog barn built nearby in the early twentieth century was later moved south of the garage, where it was used as a chicken coop and then a boathouse. Next to that was a small, early-20th-century shed. A barn and machine shed were built on the west side of the property in the 1890s but were later demolished.


...
Wikipedia

...