Lloyd was an American pharmacist who was a leader in the eclectic medicine movement and influential in the development of pharmacognosy, ethnobotany, economic botany, and herbalism.
[3] The Richardsonian Romanesque design features broken range Ashler masonry,[4] a ten-windowed turret, and a Diocletian window.
[5] In 1957 the house was purchased by its next owners, John and Billye Bierhorst, and in the 1960s sold to their son-in-law, Monroe Sher and daughter, Ellen Bierhorst (Sher),[6] who is responsible for the historic register listing and naming the house after John Uri Lloyd.
[6] In addition to being used as a single dwelling by each of the owners, both Margie Preston and Ellen Bierhorst rented rooms in the house at different points in time.
This article about a property in Hamilton County, Ohio on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.