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Visit the Historic Alexander Noble House Museum in Fish Creek

August 2, 2021 by Laurel Ciohon

alexander noble house tours

Fish Creek, Wis. (August 2, 2021) – The historic Alexander Noble House Museum displays Fish Creek life from the late 1800s to the early 1900s, while introducing you to Alexander Noble and his accomplishments. Learn about Noble’s daughter, Ula, and granddaughter, Gertrude Howe, who were determined pioneers in fields unwelcome to females. You can also discover information on Fish Creek’s first hotels, water transportation, and why it became a popular tourist destination.

After closing the Noble House doors in 2020, twenty-three wedding gowns were gently folded, the museum was carefully cleaned, and interesting pieces were pressed or carefully placed to reveal Fish Creek’s Past. Mid-June 2021 was the target re-opening. Bit by bit and piece by piece, everything was put back in place and visitors arrived from far and wide.

The Noble House is the oldest wood-frame residence in Fish Creek, built in 1875 by Alexander Noble, whose many roles included town blacksmith, postmaster, and town chairman, to name a few. The Noble House was placed on the register for Wisconsin Historic Places and the National register in 1996. It is an authentic example of a Greek revival farmhouse. Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience a portrayal of domestic life in Door County at the turn of the century.

There is so much to absorb and ponder. Many guests leave with one of many books: Fish Creek Echoes, Memoirs of a Farm Girl , and Red Stacks Over the Horizon , to name a few.

The staff graciously invite you to visit the Alexander Noble House this season. The Museum is open Tuesdays-Sundays from 10am–3pm, and is located at 4167 Main Street in downtown Fish Creek.

Noble House does group tours by appointment. The Gibraltar Historical Association has a free Audio Tour available 7 days a week, 24 hours a day at www.historicnoble.org/tours .

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alexander noble house tours

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Alexander Noble House Museum

Visit the Noble House, built in 1875, a Greek revival farmhouse, lived in by three generations of the Noble Family, a landmark on Fish Creek’s busiest corner. Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience domestic life in Door County at the turn of the century.

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, this museum is a must see. Special 2024 exhibit is "Reflection's of our Past".

Summer hours: Tues-Saturday: 10am - 3pm, Sunday: 10am - 2:00pm

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Upcoming events, jack o’lantern days, hometown holiday.

Ashbrooke Hotel

What Will You Find at the Alexander Noble House?

When you visit Door County, you’ll see history come to life. Twelve thousand years ago, early nomadic residents made Door County their home. Two thousand years ago, early permanent settlements appeared on the peninsula. The most recent permanent Native American and European settlers arrived centuries ago. The  Alexander Noble House  in Fish Creek is the perfect place to uncover a piece of the area’s fascinating history.

If you’re interested in finding more historical attractions like the Alexander Noble House,  request your free copy of our  Door County Vacation Guide . This all-in-one resource provides you with a list of local museums, restaurants, shops, and outdoor recreation. Get the guide today!

Vacation Guide

History of the Alexander Noble House

Alexander Noble , one of Fish Creek’s founding fathers, moved to the Chambers Islands in 1856. During his time in Door County, he served as the town’s blacksmith, postmaster, farmer, town and chairman, and county board member. The Noble House was built in 1875 on the busiest corner in Fish Creek, and today it stands as the oldest remaining residence in town.

The home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is an authentic example of a Greek Revival farmhouse. It’s also the first home in the community constructed from lathe and plaster. In contrast, all other homes before this one were built from lumber.

3 Ways to See the Alexander Noble House

1. docent-led house tour.

Take a look inside of the oldest home in Fish Creek with a docent-led house tour! Although the house has been restored, all of the original furnishings remain intact in the 10-room house. A museum tour is the perfect way to see what life was like in Door County at the turn of the century!

Note : Tours are offered Tuesday through Sunday from June to mid-October. Admission to the Noble House is five dollars per person and includes a docent-led tour. Please check the  Gibraltar Historical Association  site for more details.

2. Walking Tour

Step back in time with a  guided historical walking tour  through Fish Creek. You’ll learn interesting facts about the town’s architecture, industry, and heritage from Alexander Noble’s time to the present day. Walking tours are held Tuesdays and Thursdays during the summer and begin at the Old Town Hall.

