Something about the boarded-up old house on St. Paul's East Side intrigued carpenter Cliff Carey. A 36-year resident of the Dayton's Bluff neighborhood north of downtown, he couldn't help but wonder about the second and smaller structure on the city-owned lot at 656 Bush Av.
"There was something about it that was unusual," said Carey, 64.
He knew Phalen Creek once gurgled nearby. Maybe it was a mill. Or a carriage house. Carey's curiosity prompted him to call City Hall and dust off some old photos of Swede Hollow — the ravine-lining shantytown where St. Paul immigrants from Sweden, Poland, Mexico and Italy often started out, without heat or plumbing, between the 1850s and 1950s.
St. Paul city planners twice let Carey inside the little building on the property.
"It turned out to be none of the things that I had thought it might be," he said. "It was a small house, a miniature if you will. Tidy, plastered and trimmed. No bathroom. Never had one. One pull chain light in each room."
Scouring his old Swede Hollow photos, Carey experienced a "Eureka" moment when he studied the background of a well-known shot from around 1910.
Behind a larger wooden house in the photo, along the creek, Carey thinks he found the smaller house now behind 656 Bush in its original spot.
"I have been looking at old houses in St. Paul for a long time and I have never seen another one like it," he said. "If this house is not the house in the Swede Hollow photo then it's an exact duplicate."