Duncan Samson Block

Duncan Samson Block

Historic Marker

Duncan Samson Block

📍 Whitefish, Flathead County🧭 48.41053, -114.33936

Marker Inscription

This staid old brick building has a rich and colorful history.

The Duncan Samson Block, built in 1910 at a cost of about $32,000, was the third or fourth brick building in the fledgling town of Whitefish. Mrs. Jemima Duncan, a widow who had moved to Whitefish from Kalispell a few years earlier, saw opportunity in constructing a rooming house for employees of the Great Northern Railway, which had just named Whitefish as a division point on its line.

Along the way, she met J.A. Samson, a tie contractor for the railroad, and they were married the same years the building was completed. They set up housekeeping in one of the downstairs apartments. Many of the building's tenants were single young men, and as they married, Mrs. Samson advanced into the real estate business, finding small homes to sell them. Her office was in her apartment.

Although the building always has been primarily an apartment house, over the years it also housed a shoe store, a couple of grocery stores, a succession of chiropractor's offices starting in the 1930s, and a tax preparation business. In 1982, local contractor Gary Tallman bought the building and carried out a major modernization of the housing units, selling them as condominiums. In the 21st Century the Block, still essentially an apartment house, belongs to the owners of eight second-floor apartments and several main-floor businesses, including a coffee shop, a landscape architect and yes, a chiropractor office. Its exterior differs very little from the sturdy brick structure that rose along Second Street more than a century ago. In early 2012, the owners' association financed improvements, readying the venerable building for a new century.

Erected by Stumptown Historical Society and Whitefish Community Foundation.

Further reading

Duncan Samson Block — full narrativeJemima Duncan’s 1910 brick rooming house for Great Northern workers—and the Whitefish block that became condos without losing its face.

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