J. P. McKee Lustron House

The J. P. McKee Lustron House is a historic enameled steel prefabricated house in Jackson, Alabama. Designed and constructed by the Lustron Corporation, this example is one of two in Jackson. The other, the Doit W. McClellan Lustron House, is just around the corner from the McKee Lustron.[2]

J. P. McKee Lustron House
Location519 College Avenue, Jackson, Alabama
Coordinates31°31′0″N 87°53′43″W
Arealess than one acre
Built1949
ArchitectKoch, Carl & Associates; Lustron Corporation
Architectural styleLustron house
MPSLustron Houses in Alabama, MPS
NRHP reference No.00000132 [1]
Added to NRHPFebruary 24, 2000

Lustron houses were only produced during a two-year period, with 2,495 known to have been made. Only roughly 2,000 of these are still in existence. Many of those that do remain have been altered significantly. Twenty Lustron houses are known to have been ordered in Alabama, although it is not clear if twenty were erected. Only eleven remained in 2000. Architectural historians with the Alabama Historical Commission believe that the two in Jackson may have been the first erected in the state.[2]

The house forms part of the National Register of Historic Places' Lustron Houses in Alabama MPS.[2] It was placed on the National Register on February 24, 2000, due to its architectural significance.[1]

History

Both of the Lustron houses in Jackson were erected in 1949 by a local Lustron dealer, J. P. McKee of McKee Construction Company. An open house for both Lustrons was held beginning on April 16, 1949. As of 2000, the exteriors of both houses were in neartooriginal condition. Both were being utilized as rental properties.[2]

Architecture

The J. P. McKee Lustron House is an example of Lustron's "Westchester" 2-bedroom model. It retains the original enameled steel roof, wall panels, and "zig-zag" support column. Lustron houses came in four exterior colors, the McKee Lustron is in the company's "Desert Tan" color.[2]

gollark: So it looks like this person is just a "script kiddie", apart from the dropbox thing (which might be someone else's).
gollark: https://pastebin.com/FFWQuMDpThis one is hilarious.
gollark: Presumably a command block or something.
gollark: The program you linked looks like a Dropbox client.
gollark: I might DIE if I look at that.

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. "Lustron Houses in Alabama, MPS". Alabama Historical Commission. National Park Service. 1997. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
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