It was designed in a colonial revival style by Elmer Grey for Prince A. Hawkins, a scion of the well-established Hawkins family, in 1911.
[2] It is now the offices of the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association (NIAA).
[3] It is adjacent to the Francis G. Newlands House, a National Historic Landmark.
[2] From 1978 to 1988, the building housed the Sierra Nevada Museum of Art, now known as the Nevada Museum of Art.
This article about a property in Nevada on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.