William Tanner House Museum

William A. Tanner House
Aurora Historical Museum in 2011
Location 304 Oak Ave.
Aurora, Kane County, Illinois, United States
Coordinates 41°45′49″N 88°19′6″W / 41.76361°N 88.31833°W / 41.76361; -88.31833Coordinates: 41°45′49″N 88°19′6″W / 41.76361°N 88.31833°W / 41.76361; -88.31833
Built 1857
Architectural style Italianate
NRHP Reference # 76000711
Added to NRHP August 19, 1976

The William Tanner House Museum, also known as the William A. Tanner House, is a historic residence and museum in Aurora, Illinois. It was built in 1857 for William A. Tanner, a hardware merchant. His descendants lived in the house until it was donated to the Aurora Historical Society in 1936. It now operates as a Victorian-period historic house museum.

History

William A. Tanner was one of the first residents in Aurora, Illinois. He moved from Watertown, New York in 1835 shortly after Joseph and Samuel McCarty built the first mill in Aurora. Tanner was a land surveyor who noted the commercial potential of the Aurora area. He purchased a large tract of land on the west side of the river and invited his family, still in New York, to move in with him. For the next four years, Tanner harvested the land, until he briefly moved back to New York in 1839 to marry Anna Plum Makepeace. They moved back to Aurora the following year, working the farm until 1853. Together they had ten children; with this large family, Tanner required a larger house. After a few years living downtown, they moved to this house. Tanner now worked as a hardware businessman; his hardware firm stayed in business until 1979 and was the longest-running business in town.[1]

Tanner's house was constructed in the Italianate style in 1857. The two-story, brick house is built like a Latin Cross, with an octagon cupola at the center. The first floor features the parlor, music room, kitchen, dining room, library, and a master bedroom and bathroom. The second floor is exclusively bedrooms. The Tanner family (and their descendants) lived in the house until 1936, when two of the children donated it to the Aurora Historical Society.[1] On August 19, 1976, it was recognized by the National Park Service with a listing on the National Register of Historic Places. It now operates as a museum, with a $5 admission fee for adults, $4 for seniors, and $3 for students.

References

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