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Seth Peterson Cottage

Coordinates: 43°33′47″N 89°49′30″W / 43.56306°N 89.82500°W / 43.56306; -89.82500
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Seth Peterson Cottage
Seth Peterson Cottage is located in Wisconsin
Seth Peterson Cottage
Seth Peterson Cottage is located in the United States
Seth Peterson Cottage
Map
LocationE9982 Fern Dell Road, Reedsburg, Wisconsin, U.S.
Nearest cityLake Delton, Wisconsin
Coordinates43°33′47″N 89°49′30″W / 43.56306°N 89.82500°W / 43.56306; -89.82500
Built1958
ArchitectFrank Lloyd Wright and Thomas Casey
Architectural styleUsonian style
NRHP reference No.81000059
Added to NRHPNovember 9, 1981[1]

The Seth Peterson Cottage is a one-story cottage in Mirror Lake State Park near Reedsburg, Wisconsin, United States. Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright with Thomas Casey as the supervising architect, the house was built for the computer operator Seth Peterson of Black Earth, Wisconsin, and was one of Wright's last-ever designs. The exterior of the building has ashlar foundations and large glass windows. The cottage has a bedroom and a living–dining room, which surround a utility core with a kitchen and bathroom. The roof above the bedroom is flat, while the rest of the cottage has a sloping roof. The house is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Work on the cottage began in 1959, but Peterson died by suicide before the cottage was finished. The house was acquired in 1961 by the Pritchard family, who completed it. In 1966, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) bought the cottage as part of an expansion of Mirror Lake State Park. The house fell into disrepair until Audrey Laatsch, a local resident, formed the Seth Peterson Cottage Conservancy in 1989 to renovate the building. Following a $300,000 repair project, the house was opened to the public for rentals in 1992.

Description

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The Seth Peterson Cottage is located at E9982 Fern Dell Road in Reedsburg, Wisconsin, United States, near Wisconsin Dells.[2] Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in the Usonian style,[3][4] the Peterson Cottage is a one-story building with one bedroom.[5][6] It sits on a hill about 60 feet (18 m) above Mirror Lake,[7] within Mirror Lake State Park in Sauk County.[8][9] The only access is by a long driveway.[9]

The Peterson Cottage is one of 41 extant Wright designs in Wisconsin[10] and was one of the last buildings that Wright designed before his death in 1959.[11][12] The cottage is also the last building with a rectangular floor plan that he designed during his lifetime; the few designs he completed afterward all have circular or triangular floor plans.[5] Taliesin Associated Architects, the successor firm to Wright's practice, later copied the Peterson Cottage's general design in the construction of the Don and Virginia Lovness House.[13][14] Like Wright's other Usonian houses, the cottage lacks a basement or attic,[7][3] and it includes a series of interconnected, free-flowing spaces.[3] Unlike these other houses, however, it does not have any carport.[3]

As of 2024, up to two people can sleep in the bedroom overnight, while the house's living–dining room has a sofa bed for two additional people.[15] In addition, the space can host up to 40 guests for events.[16] Throughout the year, tours of the cottage are hosted on the second Sunday of every month for a fee,[15][17] and there are free tours during Wisconsin State Park Open Houses as well.[18]

Exterior

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The exterior of the building has ashlar foundations and is set into the western slope of the hill.[6] The sandstone used n the house is laid in horizontal lines[11] and is sourced from a local quarry.[2][19] The facade is made of masonry and glass, like many of Wright's other buildings.[5] The northern elevation is made of stone.[9] About one-third of the facade was originally made of plate glass,[20] particularly along the southern, western, and eastern elevations.[2][21] There is also a strip of windows on the southwest corner.[22] The windows include wooden cutouts, which cast shadows across the interior throughout the day.[11][22]

The bedroom was originally covered by a flat roof, while the other spaces were covered by a roof that slopes outward.[19][6] Like many of Wright's other buildings, the roof has protruding eaves, and there is a central chimney.[15] When the house was renovated in the early 1990s, the slope of the roof was modified to prevent water accumulations, and the original 2-inch-thick (5.1 cm) insulation was increased to 8 inches (200 mm).[23]