3. Ghost Trolley Tours

Is the Alexander Noble House haunted? Many locals believe many spirits live within the old home’s walls. Some visitors have even reported a man’s face appearing in photos of a mirror beside them.

If you’d like to see for yourself, take a  Ghost Trolley Tour . You’ll learn bone-chilling stories of Door County’s spirits and perhaps encounter a ghost first-hand.

More for History Buffs in Door County

The Alexander Noble House is just one of many unique, historical hotspots on the peninsula. The  Cana Island Lighthouse , constructed in 1868, is the most photographed lighthouse in Door County. President Andrew Jackson ordered its construction, and Civil War veteran William Jackson was the lighthouse’s first keeper. This landmark is full of history, and a visit here is one of our favorite  things to do in Sturgeon Bay .

Why You Should Stay at The Ashbrooke

Ashbrooke Pool

After a full day of exploring local history at the Alexander Noble House, come back to The Ashbrooke for some well-deserved relaxation! Our adults-only hotel is in the heart of Door County and offers  premium amenities  to all our guests. Take a dip in our indoor swimming pool, soak in our 12-person whirlpool, or use the cardio equipment in our fitness room. Every morning, wake up to complimentary rolls, coffee, and muffins in the lobby before you embark on your next Door County adventure. When you stay at The Ashbrooke, you’ll be close to Egg Harbor’s best  restaurants   and  attractions . Make the most of your next vacation by booking a stay at The Ashbrooke!

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Alexander Noble House Museum

Alexander Noble House Museum

4167 Main Street, P.O. Box 323, Fish Creek, WI 54212

  • (920) 868-2091
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Visit the Alexander Noble House, built in 1875, an authentic example of a Greek revival farmhouse. Lived in by 3 generations of the Noble family, it is a landmark on Fish Creek's busiest corner. Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience a portrayal of domestic life in Door County at the turn of the century. Special Exhibit will feature "A Glimpse of Old Fish Creek". Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, this museum is a must see. Tours: June thru October. Large groups welcome, call 920-559-6234. Admission is $5.00

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Alexander Noble House Museum

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Alexander Noble House Museum and its collection

Alexander Noble House Museum

The Alexander Noble House is a historic Greek Revival farmhouse that was built in 1875. It is located in Fish Creek, Door County, Wisconsin on Wisconsin Highway 42. This location is easily accessible and offers a glimpse into the architectural style of the late 19th century.

Original Furnishings and Artifacts in the Noble House

The restored Noble House today contains many of its original furnishings and artifacts. The authentic room settings in the home depict the period from 1875 to 1900, providing visitors with a unique insight into life during this era.

Tours Offered by the Noble House

The Noble House offers tours that portray life in Door County over a century ago. These tours depict the village as a thriving fishing and shipping village with horse-drawn wagons traveling the dirt streets, providing a vivid picture of life in the past.

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Alexander Noble House Museum

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4167 Main St, Fish Creek

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The Alexander Noble House in “Olde Towne” Fish Creek

By Sheila Sabrey-Saperstein , Door County Living – September 1st, 2005

“A jolly good town is old Fish Creek, The best on the pike I know: With its back to the rock and its face to the sea, Where the rollicking breezes blow. As snug as a bug in an old woolen rug, It lies there embowered in green: You may go where you like, on any old pike, No cozier village is seen.” – from Old Peninsula Days, Tales and Sketches of the Door County Peninsula , by Hjalmar R. Holand

Perhaps no longer “embowered in green” as this ditty describes, ye olde towne Fish Creek can be found “cozied” up to today’s shops and condos. However, one can step into the past by taking the official historic tour, if you can keep up with the tour guide, octogenarian Helen Allen, as she spins the old town stories. If she senses her audience is interested, she’ll point out where she was born (now Mr. Helsinki’s restaurant), where her grandparents lived (now a cottage store by the Whistling Swan), and where she had her wedding reception (part of the old Welcker’s resort, and now a private home on Maple). Her parents, Lester and Amanda Schrieber, and later brother Ed owned and ran the General Store (now the Fish Creek Market) between 1916 and 1970.

