E. St. Julien Cox House

E. St. Julien Cox House Visitors experience a unique blend of history and hospitality on a journey back to Victorian times. St. Julien Cox House. Eugene St. Peter, an attorney, St.

Visitors are immersed in aspects of Victorian daily life through tours, programs, meetings, and social events at the E. This historic house museum is a place to relive history, and gather for community discussion, entertainment, and fellowship. Julien Cox and his wife Mariah built this home and raised their family here. The women raised in this house made local and state history. The Cox House int

erprets the lives and experiences of Victorian women and tells those stories in dynamic ways to diverse audiences. Eugene Cox was one of the earliest settlers of St. Peter’s first Mayor, and a representative to the State House and Senate. The home was built in 1871 and is one of the few fully restored Italianate homes in Minnesota. His daughter Lillien Cox Gault followed in her father’s footsteps and eventually became Minnesota’s first female mayor. In addition, her sister Irene would be one of Minnesota’s first female attorneys. The Cox House was donated to Nicollet County Historical Society and restored before it reopened to the public as a house museum in 1971. The Cox House is a prime example of a Carpenter Gothic-Italianate Cottage, a combination of styles that were all the rage in the latter half of the nineteenth century in the cities of the American East but would have stood out for its exuberance and style in 1870s pioneer Minnesota. The architecture shows vertical board & batten siding, pillars, long windows, and cathedral cupolas that lend an imposing look to the structure. The house is as it was on the original blueprint. The wallpaper was matched as closely as possible with the original first layer on the plaster. The woodwork is pine and still shows plane marks - evidence of the use of early tools.

Did you know that the daughter of St. Peter's first mayor became a suffrage organizer?After the 19th Amendment was ratif...
05/25/2026

Did you know that the daughter of St. Peter's first mayor became a suffrage organizer?

After the 19th Amendment was ratified in 1920, Lillien Cox Gault helped launch a county-wide campaign to reach every eligible woman voter in Nicollet County: citizenship schools, registration drives, and even local ministers preaching civic duty from their pulpits. By the end of that campaign, she'd been elected county chairman and then district chairman of the effort.

Come see her story when Cox House opens for summer tours on June 6. Explore the house where Lillien grew up, and see the Smithsonian poster exhibition and companion panels that bring her story to life. Free admission, no reservations!

Cox House summer tours are back, and this year, there's even more to see.Starting June 6, explore the beautifully restor...
05/20/2026

Cox House summer tours are back, and this year, there's even more to see.

Starting June 6, explore the beautifully restored home of St. Peter's first mayor at your own pace. New this summer, we're also featuring a Smithsonian poster exhibition on the women's suffrage movement, with companion panels connecting the national story to the life of Lillien Cox Gault, who grew up right here in this house.

A self-paced house tour and a Smithsonian exhibit, all for free. No reservations needed.

Saturdays at 1:00 PM: June 6 · June 20 · July 18 · August 1 · August 15 · August 29

We'd love to see you!

Today is the last day to RSVP for this unique estate planning seminar at the Treaty Site History Center tomorrow. Learn ...
05/19/2026

Today is the last day to RSVP for this unique estate planning seminar at the Treaty Site History Center tomorrow.

Learn how to create an estate plan that protects your family’s treasures ensuring they are properly preserved and that your executor understands their value and your intentions.

What you’ll learn:

- Best legal practices for donating historical documents, photos, family heirlooms, or artifacts so they remain within the community
- How to ensure generational property is transitioned thoughtfully and what to consider before donating
- The tax-saving benefits of naming a nonprofit as a beneficiary
- How to include the Nicollet County Historical Society or another nonprofit in your will or trust without affecting your current lifestyle

RSVP at the link:

Learn how estate planning and historical preservation work together at this free NCHS seminar with attorney Jared Koch.

03/17/2026

🚨 We are closed today due to a staffing shortage. We plan to reopen tomorrow, Wednesday, March 18. Staff are working from home and are reachable by email. We apologize for the inconvenience.

Exciting news!
03/11/2026

Exciting news!

💌 Not All Victorian Valentines Were Sweet…When we think of Valentine’s Day in the 1890s, we might imagine lace paper, ro...
02/14/2026

💌 Not All Victorian Valentines Were Sweet…

When we think of Valentine’s Day in the 1890s, we might imagine lace paper, roses, and sentimental poetry.
But some valentines were anything but romantic.

They were called “vinegar valentines.”
These inexpensive, mass-produced cards featured exaggerated cartoons and sharp rhymes that mocked their recipients. Some teased a lazy coworker. Others targeted gossip, vanity, or someone seen as “too forward” or “too proud.”

They were often sent anonymously.
By the 1890s, America was changing. Women were attending college. Reform movements were growing. Courtship customs were shifting. Not everyone welcomed those changes.
Vinegar valentines weren’t just jokes. They reflected what people worried about, and sometimes who they thought needed to be “put back in place.”

In a close-knit town like St. Peter, where reputation traveled quickly, a public joke could feel very personal.

Today, Valentine’s Day leans toward kindness and affection. But history reminds us that even holidays carry the tensions of their time.

Would you have sent a sweet valentine… or a sharp one?

Happy Valentine’s Day from the Cox House 💌

Interesting!
02/08/2026

Interesting!

Address

500 N. Washington Avenue
Saint Peter, MN
56082

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