Interior

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The cottage measures roughly 30 by 36 feet (9.1 by 11.0 m) across.[6] Sources disagree on whether it has 880 square feet (82 m2)[2][4][8][20] or 900 square feet (84 m2) of interior space.[11][24][25] The Peterson Cottage was the smallest house that Wright designed in Wisconsin[5][20] and one of his smallest ever, behind only the cottages in Yemassee, South Carolina, that he designed for the Stevens family.[14] Wright's son-in-law William Wesley Peters said the building had "more architecture per square foot" than any of his other designs.[22][21] According to the architect John Eifler, who had helped restore several of Wright's buildings,[26] the Peterson Cottage is the only existing example of a Wright-designed cottage that is centered around a fireplace.[27] The living–dining room and the bedroom surround the house's masonry utility core,[6] arranged roughly in a "G" shape.[28] Due to the small dimensions of the house, the rooms are not wheelchair-accessible.[29]

The floors and the exterior patio are both made of flagstone, and there is a radiant heating system under the floor slab.[2][22][30] Pennies from 1959 are embedded into the floor.[28] The front door leads directly into the main living space, which has a high ceiling; this contrasted with Wright's other houses, which typically had high spaces accessed by foyers with low ceilings.[26] The living–dining room itself has a dining area with chairs and tables, as well as a living area with other furniture. Two glass double doors open from the dining room, overlooking Mirror Lake.[29] The living room's ceiling reaches as high as 12 feet (3.7 m) on one wall.[7]

A short corridor with closets leads from the living room to the bedroom,[29] which covers 8 by 12 feet (2.4 by 3.7 m).[31] The bedroom has a lower ceiling than the living room[26][29] and has a queen bed and a folding door.[28] Within the core is a kitchen and bathroom,[5][6] which bisects the southern half of the interior.[13] The kitchen has a small sink, refrigerator, cooking range, and oven but no countertop.[29] There is a ladder to a loft above.[28] The kitchen's ceiling contains a skylight,[7][13] with the living-room ceiling sloping down to meet the kitchen ceiling.[28] The bathroom next to the kitchen has a toilet, sink, and shower.[28] The doors to the bedroom and bathroom are the only interior doors in the house.[17]

History

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Development and use as residence

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The house was built for Seth Peterson, a computer operator from Black Earth, Wisconsin.[21][32] Peterson was an admirer of Frank Lloyd Wright and had tried unsuccessfully to become an apprentice at the architect's Taliesin Fellowship.[3][33] Peterson had frequently traveled to Wright's Taliesin studio (about 40 miles (64 km) north of the Peterson Cottage's future site[34]) and to houses that Wright had designed in Chicago.[21] In August 1958, Peterson bought a cottage on Mirror Lake near Lake Delton, Wisconsin,[35] which burned down the next month.[36][37] At some point, Peterson decided to hire Frank Lloyd Wright to reconstruct the house, though sources do not indicate when this occurred.[3] After initially receiving no response from the architect,[33] Peterson sent Wright a $1,000[a] check as part of a retainer agreement. Wright, who was low on funds, shortly cashed the check, thus committing to the house's design.[8][15][30] Initially, Wright anticipated that the house would cost $15,000 to build.[39][3]

Neither architect nor client lived to see the building's completion.[39][40] Construction commenced in early 1959, shortly before Wright's death;[21][26] he had signed the drawings in October 1958, six months before he died.[14] Peterson and his family borrowed $12,000 that July to finance the building's construction.[3] Mackey Adams of the Adams Brothers Construction Company was the house's general contractor,[3][41] and Peterson personally constructed parts of the house to save money.[15][26] Thomas Casey was the supervising architect;[11][22] Wright himself reportedly never visited the site during construction.[23] Construction stopped after Peterson ran out of money, and he hanged himself in 1960[31][33] at the age of 23.[32] At the time, Peterson was despondent; he was in debt, and his bride had reportedly left him.[40] After Peterson's suicide, the house was taken over by receivers.[41] According to the Wisconsin State Journal, one account had it that the house's plumber quit and took his materials with him after hearing that Peterson had died.[19]

