Horatio Alden Smith, the home's original owner, was a partner in the Smith & Wyman Sash and Door Company. Following a successful period in that business, Smith purchased property in the wealthy Harmon Place neighborhood and commissioned the prolific local architect William Channing Whitney to design a new home for him and his family. Smith lived in the home with his wife Eva and daughter Alice from 1887 to 1906, when he died of a heart attack. Eva continued to live in the home until 1919, when she sold it to local morticianWilliam Davies. Davies soon converted the home into a mortuary and used it as such until 1976. The house was then converted into a restaurant called The Little Prince in 1977, but this venture was short-lived. Following the restaurant's closing in 1978, the house was used as a counseling clinic and an office building. In 1990 the house served as the filming location for a scene in the movie Drop Dead Fred. The Minneapolis Community College Foundation purchased the house in 1993 for $350,000. After renovating the structure for educational purposes, it was renamed the Wells Family College Center. Minneapolis Community and Technical College used the house for miscellaneous purposes until 2018, when it was sold to local developer W+Noordijk. The house is currently slated to be rehabilitated and converted into nine apartment units as part of a larger residential development project.
Architecture
designed the H. Alden Smith house in the Richardsonian Romanesque style of architecture. Featuring a brown sandstone facade, the three-story home boasts a massive corner tower, front and side porches, and a stained-glassskylight. Although much of the interior has been modified over time, the first level retains the original reception hall and grand staircase. The original parlor, dining room, library, and sitting room also remain intact. Decadent panelling and cherry woodwork can be found throughout this level. Though heavily modified, the second and third floors retain some original features such as doors and fireplaces. The second floor originally housed bedrooms and bathrooms, while the third floor featured a ballroom and servants' quarters.