The John and Ann Williams House, at 205 Church St. in Stevensville, Montana, United States, was built in 1907.
[1] It is a one-and-half-story cottage built during a period of architectural transition; it is sort of like a Queen Anne-style cottage in its massing and fenestration, but it includes more elements suggestive of Colonial Revival style.
These are: "shallow pitched rooflines, horizontal orientation, prominent porches and clean, unembellished lines."
Hooper operated a meat market on the east side of Main Street from 1906 on, sharing that with his brother from 1907 on, and in 1911 he took over the Bitterroot Restaurant.
This article about a property in Montana on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.