Lilian T. Pritchard,[b] a socialite from Milwaukee,[19][20] bought the house in late 1961.[42] The next year, she hired Taliesin Associated Architects to renovate it.[43][44] The Pritchard family completed the work[45][46] and invited guests to the house in September 1962.[47][48] The cottage's final cost has been variously cited as $24,000,[23] $26,000,[17] $35,000,[26][49][50] or $38,000.[39] Due to a lack of records, the true cost of the house is unknown.[3] Lilian's son Owen was the home's first actual occupant.[19] Owen raised several Afghan Hounds while living at the house,[41][13] adding a high fence to keep his dogs from running away.[22] A forced-air heating system was also installed at the house.[13][39] The Pritchards hired Tom Casey to draw up plans for an expansion of the cottage, which were never carried out.[11] After Owen died, Lilian considered either expanding the house or selling it.[20]

DNR acquisition and deterioration

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Mirror Lake State Park landscape
The Peterson Cottage became part of Mirror Lake State Park (pictured) in 1966.

The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) acquired the cottage in September 1966 for $38,400, adding it to the adjacent Mirror Lake State Park.[3] Sources disagree on why the DNR bought the land. A Baraboo News Republic article from 1982 stated that the DNR wanted to convert the house to a visitor shelter,[20] while another article from the same newspaper said in 1990 that the DNR wanted to demolish the cottage and return the landscape to its natural condition.[51] In any case, at the time of the DNR's purchase, the house was not considered historically significant.[31] Local residents and preservationists spoke out against the cottage's demolition.[51] The DNR preserved the house after learning that Wright had designed it,[31][51] and the building was used as a cross-country skiing lodge.[22][30][41] The cottage was ultimately abandoned, as it was too far removed from the rest of the park, and the DNR's staff could not adequately oversee it.[21][41] In particular, the Peterson Cottage was separated from the rest of the park by six plots of private land, which the DNR was unable to acquire,[20] and it was about 14 mile (0.40 km) away from Fern Dell Road.[52]

The Peterson Cottage started to deteriorate due to vandalism and lack of upkeep;[41][51] one Associated Press article directly attributes the vandalism to the building's usage as a skiing lodge.[33] The DNR boarded up the cottage's windows and installed a fence to discourage trespassing. People broke in anyway, hosting parties and setting fires,[20][41] and some fans of Wright's work sold off pieces of the decorations.[21] Rodents chewed through the wooden boards covering the windows, and melting snow created a hole in the roof.[20] Arsonists tried to burn the house down twice.[9] By the 1980s, vandals had broken a glass pane supporting and the DNR had installed temporary supports to prevent the roof from collapsing.[41] The DNR said that, while the house's masonry frame had not deteriorated much, there were severe leaks.[41] The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1981,[20][53] and the same year it was added to Wisconsin's Register of Historic Places.[53] It was Wright's 15th design in Wisconsin to be added to the NRHP, as well as one of about 617 NRHP listings in the state overall.[5][54] The Peterson Cottage was also the only Wright–designed building that the Wisconsin government owned.[54]

The cottage remained abandoned in the 1980s because it could not be put to recreational use,[54] and there was not enough space in the house for an office or a superintendent's residence.[22] Jerald Trumm, Mirror Lake State Park's superintendent at the time, had proposed converting the cottage to a shelter or a nature center. However, he did not have money for these proposals; even restoring the house would have cost $23,000, one-quarter of the park's annual budget.[20] The DNR also could not lease or sell the building to a private citizen,[20] and relocating the building was also deemed infeasible.[20][31][30] According to Trumm, even if the house were to be restored, it would be hard to guard the large glass windows against vandals.[31] Additionally, the house's annual heating costs alone would be over $5,000.[31][55] The department had hoped to identify a group to take over the cabin but had not received any clear commitments.[20][54]

