Rozek, Theodore, House

6337 N. Hermitage Ave., Chicago, Illinois. County/parish: Cook.

Added to the National Register of Historic Places November 02, 2011. NRIS 11000779.

2 contributing buildings.

From Wikipedia:

Theodore Rozek House

The Theodore Rozek House is a historic house at 6337 N. Hermitage Avenue in the Edgewater neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois. The house was built in 1908 for Theodore Rozek, a printer and German immigrant, and his family. Architect Clarence Hatzfeld designed the original house in the American Foursquare style, a popular vernacular style of the early twentieth century. Like many other Foursquare homes, the house had a square shape and was topped by a hip roof with a dormer. In the mid-1920s, architect Andrew E. Norman designed an addition for the front of the house; this addition was inspired by the Better Homes movement, which sought to bring high-level architecture to working-class homes. The addition replaced the original front porch with a semi-circular porch supported by its original columns, distinguishing the house from its neighbors.

The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 2, 2011.

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National Park Service documentation: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/28891928

LC