One of her stories tells of Dr. Gertrude Howe (1913-1995), the last resident of Noble House, one of Fish Creek’s oldest standing homes. Helen struck up a friendship at the bridge table with Gertrude and described her as a memorable personality and a free spirit who did things women in her time wouldn’t think of doing. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Illinois Medical School, became a pilot and owned her own Cessna while working as a pediatrician in the rugged Upper Peninsula and…she smoked!

During Dr. Howe’s final years at Scandia Nursing Home developers started hovering over the then empty Noble House and members of the town’s historical society held their breath concerning its future. The Noble family dwelling was one of the last houses in the community that had been at the same location (Hwy 42 and Main) for 123 years and the historical society wanted to turn it into a museum.

Virginia Kinsey, who ran the Summertime Restaurant with her husband, grew up in the house across the street from Gertrude Howe. When Virginia’s friend died in 1995 leaving the Noble house unoccupied and sorely in need of repair, she decided it was time to save the historic home. Virginia had founded the Gibraltar Historical Association (GHA) in 1984 to rescue the Town Hall from becoming a parking lot, so she marshaled her troops once again to save Noble House.

When the caretakers of the Noble estate agreed that the land and house should be preserved, Virginia and her GHA friends let out the breath they’d been holding and established the Noble Historic Square Fund. They raised two-thirds of the total cost of $500,000 and the Town of Gibraltar raised the rest. The town owned it and the GHA operated it. The first thing they did was to protect it – the Noble House was registered with both the Wisconsin and the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.

Typical of small town America, the GHA’s fundraisers ran the gamut from raffles to bake sales and auctions to estate sales, but the most imaginative campaign was “brick by brick” where a donor bought a brick and had the family name or “in memory of” embossed on it. Many of these donated bricks form the entrance walk today.

Renovation and restoration began immediately. The house was in sad repair and in need of new plaster work, heating, lighting and plumbing. Decades of wall coverings had to be replaced and wood floors needed sanding. There were home furnishings, clothing, and papers and records dating back to the time of original owner Alexander Noble. It seemed to the workers that nothing had ever been thrown away! Noble’s blacksmithing tools were still in the garage and the deed signed by Fish Creek founder, Asa Thorp himself, for the vast sum of $260 was discovered in Noble’s papers. Also found was a sketch that his daughter, Ula, age 22, used in designing the house that stands today after the original one burned down during the winter of 1875.

Everything was painstakingly sorted, catalogued, and cleaned by the many volunteers with direction from a hired firm specializing in the restoration of historic places. Local co-owner of The Thorp House Inn, Chris Falck-Pedersen, researched and spearheaded the team responsible for the authentic interior décor. The museum proudly opened for business the summer of 1998 on the busiest corner in Fish Creek where it had survived for so many years.

Alexander Noble (1829-1905) was one of Fish Creek’s founding fathers who moved from his native Scotland to Chambers Island in 1856 where he built the first sawmill turning the island into a busy lumber camp. In 1862 he moved to Fish Creek to raise his family and became, at various times, blacksmith, postmaster, town chairman and county board member. All homes before his had been log; the Noble house was the first to be made of lathe and plaster. The original property had several out buildings where Noble Park is now located.

Noble House is a monument to one of the oldest families in Fish Creek who kept it continuously until Gertrude Howe died: from Alexander Noble’s much younger second wife Maria, to their daughter Nellie, and to Nellie’s daughter Gertrude, who cared for her mother in between flying jaunts to and from the “Soo” (Sault St. Marie). Records show that Maria and Nellie were both strong women so one can see where Gertrude inherited her spunk. Maria lived almost 30 years after her husband and in order to pay the taxes and keep the house, she sold off much of the additional property Alex had accrued. An individualist in her own right, Nellie went off to school in Illinois and became a secretary to Harvey J. Firestone, Jr. in Chicago and in 1909 married Donnell Howe, an FBI man. When he died in 1954 Nellie returned to Noble House to live until her death in 1962 and Gertrude maintained the home until she herself retired there in 1968.

Inside Noble House you will find pictures and keepsakes of these women as they step off the pages of history, a history so carefully preserved by the men and women of Fish Creek and the Gibraltar Historical Association who care about their town and its roots. Thanks to them the Town Hall survived demolition and the Noble House is alive again and welcoming callers.