Restoration efforts

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Planning

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In the late 1980s, the psychotherapist Audrey Laatsch, a local resident, became interested in the structure after noticing its rundown condition.[26][56] According to one account, she reportedly first noticed the house after her canoe flipped over and she sought a place to dry off.[57] Laatsch led a campaign to restore the cottage, despite having neither money nor jurisdiction.[26][56] Though she did not have any previous experience with historic preservation, Laatsch said that she had long been interested in interior design and in Wright's work.[56] A subcommittee of the Mirror Lake Association led early efforts to preserve the house.[58][59] The Seth Peterson Cottage Conservancy (SPCC), a nonprofit organization led by Laatsch, was founded in October 1988[30] to continue the association's work.[8][59] The next year, the DNR and the Mirror Lake Association held a public hearing on the future usage of the Peterson Cottage.[41] Approximately 60 people who attended the hearing, including John Eifler.[26]

Trumm estimated that it would cost $120,000–150,000 to restore the cottage and improve access to it.[31][55] The Wisconsin government agreed to provide two $25,000 matching funds grants in mid-1989, on the condition that the SPCC raise an equivalent amount of money.[11][60] In November, the DNR leased the cottage to the SPCC for 15 years,[51][61] and the SPCC announced plans to operate the house as an overnight accommodation and event space.[50][51] Although the DNR could not lease out the property, the SPCC was not subject to this restriction,[38] and the state passed legislation specifically to allow overnight accommodations in Mirror Lake State Park.[52] With rental rates tentatively set at $175 a night, the SPCC believed that it could raise at least $15,000 a year.[50] Volunteers began cleaning up the house in late 1989,[27][26] and Eifler was hired to design the cottage's restoration.[22][61] The SPCC sought tax exemptions for the renovation.[27] Because the building was on the NRHP, the SPCC sought state government approval for various aspects of the renovation.[62]

Reconstruction

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Interior of the Peterson Cottage

Conservancy members first met to discuss the cottage's restoration in early 1990[60][25] and began raising $100,000 for urgent repairs.[49] In the long run, the organization anticipated that the project would cost at least $213,000.[50][49] It also invited the general public to help restore the house, hosting its first "Hands-on Work Holiday" at the end of March.[53][63] One of Peterson's childhood friends, Burt Goderstad, donated the original architectural drawings for the house to the SPCC.[63][64] Although the cottage had been completed just three decades prior, everything except the walls and floors had to be rebuilt due to its poor condition.[30][33][65] In addition to restoring the house's original appearance, the project involved installing a radiant heating system, which had been part of the original design but never installed.[22][65] Parts of the design were modified to make the house wheelchair accessible, and energy-efficient windows and insulated shades were also installed.[22]

In April 1990, the Wisconsin Conservation Corps conducted preliminary work—which included constructing a trail, removing the original roof, and temporarily disassembling the floor[19][66]—at a cost of $16,000.[67] The preliminary work was completed by June.[19][68] The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts gave the SPCC a $10,000 grant in late 1990,[22][69] which allowed the SPCC to rebuild the roof.[70] To raise additional money, the SPCC held tours of the cottage each month,[60] and it sold prints depicting the house.[71] Various firms donated material and labor.[22][26] For example, the house received windows from Pella and a refrigerator from Sub-Zero, both of which had been among the house's original suppliers.[26] Companies such as Wisconsin Power & Light and American Family Insurance donated money as well.[64][72] Although the project was supposed to have been completed by October 1990,[50] this was delayed due to lackluster fundraising.[64]

