Smith Mansion (Wyoming)

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Smith Mansion
General information
LocationCody
Address2902 North Fork Highway,
Construction started1971 (1971)
Construction stopped1992 (Death of architect)
Height75 ft (22.9 m)
Technical details
Floor area321 m2 (3,450 sq ft)
Design and construction
ArchitectFrancis Lee Smith
Known forDistinctive architecture, prominence compared to surrounding valley, killing its owner.

The Smith Mansion, also known as the Smith Family Cabin, is a large, extremely prominent structure standing at roughly 75 ft (22.9 m) in the Wapiti Valley outside Cody, Wyoming in the small unincorporated community of Wapiti. The mansion can be easily spotted if travelling down the North Fork Highway towards Yellowstone National Park, due to its towering, dark and intimidating architectural style. It takes the form of a large log tower, with sections seemingly tacked on haphazardly, although the tower is very stable. Comparisons have been drawn to the Goose Creek Tower in Talkeetna, Alaska.[1]

History

Francis Lee Smith

Francis Lee Smith was born January 4, 1944, in Cody, Wyoming to Irene B. and George R. Smith; he had two brothers, George D. and William H. Smith. Raised in Cody and attending Cody High School, he attended Montana State University and studied architecture, graduating in 1967 with honors.[2]

Building of the Mansion

in 1952, a large wildfire swept over Rattlesnake Mountain, just west of Cody. It left large amounts of timber unclaimed, and Smith decided to use this to build what he described as "A tribute to the North Fork Mountains".[3] He chose the site atop the hill as he believed it to be the geographic center of the Wapiti Valley.[4]

Lee broke ground in mid-1971, intending to build a family home for his wife and incoming children. But once the first floor had been completed in early 1973, he decided to add more floors. Smith and his family lived in it while he was building it, without any electricity, running water, air conditioning, or gas, and with the only source of heat in the entire building a small wood-burning fireplace on the first floor.

In the early 1980s, Smith's wife, Linda Smith-Mills, divorced him, citing his continued obsession with building his mansion.[5] According to her, when she divorced him, he seemed to "throw himself... deeper into the building of his house",and "Without me,... his house became his everything."

Death of Smith

Smith was working on an upper-level balcony of the house at about 6pm on April 1992, when, reportedly, a large section of timber came loose and knocked him off the balcony. He fell roughly 20 feet onto a roof below and onto his neck or head, dying instantly.[6] A day later, a neighbor reported seeing Smith's dead body to the local sheriff's office. Smith was pronounced dead on scene.[2] He is buried in Cody Cemetery, in his hometown of Cody, next to his mother and father.

Preservation and property purchase

Caretaking

After Francis Lee Smith died in 1992, his daughter Sunny Smith-Larsen has been the caretaker of the property. In October 2009, Paul and Sunny Larsen created the Smith Mansion Preservation Project, a charity website that sees to regular clean-ups and maintaining of the property.[7]

Property purchase

In October 2019, the Smith Mansion was sold to Zhiru Huang of Mountain Lodging, a lodging company that owns many properties in the surrounding Cody area, including the Green Creek Inn & RV at the bottom of the hill the mansion rests on.[8] The official selling price mean "asking price" or actual "selling price" or something was not listed; however, estimates ranged between $250,000 and $500,000, with Realtor giving an estimated value of $414,300.[9]

References

  1. Grundhauser, Eric (7 April 2015). "Dr. Seuss House aka The Goose Creek Tower". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Obituaries: Francis Lee Smith". Cody Enterprise. Apr 27, 1992.
  3. Larsen, Paul. "The Artist, Lee Smith". Smith Mansion Preservation Project. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  4. Nir, Sarah Maslin (Feb 1, 2012). "Gone With The Whimsy". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  5. Vaughn, Beverley Joe. "Francis Lee Smith (1944-1992)". Find A Grave. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  6. Westmaas, Reuben. "The Smith Mansion Is a Giant, Twisting House in Wyoming That Killed Its Owner". Discovery. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  7. Larsen, Sunny Smith. "SMPP". Smith Mansion Preservation Project. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  8. Wiederspahn, Annaliese (Feb 2, 2020). "Wyoming's Weird and Wacky Smith Mansion Finally Sells". Cowboy State Daily. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  9. Wolfson, Leo (Jan 27, 2020). "Smith Mansion property purchased". Cody Enterprise. Retrieved 6 April 2023.

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