Resources and Further Information

Helen Allen, Eunice Rutherford and Doug Blahnik of the Gibraltar Historical Association.

“The house of memory” by Keta Steebs, Door County Advocate , March 8, 1996

“Fish Creek Museum slows a busy corner” by Dennis McCann, Fish Creek Voices: An Oral History of a Door County Village ed. by village residents Edward and Lois Schreiber, 1990

Fish Creek Echoes: a Century of Life in a Door County Village ed. by Edward Schreiber and Virginia Kinsey, 2000

Related Articles

Alexander Noble House Prepares “A House In Mourning”

A New Glimpse of the Past at Alexander Noble House

Alexander Noble House Museum Opens for the Season

Alexander Noble House Open For Season With New Exhibit

Door County Tickets

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Door County Trolley's ghost tours offer a look at the peninsula's spooky side

Ross Dippel, dressed in a Vincent Price-like undertaker’s costume, leads visitors through the historic Noble House in Fish Creek. Dippel is a guide for the Door County Trolley Ghost Tours.

By Brian E. Clark , Special to the Journal Sentinel

I've never thought of Door County as a spooky kind of place. But scary (at least a little) it is, if you believe the ghostly tales told by Ross Dippel, a guide for Door County Trolley tours. Based out of the Orchard Country Winery & Market near Fish Creek, this evening excursion lasts about two hours and includes visits to a haunted home or two, a lighthouse and the Blossomberg graveyard in Peninsula State Park.

Though you might see a ghost, this tour isn't terrifying and shouldn't give you nightmares. It's aimed at all ages and is family friendly. My spouse and I took our kids, ages 12 and 14, on this hair-raising outing and they got a big kick out of it. The ghost tour runs through Oct. 31 and makes an ideal Halloween-type adventure, if your travels take you to Door County.

Dippel, a Baraboo native and formally trained actor with a deep, booming voice, stepped onto the trolley for our only slightly unnerving 6 p.m. excursion dressed in a Vincent Price-like undertaker's costume. Organ music from a funeral dirge filled the trolley and we were soon headed toward Fish Creek.

Our first stop was a small, white house off Highway 42, where a man had died just 20 or so years ago of natural causes. But his spirit, Dippel said, stuck around, showing up on occasion dressed in a red flannel shirt and farmer's overalls — usually at the top of the stairs of the two-story dwelling. Once, residents reported, a room in the house turned cold and they could see an indentation on a couch where it looked as if a man was sitting.

Then, as the sun cast an eerie yellow light over the orchards and vineyards lining the road, we motored into Fish Creek. We drove down by the marina and then looped back to the former Lundberg home on Maple St., now a White Gull Inn property.

Lundberg and his wife had four daughters whom they lavished with love and gifts, Dippel said. But in 1901, the oldest child, Ruth, contracted tuberculosis and died on Christmas morning with a fully decorated Yule tree in the parlor. Her ghost sometimes appears in that parlor and her second-floor bedroom. Her spirit is said to have pulled a full-grown man — a chef at the White Gull Inn — by his feet from his bed in the room. Lundberg never again put up a Christmas tree in the parlor, Dippel said.

Next, we headed for Sunset Park and learned about the wreck of the Erie L. Hackley, a steamship that went down in 1903 during a fierce storm on Green Bay after Capt. Joseph Vorous disregarded the weather forecast and tried to make the crossing from Menominee, Mich., to Egg Harbor.

Eleven people died, including the captain. The brother of one of the passengers, who dreamt of the wreck the night before, found his sibling's body on a Fish Creek beach and never forgave himself. The ghosts of the victims are said to haunt the bay, Dippel said.

Next stop was the Thorp House Inn on Bluff Lane, supposedly haunted by the mischievous Casper-like ghost of a 6-year-old named Huey Melvin, who died in 1903 from tetanus. He occasionally awakens guests, Dippel told us, and says "come with me."

Night had descended as we arrived at the 10-room Alexander Noble House , built in 1875 at the corner of Main St. and Egg Harbor Road. It is owned by the Gibraltar Historical Association and is filled with costumes and memorabilia — and the occasional spirit — from the late 1800s and early 1900s.