The Wisconsin government disbursed the matching grant in June 1991 after $50,000 had been raised,[72] and the National Park Service provided another $4,135 that month.[73] By then, the SPCC's cost estimate for the restoration had increased to $325,000.[74][c] The new roof was also completed at that point;[73] in contrast to the original roof, it was sloped slightly and had a thicker waterproof membrane.[23] The Jeffris Family Foundation of Janesville, Wisconsin, agreed to provide an $80,000 matching funds grant in early 1992;[75][76] the conservancy received the funds that June after raising an equivalent amount independently.[65][77] This funding was used to build custom furniture that Wright had designed, but never actually constructed.[75] In addition, volunteers worked on the house's mechanical systems during early 1992.[78] The renovation ultimately cost more than $300,000;[8][26][79] some sources give a figure of up to $350,000.[3][80][d]

Usage as rental house

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The house was rededicated on June 7, 1992.[65] This date was chosen because it coincided with a free-admission day at Wisconsin state parks and because it was the day before both Wright's and Peterson's birthdays.[65][77] The SPCC began renting the house for homestays the next month,[8] hiring the Sand County Service Company to manage bookings.[77][81] Laatsch said that "the bed arrived just 20 minutes ahead of the first guests".[8] The Peterson Cottage thus became the first Wright–designed house that visitors could rent for overnight stays.[79][82] The SPCC never formally advertised the cottage to visitors,[26] but the state government did promote the house, as well as several other Wright buildings in Wisconsin, as part of the Frank Lloyd Wright Wisconsin Heritage Tour.[12][24][33] The cottage was used for events such as birthday parties, anniversaries, and weddings, attracting visitors from as far away as Australia.[26][56] In addition, open house events were hosted on the second Sunday of each month.[9][12][82]

The SPCC hosted its annual meetings at the Peterson Cottage,[81][83] and it also sought volunteers to help landscape the area around the house.[84] By the mid-1990s, there was a months-long waiting list to rent the cottage,[26][85] which was occupied 325 days a year.[3][80] The Reedsburg Times-Press wrote in 1995 that people had booked the house for events as much as four years in advance.[85] The high occupancy rate had allowed the SPCC to pay off all of the building's construction cost.[3][83] The SPCC had completed all major construction work by 1996, when it shifted its focus to maintenance; some of the house's furnishings needed to be replaced due to high usage.[83] The SPCC was considering constructing a dock and gate for visitors by the late 1990s, and it also wanted to donate $25,000 to the DNR for the construction of a visitor center.[80] Thereafter, the SPCC gave some of its profits to the DNR.[86]

The Peterson Cottage continued to have a two-year-long waiting list in the early 21st century.[86][87] The SPCC retained control of the house, renewing its lease with the DNR.[87] In 2003, the SPCC sued the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company (which had provided the radiant heating system), claiming that the rubber tubing in the floors had decayed prematurely.[88] Along with the Bernard Schwartz House and Louis Penfield House, it was one of a small number of Wright–designed private residences that were being used as homestays.[89][90][e] Upon the 20th anniversary of the house's opening, in 2012, the house was booked more than 90 percent of the time.[52] A SPCC official said in 2022 that it had "been a very successful project for us financially" to rent out the house.[87] By 2024, the house had accommodated 10,000 overnight visitors.[15]

Impact

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Reception

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Architecturally, Wisconsin Dells Events wrote that "the architect's unique style is evident in the one-bedroom structure", particularly regarding the house's layout around a central fireplace.[41] Commentators likened the house's interior to a cave[7][9] and wrote that the windows helped relate the interiors to the natural surroundings.[57][93][40] Another critic for the Courier News described the house's design as being "in perfect harmony with sandstone cliffs" nearby.[7] Due to the bedroom's small ceiling, the Reedsburg Times-Press likened the house to a mushroom.[52] Another reviewer, writing for Vogue magazine in 2022, said that "there's no other place to hang out—at least if you're seeking comfort—than the sprawling living room", saying that the bedroom was small, as was the case with many Wright designs.[94]

After the house opened to the public, the Chicago Tribune wrote that the cottage was "one of the newest small wonders of the world",[8] while Paul Goldberger wrote that "the house possesses an extraordinary quality that can only be called monumentality in miniature."[26] According to the Baraboo News Republic, visitors felt that the building was "a jewel in the wilderness" and that it "excites visually yet calms emotionally".[82] A critic for the Chicago Tribune said that the house was "an unforgettable experience" during the day but that it was cold and uncomfortable during winter nights.[29] Travel & Leisure magazine called the Peterson Cottage "one of the least known—and the most petite among all of [Wright's] structures".[15]

