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Thompson-Fasbender House U.S. National Register of Historic Places Location: Hastings, Minnesota Coordinates: 44°44′35.82″N 92°51′41.56″W / 44.7432833°N 92.8615444°W / 44.7432833; -92.8615444Coordinates: 44°44′35.82″N 92°51′41.56″W / 44.7432833°N 92.8615444°W / 44.7432833; -92.8615444 Built: 1880[2] Architect: William Thompson[3] Architectural style(s): Second Empire Governing body: Private Added to NRHP: May 22, 1978 NRHP Reference#: 78001532[1] The Thompson-Fasbender House, located at 649 3rd Street West in Hastings, Minnesota is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was built in 1880 by William Thompson who came to Minnesota in 1857 from Maine. He was a banker, wheat-buyer, and land-owner who also was part-owner of a saw mill and door and sash factory. His access to woodworkers is reflected in the home's finishing. Its Second Empire architecture is reflected in its mansard roof featuring scalloped wooden shingles and bracketed cornices.[2] In 1929, Dr. Herman Fasbender, Sr. purchased the home and transformed it into Saint Raphael Hospital, which had been housed in the VanDyke-Libby House. When the Regina Memorial Hospital opened in 1953, Saint Raphael closed and the house was converted into a tenement building;[2] Fasbender then moved his practice to the Fasbender Clinic building. Today the home is a bed and breakfast inn.[4] References ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2007-01-23. http://www.nr.nps.gov/.  ^ a b c "Historic Sites:Hastings". Dakota County Historical Society. http://www.dakotahistory.org/county/hastings.asp. Retrieved 2007-10-12.  ^ "National Register of Historic Places". National Park Service. 2007-10-12. http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/MN/Dakota/state.html.  ^ "Historic Sites:Hastings". Dakota County Historical Society. 2005. http://www.dakotahistory.org/county/hastings.asp. Retrieved 2008-02-25.  v • d • e U.S. National Register of Historic Places Keeper of the Register · History of the National Register of Historic Places · Property types · Historic district · Contributing property List of entries · National Park Service · National Historic Landmarks · National Battlefields · National Historic Sites · National Historical Parks · National Memorials · National Monuments v • d • e Features of Dakota County, Minnesota Communities v • d • e Municipalities and communities of Dakota County, Minnesota County seat: Hastings Cities Apple Valley | Burnsville | Coates | Eagan | Farmington | Hampton | Hastings‡ | Inver Grove Heights | Lakeville | Lilydale | Mendota | Mendota Heights | Miesville | New Trier | Northfield‡ | Randolph | Rosemount | South St. Paul | Sunfish Lake | Vermillion | West St. Paul Townships Castle Rock | Douglas | Empire | Eureka | Greenvale | Hampton | Marshan | Nininger | Randolph | Ravenna | Sciota | Vermillion | Waterford Unincorporated communities Castle Rock | Waterford Ghost town Nininger Footnotes ‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties People Pierce Butler, U.S. Supreme Court justice | Natalie Darwitz, Olympic Silver Medalist | Ignatius Donnelly, Minnesota's 2nd Lt. Governor | Craig Kilborn, comedian | John Kline, U.S. Representative from Minnesota's 2nd congressional district | Paul James Krause, NFL Hall of Famer | Joan Kroc, philanthropist | Laura Osnes, actress | Tim Pawlenty, Minnesota's 39th Governor | Alexander Ramsey, Minnesota's 2nd Governor | Coleen Rowley, former FBI agent | Henry Hastings Sibley, Minnesota's 1st Governor | Harold Stassen, Minnesota's 25th Governor Geography Mississippi River: Adjacent to South St. Paul, Inver Grove Heights, Rosemount, and Hastings | Minnesota River: Adjacent to Mendota Heights, Mendota, and Burnsville | Vermillion River: From Farmington through Eureka Township to Hastings Historic Sites Byron Howes House | Church of Saint Mary's-Catholic | Church of the Advent | Dakota County Courthouse | Daniel F. Akin House | District No. 72 School | East Second Street Commercial Historic District | Emil J. Oberhoffer House | Exchange Bank Building | Fasbender Clinic | First Presbyterian Church, Hastings | Fort Snelling | Fort Snelling-Mendota Bridge | George W. Wentworth House | Good Templars Hall | Hastings Foundry-Star Iron Works | Hastings Methodist Episcopal Church | Henry H. Sibley House | Holz Family Farmstead | Ignatius Eckert House | MacDonald-Todd House | Mendota Historic District | Minneapolis Saint Paul Rochester & Dubuque Electric Traction Company Depot | Ramsey Mill and Old Mill Park | Reuben Freeman House | Rudolph Latto House | Serbian Home | St. Stefan's Romanian Orthodox Church | Stockyards Exchange | Thompson-Fasbender House | VanDyke-Libby House | West Second Street Residential Historic District | William G. LeDuc House Industry Pine Bend Refinery| Thomson West| Northwest Airlines Attractions Big Rivers Regional Trail | Fort Snelling State Park | Lake Byllesby Regional Park | Lebanon Hills Regional Park | Miesville Ravine Park Reserve This article about a property in Minnesota on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. v • d • e