When visitors tour at night, Dippel said they often find that their cameras stop working. Or when they do work, strange images appear. Temperatures sometimes change and doors slam unexpectedly, he said. And outside, in a cove of trees, mists and shapes often form where a cabin once stood.

Then came the most unnerving part of the tour — at least for me — when we drove out to the Blossomberg Cemetery in Peninsula State Park and visited the graves of the spirits that Dippel had introduced us to. In the distance, beyond the glow of our flashlights, I saw yellow, blue and orange luminescences flickering. Honest.

Last but not least on our tour was the Eagle Bluff Lighthouse , also in the park. Not so long ago, Dippel said, a ranger on a late-night patrol saw a mysterious boy not once but three times. The first two times, the lad melted into the forest. But the third time, his form disappeared by walking through a wall. Though ridiculed, Dippel said the ranger stuck to his story.

The boy's spirit sometimes reappears. Dippel and others figure the youngster might have been the son of a lighthouse keeper who drowned in the late 1800s after he and his older brother fell through the ice while fetching water for their mother on a cold November morning. The brother lived.

Those who want a more bone-chilling, blood-curdling and petrifying ghost tour should take the Haunted Olde Sturgeon Bay trolley excursion. These tours will run through Oct. 26.

"Lurking beneath this charming waterfront community lives the horror of its unusual murders, haunted buildings and spirited maritime past," Dippel said. "One of those murders was the killing of a young woman, not so many years ago, who was quartered and then thrown into a furnace."

For those looking for something less nerve-wracking, Door County Trolley also offers culinary, wine, brewery, lighthouse and scenic tours.

Getting there: Fish Creek is 176 miles from Milwaukee via Interstate 43 and Highway 42.

More information: Contact Door County Trolley at (920) 868-1100 or see doorcounty

trolley.com . For details on other things to see and do in Door County, see the Door County Visitor Bureau website at doorcounty.com or call (920) 743-4465 .

Brian E. Clark is a Madison writer and photographer.

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alexander noble house tours

alexander noble house tours

Gibraltar Historical Association

Alexander noble house museum, history of alexander noble.

alexander noble house tours

Alexander Noble (1829 – 1905) was one of Fish Creek’s founding fathers who moved  from his native Scotland to Chambers Island in 1856.  He built the first sawmill and turned  the island into a busy lumber camp. In 1862 he moved to Fish Creek to raise his family and became at various times blacksmith, postmaster, farmer, town chairman and county board member.  

To be the village blacksmith was of no small importance in a life style dependent on horses and buggies and hand-forged tools for building houses and keeping sawmills and fishing boats in operation.  Noble probably made his own tools and nails to erect his ten room home on the  prominent corner on Fish Creek’s Main Street;  the land grant signed by Abraham Lincoln.  He also filed on 300 acres of land east of the village, raising peas and other crops and kept horses and cows.

Alexander Noble raised seven children; three with his wife, Emily Vaughn Noble, and after her death in 1873, four with Maria Campbell Noble who lived some 30 years after Alexander’s death.  He was active in the Democratic Party and his deep interest in education led to a gift to the town of property for a grade school built where the Community Center now stands.

All homes constructed before his were log homes. The Noble house was the first to be made of lathe and plaster. Completed in 1875, his dwelling is the oldest remaining residence in the village.

Visit the Noble House Museum

10am-3pm Tuesday through Sunday

$5 per person

(includes docent led tour)

Located in the heart of Fish Creek at the intersection of Highway 42 and Main Street and open June through mid-October.

alexander noble house tours

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alexander noble house tours

Our Door County: Haunted Door

Published October 1, 2017

In the center of Fish Creek, a historical building has stood proudly for 142 years, but it has also been home to disquieting spirits.

The  Alexander Noble House was built in 1875 by Alexander Noble, replacing the family home that was destroyed by fire a year earlier. Before that, Noble’s wife Emily died, besetting the family in sadness.

The latest episode of Our Door County takes you inside the Noble House to tell the story of the spirit that haunts docents and visitors to this day. In Haunted Door, you’ll meet the Nobles, and find out why so many locals swear that Emily’s ghost continues to make her presence felt on the corner of Main Street and Highway 42 in Fish Creek.