There has also been commentary on the building's symbolism. A reporter for The Wall Street Journal said that the cottage was "a work of art" because of its secluded location,[95] and the Financial Times said in 2010 that the cottage was "modernism in miniature".[96] A Corporate Report Wisconsin article described the Peterson Cottage as one of several Wright designs that "have, over the years, become a part of Wisconsin's cultural and historical fabric".[97] A writer for The Columbus Dispatch compared the cottage to a cathedral in 2015.[40]

Media and accolades

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The Lovness family replicated the cottage's design when they constructed a residence in Stillwater, Minnesota, in 1976,[14] and the design also inspired that of the O'Donnell family's house in Bellevue, Iowa.[98] After the building's 1990s renovation, longtime Wright biographer Brendan Gill detailed the cottage in an article for Architectural Digest.[9][82] The house and its renovation were detailed in a 1997 book by John Eifler and Kristin Visser.[39][99] It was also the subject of the 2016 documentary The Jewel in the Woods, produced by Bill Kult, who spent 16 years documenting the house's history.[21][100] In addition, after Laatsch died in 2002, her friend Jeff Hagen painted a portrait of the Peterson Cottage titled Audrey's Star.[101]

The cottage's renovation received an award from the Wisconsin Association of Historic Preservation Commissions, in addition to the Wisconsin Trust Award for Historic Preservation.[102][103] Eifler & Associates also received an award from the American Institute of Architects' Chicago chapter,[104] and Laatsch received a Wright Spirit Award from the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy in 1993.[105] In addition, the SPCC received a certificate of commendation in 1995 from the Wisconsin State Historical Society.[106] The SPCC itself also gives out the Kristin Visser Historical Preservation Award, which is given every two years to people who have helped preserve a Wright–designed building or a Prairie School building in Wisconsin or neighboring states.[107]

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^ The documentarian Bill Kult says that Peterson sent Wright $500.[21] Claire Barnett, who led the Seth Peterson Cottage Conservancy, gives a figure of $700.[38]
  2. ^ Also cited as "Mrs. Owen L. Pritchard"[42]
  3. ^ This included $250,000 to restore the building itself, $50,000 for landscaping, and $25,000 for equipment and interior furnishings.[74]
  4. ^ The Racine Journal Times says that, while the SPCC spent $250,000 upfront, it received another $100,000 worth of donated material.[80]
  5. ^ The Price Tower in Oklahoma had a hotel,[91] and the Edwin H. Cheney House was used as a bed and breakfast; neither were strictly used as homestays.[92]

