Jesse C. Bowles House
The Jesse C. Bowles House is a historic residence located in the Mount Baker neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on November 6, 1986. The residence is a well-maintained example of 20th-century Tudor Revival architecture.
History
The Jesse C. Bowles House is located on a bank off Shoreland Drive in the Mount Baker neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, on four lots measuring -wide, adjacent to Lake Washington. The house was designed by residental architect Arthur Lamont Loveless in the Tudor Revival-style and built in 1925.The three-story brick home is by with a concrete foundation, wood-framing with half-timbering, Tudor arches, and a pitched gable roof with clay tiles and an attic. Rooms and casement windows have views of the lake. Modifications to kitchen and bedrooms were done in the 1950s. The residence is among the largest properties in the Mount Baker neighborhood.
The Bowles House was constructed for Jesse C. Bowles and his wife Louise. Bowles was the president of both the Northwest Envelope Company and the Bowles Realty Company. His father, Charles Bowles, moved to Seattle around 1900 and contributed to the founding of the Bowles Wholesale Plumbing Company and Northwest Steel in Portland, Oregon.