This October, tour the Noble House yourself to see if you get a ghostly feeling as well.

For more great Door County ghost stories, try the Door County Trolley Ghost Tours , which includes a stop at the Noble House.

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  3. Noble House 2024

  4. Haunted Alexander Noble House in door County Wisconsin

  5. Group from Mexico hosted by Noble House Tours Pvt. Ltd

  6. The Epic Life Of Alexander The Great

COMMENTS

  1. Tours

    Built in 1875, the Noble House was home to three generations of the Alexander Noble Family. It is an authentic example of Greek Revival farmhouse architecture. Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience a portrayal of domestic life in Door County at the turn of the century. Special Exhibit "Reflections of our Past", a step back in time.

  2. Gibraltar Historical Association, Alexander Noble House Museum

    Visit Alexander Noble House and step back in time. Built in 1875, oldest frame residence and on the National Register of historic places. Gibraltar Historical mission to preserve, research and collect objects reflecting Gibraltar's Townships history and share with future generations. Gibraltar Historical Association, Alexander Noble House Museum - historicnoble-gha

  3. Alexander Noble House Museum

    Alexander Noble House Museum. 4167 Main St Fish Creek, WI 54212 Email ... Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience domestic life in Door County at the turn of the century. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, this museum is a must see. Special 2024 exhibit is "Reflection's of our Past".

  4. Visit the Historic Alexander Noble House Museum in Fish Creek

    The staff graciously invite you to visit the Alexander Noble House this season. The Museum is open Tuesdays-Sundays from 10am-3pm, and is located at 4167 Main Street in downtown Fish Creek. Noble House does group tours by appointment. The Gibraltar Historical Association has a free Audio Tour available 7 days a week, 24 hours a day at www ...

  5. Alexander Noble House Museum

    Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience domestic life in Door County at the turn of the century. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, this museum is a must see. Special 2024 exhibit is "Reflection's of our Past". ... Alexander Noble House Museum. Visit the Noble House, built in 1875, a Greek revival farmhouse, lived in by ...

  6. Alexander Noble House Museum

    Alexander Noble House Museum. 4167 Main St - Fish Creek, WI 54212. Information: 920-868-2091. Tours daily 10am-3pm, June thru October. Share. View Website Favorite (5) Visit the Alexander Noble House, built in 1875, an authentic example of a Greek revival farmhouse. Lived in by 3 generations of the Noble family, it is a landmark on Fish Creek ...

  7. What You Need to Know About the Alexander Noble House

    3 Ways to See the Alexander Noble House 1. Docent-Led House Tour. Take a look inside of the oldest home in Fish Creek with a docent-led house tour! Although the house has been restored, all of the original furnishings remain intact in the 10-room house. A museum tour is the perfect way to see what life was like in Door County at the turn of the ...

  8. Alexander Noble House Museum

    Built in 1875, the Noble House was home to three generations of the Alexander Noble Family. It is an authentic example of Greek Revival farmhouse architecture. Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience a portrayal of domestic life in Door County at the turn of the century. We invite you to visit the Noble House Museum and see the gowns ...

  9. Alexander Noble House Museum

    Visit the Alexander Noble House, built in 1875, an authentic example of a Greek revival farmhouse. Lived in by 3 generations of the Noble family, it is a landmark on Fish Creek's busiest corner. Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience a portrayal of domestic life in Door County at the turn of the century. Special Exhibit will feature "A Glimpse of Old Fish Creek".

  10. A Glimpse of the Past

    The Alexander Noble House Museum opens for the season in mid-June, featuring "A Glimpse of the Past," depicting Fish Creek life from the late 1800s to the early 1900s. ... It is an authentic example of a Greek revival farmhouse. Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home and experience a portrayal of domestic life in Door County at the turn of the ...

  11. Alexander Noble House Museum (Fish Creek)

    The Alexander Noble House is a historic Greek Revival farmhouse that was built in 1875. It is located in Fish Creek, Door County, Wisconsin on Wisconsin Highway 42. This location is easily accessible and offers a glimpse into the architectural style of the late 19th century. ... Tours Offered by the Noble House. The Noble House offers tours ...