Citations

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  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d e Sanderson, Arlene (2001). A Guide to Frank Lloyd Wright Public Places: Wright Sites. Princeton Architectural Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-56898-275-5. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Logan, Deb (July 17, 1997). "Peterson cottage exemplifies Usonian image". Portage Daily Register. pp. 1, 2. Retrieved March 9, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  4. ^ a b Teachout, Terry (March 31, 2017). "A 'Tiny House' That Predates the Current Craze; Paul Rudolph's Walker Guest House offers the security of a cave with the joy of a pavilion". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. ProQuest 1882590150.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Wright-designed house on National Register". Stevens Point Journal. January 27, 1982. p. 26. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  6. ^ a b c d e f National Park Service 1981, p. 2.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Zak, Victor (May 25, 2008). "The Wright Wisconsin getaway". The Courier-News. p. 59. Retrieved March 9, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Zell, Fran (August 22, 1993). "For Rent: Wright Nights in Wisconsin Here's Your Chance to Stay a Cottage by the Master". Chicago Tribune. p. 1. ISSN 1085-6706. ProQuest 283580080.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Chickering, Pam (November 13, 1992). "National magazine to feature Wright cottage". Portage Daily Register. p. 6. Retrieved March 8, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  10. ^ Harpaz, Beth J. (March 5, 2017). "Events, trail celebrate Frank Lloyd Wright's 150th birthday". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. H.5. ProQuest 1874191922.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g "State grant for Mirror Lake Wright cottage approved". The Reedsburg Times-Press. August 3, 1989. p. 3. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  12. ^ a b c Davenport, Don (May 17, 1992). "At home with Wright". Chicago Tribune. p. 267. ISSN 1085-6706. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  13. ^ a b c d e Storrer, William Allin (1993). The Frank Lloyd Wright Companion. University of Chicago Press. p. 462. ISBN 978-0-226-77624-8. (S.430)
  14. ^ a b c d National Park Service 1981, p. 3.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Chang, Rachel (December 26, 2024). "This Tiny Cottage Rental in a Wisconsin State Park Is the Smallest Home Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright". Travel + Leisure. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
  16. ^ Bergin, Mary (February 10, 2007). "Wright built perfect romantic retreat". The Capital Times. pp. C1, C2. Retrieved March 9, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  17. ^ a b c Gand, Gale (October 8, 2009). "Gand searches for Mr. Wright". Chicago Tribune. p. 19. ISSN 1085-6706. Retrieved March 9, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  18. ^ "Seth Peterson Cottage offers free visit". Wisconsin Dells Events. May 15, 2013. p. 8. Retrieved March 9, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g Hopkins, Steve (June 2, 1990). "Down and up: Wright cottage dismantled". Wisconsin State Journal. p. 25. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Strobel, Jeff (March 2, 1982). "Elements may overcome Wright design". Baraboo News Republic. pp. 20, 21. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i Sisson, Patrick (June 2, 2016). "Frank Lloyd Wright's Smallest Project Has a Dramatic, Tragic Past". Curbed. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hayes, G. (May 31, 1992). "A Little Jewel Shines Again". Milwaukee Journal. p. 21. ProQuest 333518384.
  23. ^ a b c d Buchta, Jim (May 2, 1999). "Where Wright Went Wrong". Star Tribune. pp. E1, E6. Retrieved March 9, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  24. ^ a b Romell, Rick (May 6, 1992). "Wright sites Promotional effort designed to boost restoration efforts". Milwaukee Sentinel. p. 1E. ProQuest 333338443.
  25. ^ a b Tancill, Karen B. (January 29, 1990). "Group strives to rehabilitate Wright cottage". The Journal Times. p. 4. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Goldberger, Paul (June 2, 1994). "Paradise Revisited; Where Earth and Sky Meet: A Wright Cottage, for Rent". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
  27. ^ a b c Young, Joseph (October 16, 1989). "Doing Wright-thing for lake cottage". Baraboo News Republic. pp. 1, 5. Retrieved March 8, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Houdek, Cathy (December 12, 2001). "Mirror Lake park home to unique architecture". Wisconsin Dells Events. p. 3. Retrieved March 9, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Stroud, Toni (April 15, 2001). "In a cottage in the woods with Frank Lloyd Wright". Lincoln Journal Star. p. 87. Retrieved March 9, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  30. ^ a b c d e f Ecker, Carole (May 10, 1992). "Setting it Wright". Portage Daily Register. p. 11. Retrieved March 8, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h Pritchard, Ken (February 6, 1989). "Mirror Lake cottage: Wright stuff worth keeping". Portage Daily Register. p. 19. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  32. ^ a b "Seth Peterson, of Black Earth, Is Dead at 23". The Capital Times. April 18, 1960. p. 14. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  33. ^ a b c d e f "Historic cottage revived for June tourist opening". Wausau Daily Herald. Associated Press. May 17, 1992. p. 54. Retrieved March 8, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
  34. ^ Goldberger, Paul (June 2, 1994). "Wright's Own Home: A Lifelong Work in Progress". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
  35. ^ "Happenings About Town". Baraboo News Republic. August 16, 1958. p. 4. Retrieved March 7, 2025 – via newspapers.com.
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Sources

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