3588 County Highway JG | Property Record | Wisconsin Historical Society

Property Record

3588 County Highway JG

Architecture and History Inventory
3588 County Highway JG | Property Record | Wisconsin Historical Society
NAMES
Historic Name:Little Norway - Norway Building
Other Name:Nissedahle
Contributing: Yes
Reference Number:4516
PROPERTY LOCATION
Location (Address):3588 County Highway JG
County:Dane
City:
Township/Village:Blue Mounds
Unincorporated Community:
Town:6
Range:6
Direction:E
Section:4
Quarter Section:NW
Quarter/Quarter Section:NE
PROPERTY FEATURES
Year Built:1893
Additions: 1935C. 1987C. 1991
Survey Date:19791996
Historic Use:church
Architectural Style:Other Vernacular
Structural System:
Wall Material:Log
Architect: Albert Waldemar Hensteen
Other Buildings On Site:
Demolished?:Yes
Demolished Date:2015
NATIONAL AND STATE REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES
National/State Register Listing Name: Little Norway
National Register Listing Date:3/16/1998
State Register Listing Date:7/17/1997
National Register Multiple Property Name:
NOTES
Additional Information:A 'site file' (Little Norway) exists for this property. It contains additional information such as correspondence, newspaper clippings, or historical information. It is a public record and may be viewed in person at the Wisconsin Historical Society, Division of Historic Preservation-Public History. Was dismantled 4/2015 for shipment to Norway.

This spectacular structure dazzled visitors at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, where it was the official exhibit building for Norway. The design is based on a twelfth-century Norwegian wooden church, or stavkirke at Gol, which Hansteen had helped restore. In the Norway Building, Hansteen strayed from historical accuracy by adding windows, which are not found in true stave churches. He also incorporated elements of an architectural aesthetic that was popular in Norway in his own time: the so-called "Dragon style," named for the wooden dragons atop the peaks of the gables, breathing flame to ward off evil spirits. As that description suggests, the "Dragon style" combined Christian and pagan elements, the latter derived from Viking ships, burial sites, and folk art.

The building's frame consists of a grid of crossed, hand-hewn logs with vertical wooden staves tying the logs to the rafters. Sheltering the building is a dramatic, steeply pitched, multi-layered roof with bellcast eaves that turn up at the corners. The gabled entry at center leads the eye upward to a gabled wall dormer and finally to a gabled cupola. Spindle columns, scalloped bargeboards, and diamond patterns ornament the gable ends. Elaborately carved wooden window surrounds, zoomorphic wooden sculptures around the entry, and ornate ridge crestings enhance the Nordic appearance. The fire-breathing dragons atop the ridge crestings are 1992 reproductions. Inside, the carved faces of kings and queens from Norse sagas peer down from the wooden beams.

M. Thams and Company, a manufacturer of prefabricated housing in Trondheim, Norway, constructed the building in Norway, then shipped it in panels for assembly in Chicago. It is one of few surviving structures from the Columbian Exposition. After the fair, it was disassembled and moved to a Lake Geneva estate. Chewing-gum magnate William Wrigley, Jr., later purchased the estate and used this building to screen home movies. His son Philip donated the building to the founder of Little Norway, Isak Dahle, in 1935. It served as a folk-art museum until 2012.

In 2015, the current owners sold the pavilion to the Norwegian city of Orkdal, where the building was reassembled and restored. It was rededicated in September 2017 as the “Thams Pavilion.”
Bibliographic References:Rhinelander Daily News 8/17/2001. Wisconsin State Journal, 10/16/1994. Buildings of Wisconsin manuscript. Prepared by Landscape Research, Ltd. for the Dane County Cultural Affairs Commission, Dane County: A Guide to the Rural Landscape, 1978.
RECORD LOCATION
Wisconsin Architecture and History Inventory, State Historic Preservation Office, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, Wisconsin

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