Ranch House
Ranch
House
Barn
Barn
Chicken House
Chicken House
Carriage House
Carriage House
Outhouse
Outhouse
Summer Kitchen
Summer Kitchen
Springroom Door
Spring
Room
Cistern
Cistern
Ice House
Ice House
School
School

Virtual Tour of the 1881 Limestone Ranch House

Spring Hill Ranch

Stephen F. Jones named his ranch the Spring Hill Ranch for the abundant springs on the property. The main ranch house is located two miles north of Strong City, Kansas, facing the morning sun in the east. It was built on a hillside with a two-story exposure on the upper side and a three story on the lower level. The architecture represents a blending of Renaissance influence and Plains Vernacular. It is a Second Empire style of 19th century architecture with a mansard roof enclosing the upper story with dormers and projecting mansard gables, cornices, brackets, and stone quoins at the corners of the house.

The builder was Contractor David Rettiger of Strong City, Kansas and was co-owner of Emslie, Rettiger & Company. They had "probably the finest quarries in the state." (Strong City Independent, November 2, 1881.) Rettiger also built the Montezuma Hotel in Las Vegas, New Mexico in the mid 1880s according to the Chase County Republican, February 25, 1888. Rettiger worked on the Chase County Courthouse in 1871-72 (Strong City Independent, December 24, 1881.)

Spring Hill Ranch HouseCarpenters were L.P. Jenson of Cottonwood Falls, KS, "one of the best carpenters in the state." (Chase County Historical Sketches, volume 2, page 136) He also worked on the Chase County Courthouse in 1871-72. William Asher Magathan, of Cedar Point, Kansas, worked on the house as a carpenter. His tools are featured in a display in the barn.

The native limestone used in the building was quarried and dressed at the Rettiger home quarry, north of Strong City. Individual building stones are square cut on all bearing surfaces and have a rough hewn face. The stones are all the same size. The expensive hand-cut stone would be impossible to reproduce today.Fountain/flower garden

The cost for the Spring Hill Ranch was $40,000 total: $25,000 for the house and $15,000 for the barn. According to local legend it took "20 men working night and day to complete the home. There was so much activity during the construction that travelers often thought they had reached Strong City and tried to put up for the night." There are cornices in ten of the eleven rooms and the wooden doorway into the front of the home is all handcarved. The staircase and newel post are walnut, constructed off-site. The staircase pieces were put together on-site using the Roman numerals marked on the underside. Look closely at the seams and look underneath for the Roman numerals. You will see that they match. The staircase is still as true today as it was when it was first put into place.

The front yard was terraced and planted with lilac and rose bushes. What a fragrant and palatial site it must have been. There was a fountain supplied with water piped from a spring located up on the hill. Erma Slabaugh (resident) had water and goldfish in the fountain until they found her son's dog in it, drowned to death. It has been filled in with dirt ever since.

Level 4 - Fourth Floor contains
the bedrooms
and a bathroom.