The 1918 farmhouse was supposed to be Chan Poling and Eleanor Mondale Poling's happily-ever-after retreat in the country.
Eleanor had moved back to Minnesota from New York in 2002 to be closer to her parents, former Vice President Walter Mondale and his wife, Joan, and to Chan, singer and keyboardist for the New Standards and the Suburbs, who was then her boyfriend.
While hunting for property in the country where she could keep her horses, Eleanor fell in love with the white clapboard two-story sitting on an idyllic 5 acres near Prior Lake, said Chan. The couple married and spent the next nine years fixing up the charming country house and outbuildings, which they shared with dogs, cats, chickens, miniature horses and a miniature donkey.
"We built a beautiful new outdoor riding arena," said Chan. "Eleanor used to ride the horse and buggy in there."
But in the fall of 2011, Eleanor died of brain cancer, after battling the disease for six years.
Today the henhouse and stable are empty — the horses and donkey have been adopted by neighbors. "The horses were my wife's thing," said Chan. "It's too hard to take care of them by myself."
Chan recently put his Prior Lake hobby farm up for sale. "This house is a little far away to be all by yourself," he said. "It's great for a couple or a little family." He has his eye on an older home in St. Paul that he hopes to buy and renovate.
Over the years, the Polings made improvements to their old farmhouse, aiming to stay true to the home's early 1900s character. After they moved in, some local residents stopped by and told Chan and Eleanor that their great-grandfather had built the home.