  12. History Hub: Chambers Island Connections

    To learn more about water transportation, the birth of local tourism and Chambers Island's rich history, visit the Alexander Noble House Museum this season to see the phonograph player and explore the exhibit Reflections of our Past, A Step Back in Time. Or get even closer to the action by booking a tour of Chambers Island during the Door ...

  13. Alexander Noble House

    The Alexander Noble House, built in 1875, is a historic Greek Revival farmhouse located in Fish Creek, Door County, Wisconsin on Wisconsin Highway 42. ... The house offers tours that portray life in Door County over a century ago, depicting the village as a thriving fishing and shipping village with horse-drawn wagons traveling the dirt streets

  14. Late 1800s, Early 1900s Come to Life at Noble House

    After closing the doors of Fish Creek's Alexander Noble House (historicnoble.org) in 2020, ... Enjoy a tour of the 10-room home to experience a portrayal of domestic life in Door County long ago. The museum, 4167 Main St., is open Tuesday - Sunday, 10 am - 3 pm, ...

  15. The Alexander Noble House in "Olde Towne" Fish Creek

    The museum proudly opened for business the summer of 1998 on the busiest corner in Fish Creek where it had survived for so many years. Alexander Noble (1829-1905) was one of Fish Creek's founding fathers who moved from his native Scotland to Chambers Island in 1856 where he built the first sawmill turning the island into a busy lumber camp ...

  16. Ghost trolley tours offer look at Door County's spooky side

    Night had descended as we arrived at the 10-room Alexander Noble House, built in 1875 at the corner of Main St. and Egg Harbor Road. It is owned by the Gibraltar Historical Association and is ...

  17. Museum

    Alexander Noble (1829 - 1905) was one of Fish Creek's founding fathers who moved from his native Scotland to Chambers Island in 1856. ... The Noble house was the first to be made of lathe and plaster. Completed in 1875, his dwelling is the oldest remaining residence in the village. Visit the Noble House Museum. OPEN HOURS. 10am-3pm Tuesday ...

  18. Town Parks

    ALEXANDER NOBLE HOUSE MUSUEM LOCATION: Corner of Hwy 42 and Main Street The Alexander Noble House was purchased in 1966 with a combination of donated and Town funds. Today, the building is leased to the Gibraltar Historical Association, which operates the home as a museum with seasonal tours and maintains the building's historic significance and place on the National Historic Places.

  19. THE 5 BEST Things to Do in Seversk

    Tours, activities and experiences bookable on Tripadvisor, ranked using exclusive Tripadvisor data including reviews, ratings, photos, popularity, user preferences, price, and bookings made through Tripadvisor. Frequently Asked Questions about Seversk. What are the top attractions to visit in Seversk?

  20. Seversk

    Seversk is a travellers and tourists attraction in Seversk, Tomsk Oblast, Russia, Russia. Toursian, the largest travelers community to plan tours and record places in your own map and marker anywhere in the world while managing hotels, food, shopping, resort, flights and cruise.

  21. Siberian Chemical Combine (SKhK)

    This page is part of the Facilities Collection.. Established in 1953 in Tomsk-7 (now known as Seversk), the Siberian Chemical Combine (SKhK) played an important role in the Soviet nuclear weapons program. The facility produced plutonium and highly enriched uranium (HEU), and fabricated HEU and plutonium warhead components. 1 Five plutonium production reactors, a reprocessing facility, a ...

  22. Our Door County: Haunted Door

    The Alexander Noble House was built in 1875 by Alexander Noble, replacing the family home that was destroyed by fire a year earlier. Before that, Noble's wife Emily died, besetting the family in sadness. ... This October, tour the Noble House yourself to see if you get a ghostly feeling as well. For more great Door County ghost stories, ...

  23. Seversk Map

    Seversk. Seversk is a city that lies to the north of Tomsk, Siberia. Seversk was once known as "Tomsk-7", a secret closed city of the Soviet Union. Tomsk-7 was off-limits to non-residents and only became known after the fall of the iron curtain, and remains closed to outsiders to this day. Photo: Alexey Lubkin, CC BY-SA 3.0. Ukraine is facing ...