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Bishop Gallagher House

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Bishop Gallagher House - Bishop Gallagher House — architectural photograph, 1925 Maginnis and Walsh Tudor Revival, 1880 Wellesley Dr., Detroit. Photo by Andrew Petrov - Photo by Andrew Petrov - Detroit Michigan

Bishop Gallagher House — architectural photograph, 1925 Maginnis and Walsh Tudor Revival, 1880 Wellesley Dr., Detroit. Photo by Andrew Petrov

Photo by Andrew Petrov
Bishop Gallagher House — Bishop Gallagher House — architectural photograph, 1925 Maginnis and Walsh Tudor Revival, 1880 Wellesley Dr., Detroit. Photo by Andrew Petrov — photo by Andrew Petrov

National Register of Historic Places Filing

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State SignificanceCommunity PlanningLandscape ArchitectureArchitectureCommerceIndustry1915-1940

Palmer Woods is significant as a carefully planned residential subdivision which strove to take advantage of the natural beauty of the terrain. Designed by landscape architect Ossian Cole Simonds, Palmer Woods received the Michigan Horticultural Society's Award of Merit in 1938 for being the finest platted subdivision in Michigan. Palmer Woods is also significant because it contains many of the finest examples of residential design in the City of Detroit. The work of internationally known architects such as Frank Lloyd Wright, Minoru Yamasaki, and Maginnis & Walsh, is represented as well as many of Detroit's most talented architects including Alvin E. Harley, Clarence E. Day, Richard H. Marr, William Kuni, J. Ivan Dise, C. Howard Crane, Herbert and Frances Schmitz, and the firms of Pollmar & Ropes, and Baxter, O'Dell and Halpin. Lastly, Palmer Woods is significant as the home of many prominent Detroiters including the upper echelon executives of the auto companies that prospered with the rapid expansion of Detroit's auto industry during the first quarter of the 20th century.

Physical Description

The Palmer Woods Historic District is located approximately eight miles north of downtown Detroit between Seven and Eight Mile roads, adjacent to and west of Woodward Avenue, Detroit's major north-south thoroughfare. This district is composed of 188 acres with 14 broad, curving avenues on which there are 297 structures. The district is entirely residential. The area is bounded by Evergreen Cemetery on the north, Woodward Avenue on the east, Seven Mile Road and Palmer Park on the South, and the Sherwood Forest Subdivision on the west. Palmer Woods is characterized by large, irregularly shaped lots with large homes. The houses have deep setbacks and extensive grounds which were often designed by professional landscape architects. The predominant building materials in the area are red brick, stone, stucco, and slate often found in combination. Architectural styles found within Palmer Woods include Tudor Revival, Neo-Georgian, Mediterranean, Moderne and Craftsman. The historic district includes the entire Palmer Woods subdivision as originally platted. Landscape architect Ossian Cole Simonds laid out Palmer Woods with irregular-shaped lots and curving streets, taking full advantage of the natural terrain. The traffic pattern within the subdivision is self-contained with few through streets. There are no through streets on the northern and western sides of Palmer Woods. The streets which intersect with Woodward Avenue on the eastern edge are Strathcona, Wellesley, and Balmoral. Streets with access to Seven Mile Road on the south are Strathcona, Lincolnshire, Burlington, and Gloucester. The average lot width is 100 feet and the average depth is 175 feet. Street names such as Balmoral, Gloucester, and Cumberland reflect an interest in English history. The original plat map shows Suffolk Drive as Devonshire, Woodston Road as Nottingham Road, and Lincolnshire Drive as Lincoln Highway. The area is buffered from Woodward Avenue, Detroit's major north-south thoroughfare, by a green belt which runs from Strathcona Drive on the north to Seven Mile Road on the south. This green belt visually connects the open expanses of Evergreen Cemetery to the north and Palmer Park to the south and was part of the original design for the area.

Architect/Builder

various see text

NRHP Ref# 83000896 • Data from National Park Service • Content available under CC BY-SA 4.0

