The large home overlooking Hanscom Park in the Field Club neighborhood was designed by architect Joseph E. Dietrick. Built in 1896, it was arguably the most elaborate Victorian-era house in the neighborhood. It features fish-scale shingles, an elaborate wraparound front porch, and applied molding. These elements are incorporated into a cross-gambrel roofline that combines the ornate detailing of the Queen Anne style with the more conservative Dutch Colonial roof form.

2022 Google Maps photo of 1624 S 32nd Ave before it was repainted last year.

Inside, the house includes a reception hall with a fireplace, a formal dining room with hand-carved columns, pocket doors with transoms to allow for airflow, built-ins, bench seating, a bamboo-inspired staircase, and large windows throughout.

Looking at the eastern facade of the Queen Anne at 1624 S 32nd Ave. The house sits on a hill overlooking Hanscom Park.

Located at 1624 S. 32nd Avenue, the house was built for Charles and Marietta Hughes. Charles Hughes was superintendent of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad. The Hughes family moved by 1900, at which point the house was sold to Dr. Henry Burrell, who in turn moved out in 1906.

The living room at 1624 S 32nd Ave with large windows facing 32nd Ave and Hanscom Park.

The next owner was Judge William H. Munger. Widely known as the Judge Munger residence, he was born in New York in 1845. He moved to Cleveland at age 20, where he worked in his uncle’s dry goods store while also studying the law. He joined a law firm a year later and was admitted to the bar in 1868. At that point he relocated to Fremont, Nebraska.

The living room at 1624 S 32nd Ave with hand carved columns between it and the dining room.

While building his legal practice, he worked briefly at a lumber yard and tried small cases. In 1875, he served as a member of Nebraska’s constitutional convention. By 1878, he entered into a partnership with J. M. Woolworth of Omaha. He was appointed a United States judge in 1898 by President Grover Cleveland and served on the bench until 1914, passing away the following year. His wife, Jennie Munger, moved out shortly afterward.

The updated kitchen at 1624 S 32nd Ave.

J. L. Baker of the Baker Ice Machine Company became the next resident. Perhaps his biggest contribution came in 1920 with the addition of a brick-and-concrete reinforced garage facing Hickory Street at a cost of $2,000. He continued to live there until at least 1940.

The original bamboo inspired stairway at 1624 S 32nd Ave.

The home changed hands several times after that, including ownership by Robert Schaap, who made alterations in 1947 without filing a permit. It seems plausible that Robert is responsible for converting the grand home into apartments. Elmer and Kathryn Grossoehme purchased the property shortly thereafter. After Elmer’s death, Kathryn lived in the basement quarters while maintaining the house and its six rental units by herself.

The stairway leading up to the second floor at 1624 S 32nd Ave.

An Omaha World-Herald article from 1977 noted that at age 69, Kathryn repaired one of the pillars supporting the front porch. She also applied wallpaper, painted walls and woodwork, laid carpet, repaired plaster, fixed cracks in the sidewalk, set bathroom tile, and even did some carpentry—though she admitted she was not much of a plumber or electrician. It is unclear when Kathryn moved out, but she lived until 1992. Subsequent owners continued renovations over the following decades. The home sold in 2019 for $297,000.

This cozy nook greats you as you make your way up to the second floor at 1624 S 32nd Ave.

The 4,000-square-foot home, with five bedrooms and four bathrooms, is currently listed for $675,000. It retains many original features, including its woodwork, while offering an updated kitchen, refreshed bathrooms, and a lower-level suite with a private entrance, bathroom, and kitchen. The third floor also includes 1,205 square feet of space ready to be finished and features a separate kitchen. See the link in the comments for the real estate listing.

One of the bedrooms at 1624 S 32nd Ave.

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More pictures

The fireplace in the reception area at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
Original built-ins at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
The tunnel that leads from the basement to the garage at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
Looking inside the garage at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
The unfinished third floor at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
The unfinished third floor at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
Looking southeast from the front porch at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
Looking south from the front porch at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
Looking at the northeast corner and the rounded window from the front porch at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
One of the bathrooms at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
Looking at the northern side of the house at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
The southern facade of the house at 1624 S 32nd Ave and the garage that was added in 1920.
Looking at the backyard with the patio on top of the garage at 1624 S 32nd Ave.
The view of Hanscom Park from the third floor at 1624 S 32nd Ave.

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2 responses to “Judge Munger’s Queen Anne at 1624 S 32nd Ave”

  1. postdeepestde510b6eee Avatar
    postdeepestde510b6eee

    Could Judge Mungers’ house on So 32 Ave, been Charlie Mungers’grandfather? Charlie’s dad was an attorney, and Charlie was an attorney for most of his life. Charlie grew up at 105 So 55th Street, Omaha.

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    1. I don’t believe so. A quick search on Ancestry shows me that his grandfather was likely Thomas C. Munger. I haven’t dug into it far enough to see if there’s any relation.

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