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Council Bluffs Iowa Walking Tour
Item 6 of 7

This attractive building was home to a short-lived women's school called Reverend Little's Young Ladies Seminary. It was founded by Presbyterian minister George Little in 1867 and operated until 1870. Designed in the Italianate style, the former school features a wraparound porch with decorative columns and spindle work, brick corner quoins, a cornice with carved wooden brackets, and cast iron window sills. The building now houses law offices. It was added to the National Register in 1982.


The former Reverend Little's Young Ladies Seminary was built in 1867 and operated until 1870. It is now occupied by law offices.

Sky, Building, Property, Window

In 1867, a group of wealthy residents decided to establish a private school for young women. The group included General Grenville M. Dodge, who was the chief engineer of Union Pacific Railroad, pioneer settler Samuel Bayliss, and land speculator Thomas Tostevin. They thought such a school was more appropriate for upper class young women. In May the group signed a contract with Reverend Little, who agreed to pay $4,000 of his own money to build the school. The group agreed to pay the rest of the cost. Classes began that fall in the sanctuary of the Presbyterian Church and remained there until the school building was completed in November. The classes taught included vocal and instrument music, gymnastics, and penmanship.

It appears that the school was run well but Reverend Little had difficulty in obtaining the payments he was promised to build the school. The board of trustees told him on January 1, 1870 that he would not longer receive payments. In response, he closed the school and sued the trustees for the money they owed him. It doesn't appear he received the money but he did obtain the title to the property. However, instead of reopening the school, Little sold it to banker James F. Evans and moved to Nebraska to work as a missionary.

Evans, who was one of the town's leading bankers and financiers, converted the school into a single-family house. He served as president of First National Bank, invested in a grain purchasing firm run by two brothers, and, in the 1880s, became a main partner in a flour mill. The Evans family lived in the house until 1898. The next owner, Rodney Tyler, lived in the house until 1907. Tyler was also a partner in the mill and he eventually bought it. He became a leading street railway developer in Council Bluffs as well. A few years after he sold the house it was converted into apartments. When it became an office building is unclear.

Christian, Ralph J. "Reverend Little's Young Ladies Seminary." National Park Service - National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form. February 4, 1982. https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/24805b23-1a51-445e-980b-1ee8ce80c5b1.

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Wikimedia Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rev_Littles_C_Bluff_IA.jpg