From Wikipedia

The Palmer Woods Historic District is a neighborhood located in Detroit, Michigan, bounded by Seven Mile Road, Woodward Avenue, and Strathcona Drive. There are approximately 295 homes in the 188-acre (0.76 km2) district, which is between the City of Highland Park in Wayne County and the City of Ferndale in Oakland County. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. The Detroit Golf Club is nearby.As of 2015, many of the wealthiest professionals in the city of Detroit live in Palmer Woods.The Palmer Woods Historic District is named after Thomas W. Palmer, a prominent citizen of nineteenth-century Detroit and a United States Senator. Palmer's estate included land on both sides of Woodward Avenue, stretching from Six Mile Road to Eight Mile Road. During his lifetime, Palmer donated some of his land to the city of Detroit to establish Palmer Park, and he gave additional land to the state of Michigan to build the Michigan State Fairgrounds.Palmer died in 1913; two years later, Detroit real-estate developer Charles W. Burton purchased the section of Palmer's estate that now encompasses the Palmer Woods Historic District. Burton envisioned an exclusive neighborhood catering to Detroit's richest citizens, with room for spacious and elegant homes. He hired the landscape architect Ossian Cole Simonds to design the layout of the development. Cole laid out a subdivision with gently curving streets, capitalizing on the natural beauty of the area and creating a park-like atmosphere in the neighborhood. Curbs are nonexistent, minimizing the transition from street to lawn and discouraging pedestrian traffic, and every lot in the neighborhood had a unique shape.Many Colonial Revival and Tudor Revival style homes were constructed between about 1917 and 1929. The neighborhood received the Michigan Horticultural Society's Award of Merit in 1938 for being the finest platted subdivision in Michigan. After World War II, additional mansions were constructed.In 2007 and 2008, there were around 24 residential properties that were vacant. By 2011, the community established its own private security service. By 2014, housing prices, which had previously declined, began to rebound.As of 2020, the neighborhood had a median household income of $155,917. Ethnically, Palmer Woods is 74.8% African American, 17.1% European American, and 6.2% Hispanic.Palmer Woods is known for its elm-lined streets with large brick and stone homes in Tudor Revival architecture, set back from the street behind contiguous uninterrupted lawn. Lots are large, with ample room for trees, play equipment, and a good expanse of grass. There may be coats of arms, leaded or stained glass windows, and other features (such as elevators) in some of the homes. Various properties boast more than one structure, such as a house and guest house, or maids' quarters. Streets gently curve through the forested neighborhood.Palmer Woods has its own security service and an active voluntary neighborhood association. The home of physicians, politicians, business owners, artists, executives and their families, the Palmer Woods neighborhood has attracted some of Detroit's most prominent citizens. Charles W. Burton himself made his home in the neighborhood.Two of the seven Fisher Brothers (owners of Fisher Body), Alfred and William, also lived in the neighborhood. William Fisher's former house, at 1791 Wellesley Drive, is 35,000 square feet (3,300 m2), one of the largest in Detroit. Alfred J. Fisher's former mansion is located at 1771 Balmoral Drive. John H. Kunsky, the founder of United Artists theatres, also lived in the area.Almost every house in Palmer Woods has unique architectural features, but a number are particularly important. At the southern edge of the district is the Dorothy H. Turkel House, the only house in Detroit designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. C. Howard Crane, the noted theater architect, designed the home of John H. Kunsky, incorporating many theater elements into the design. Minoru Yamasaki and Leonard B. Willeke also designed houses in the district.McGinnis and Walsh designed this Tudor Revival mansion, known as the Bishop Gallagher residence (1925) Front of the mansion in 2020 Probably the most significant house in the district is the 62-room Bishop Gallagher residence at 19366 Lucerne Drive (also known as 1880 Wellesley Drive). The mansion was built in 1925 for the Fisher brothers, who hired the Boston firm of McGinnis and Walsh, specialists in ecclesiastical architecture, to design the Tudor Revival structure. Upon completion, the Fisher brothers gave the property to Bishop Michael Gallagher, of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit. The 40,000-square-foot (3,700 m2) home is the largest within the city of Detroit.The two-story brick building consists of a large central structure flanked by diagonal wings. There are numerous exterior bays, each topped with a parapet capped with masonry and a finial. Religious themes are included throughout the house, both on the exterior and the interior. On the exterior, medallions, shields and crests are set into the brickwork, and a copper statue of the Archangel Michael defeating Satan is prominent. The interior is finished with oak, stone and masonry. The residence had, at one time, the largest collection of Pewabic glazed pottery tile in Michigan.Bishop Gallagher lived in this house until his death in 1937. Subsequent archbishops of Detroit (Cardinals Edward Mooney and John Dearden) also lived in the home. Upon Cardinal Dearden's death in 1988, the archdiocese sold the mansion in 1989 to John Salley of the Detroit Pistons for $500,000.In 1995, the property was sold by Salley to Bishop Wayne T. Jackson of Great Faith Ministries International, who used it as a home and as offices for his ministry. In 2017, the mansion was sold by Jackson for more than $2.5 million to a real estate developer from California who collects historic houses.Forbidden Fruits (2006), a movie produced by Marc Cayce, was filmed inside the Bishop Gallagher residence.Palmer Woods is within the Detroit Public Schools district. Residents are zoned to Palmer Park Preparatory Academy, formerly the Barbara Jordan School, for elementary and middle school. All residents are zoned to Mumford High School. Palmer Park is operated by teachers and not by a principal administrator.• Mike Duggan• Mitt Romney (resided in the community until he was five years old)Wikimedia Commons has media related to Palmer Woods Historic District.• Michigan portal• Palmer Woods websiteWestHistoric DistrictsSee also: Historic homes in metropolitan Detroit

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Building Details

Architect
Maginnis and Walsh
Year Built
1925
Address
1880 Wellesley Dr.
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Building Type
mansion
National Register
Listed
Ref# 83000896
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