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Oram Nincehelser House : ウィキペディア英語版
Oram Nincehelser House

The Oram Nincehelser House is a historic residence in the village of Mechanicsburg, Ohio, United States. Built for a nineteenth-century local doctor, it has been named a historic site because of its distinctive architecture.
==Oram Nincehelser==
Born in Pennsylvania, John Nincehelser married the former Hannah Longabough, and after moving from state to state for a number of years, the Nincehelsers settled in Wayne Township in Champaign County, Ohio, near the community of Cable. Four children were born to their union, of which the youngest who survived to adulthood was their son Oram A. Nicehelser. The family were members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.〔''The History of Champaign County, Ohio''. Chicago: Beers, 1881, 841.〕 In adulthood, Oram became a physician, opening a practice in 1887 and continuing for more than thirty years; during his first six years, he engaged in partnership with a neighbor, Dr. J.H. Clark, but they later operated separate practices.〔Ware, Joseph. ''History of Mechanicsburg, Ohio''. Columbus: Heer, 1917, 68.〕 Nincehelser was active in the local Masonic organizations; he was an officer for one of Mechanicsburg's two Masonic lodges,〔Middleton, Evan P., ed. ''History of Champaign County Ohio: Its People, Industries and Institutions.'' Vol. 1. Indianapolis: Bowen, 1917.〕 and he was a member of a Scottish Rite 32° club.〔
By the 1890s, Nincehelser's practice had made him a wealthy man;〔Owen, Lorrie K., ed. ''Dictionary of Ohio Historic Places''. Vol. 1. St. Clair Shores: Somerset, 1999, 120.〕 Mechanicsburg's growth was attracting many professionals, and he was one of at least three physicians active in the community.〔Recchie, Nancy. ''National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Mechanicsburg Multiple Resource Area''. National Park Service, December 1984.〕 Accordingly, after marrying a woman from New York City, he arranged for the construction of a large Queen Anne-style house on Main Street just north of downtown Mechanicsburg. The magnificent new residence was built primarily to impress his new bride, but the couple did not live long in the house: Mrs. Nincehelser deserted her husband after just a few years of marriage.〔 In later years, the original meeting hall of Mechanicsburg's Odd Fellows lodge burned,〔 and Nincehelser sold his home to them in 1931; he had lived alone in the house since his wife left him.〔

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