Filed Under Miles City

Anderson Bungalow

Miles City East Main Street Residential Historic District

Real estate speculation abounded in the East Main district when carpenter Ernest Anderson built this lovely one-and-a-half-story bungalow in 1916. Its large front porch, supported by heavy, tapered columns, and its low-pitched roofs with overhanging eaves and triangular braces clearly mark this house as a Craftsman style bungalow, one of the most fashionable house styles during this period. Anderson probably never intended this house for his own home; rather, he saw it as an investment and an advertisement of his carpentering skills. From 1918 to 1928 the bungalow was used as rental property. Its tenants included Charles D. Jones, general manager of the Yellowstone Lumber Company. Some time before 1928, when it was sold to Harmon Bright, then vice president of First National Bank, and his wife Mary, the bungalow’s characteristic open front and side porches were enclosed and a breezeway was built, connecting the house to a new garage. These alterations did nothing to reduce the residence’s charm or its ability to link the Miles City of today with the boomtown of the early 1900s.

Images

Anderson Bungalow
Anderson Bungalow Anderson Bungalow. Front to side view of the house, facing northeast on East Main Street. Source: Montana State Historic Preservation Office Creator: Dena Sanford and Susan McDaniel Date: Mar. 1989

Location

2119 Main Street, Miles City, Montana | Private

Metadata

The Montana National Register Sign Program, “Anderson Bungalow,” Historic Montana, accessed March 28, 2024, https://historicmt.org/items/show/260.