Last Spring I started to document various buildings in Rogers Park that had been included in historic journals, brochures, and other publications. Every time I think I've found them all I come across a digitized source that proves me wrong. That's the case with the Gage House, at the southeast corner of Farwell and Lakewood. It was built in 1903 and published in the 1912 edition (Vol. 2) of the Cyclopedia of Architecture, Carpentry and Building.
No address was given in the encyclopedia, but I've walked by this building often enough to recognize it. It looks mostly unchanged, although there are some window alterations and the side porch was enclosed at some point. It still has the original stucco at the first floor and wood siding above. And it hasn't lost the distinctive pent roof that divides the first and second floors.
Every now and then I run into a building with a pedigree. This house was designed by John B. Fischer, chief draftsman for the Chicago offices of Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge, perhaps best known here for their 1897 Chicago Public Library (now the Chicago Cultural Center). Fischer is credited with designing the Harper Memorial Library as well as many gothic buildings on the campus of the University of Chicago. The Ryerson Burnham Library at the Chicago Art Institute contains his papers. After 1910 he was affiliated with the firm Postle and Fischer. Below are some of John Fischer's designs identified in the Chicago Historic Resources Survey. I'm especially impressed by the design to the far right, which reminds me of a previous post.
Photos from the Cook County Assessor |

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Both sides of the living room |
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Adapted from Sanborn Maps |