Fountain–Bessac House
The Fountain–Bessac House, also known as the Fountain-Haeussler House, is a private house located at 102 W. Main Street in Manchester, Michigan. It was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1986 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.
History
In 1842, flour mill owner Jacob Fountain hired local builder William S. Carr to build what is now the first floor of this house. Fountain built the house in part to outshine the nearby house of banker John Kief. In 1850, Fountain moved into an even more opulent home, and sold the house to Dr. William Bessac. In 1853, Bessac added a second story; the Bessac family moved into the newly constructed second floor and Dr. Bessac used the first floor for his medical practice. Bessac died in 1885, and the house passed to his daughter Mary, and her husband, pharmacist George Haeussler. They lived in the house until George and then Mary died, after which ownership of the house passed to their son Raynor Haeussler.By 1947, the house had been either vacant or rented for some years, and Raynor Haeussler sold it to potato farmers Mary and Tom Walton. In 1949–50, the Waltons hired Emil Lorch, dean emeritus of the University of Michigan School of Architecture, to renovate and update the building. They added a garage and breezeway to the rear of the house. The Waltons sold the house to Katherine McKibben in 1990.