Historic Properties of Spokane
Lloyd, Hubert & Bertha, House
Built in 1910, the Hubert & Bertha Lloyd House is an artistic blend of Spanish Mission and Craftsman-style traditions. The one-and-one-half story home is covered by a very low-pitched pavilion hip roof with widely overhanging eaves and exposed rafter tails. The north façade of the house features a full-width covered front porch with an arched center entrance and a tall square tower at the home’s northwest corner. The corner tower is distinguished with a concrete balcony and a protective parapet wall. The house is supported by a basalt foundation and is clad in painted pebbled stucco. The Hubert & Bertha Lloyd House was erected for the property's first homeowners, Bertha & Hubert T. Lloyd, an electrical engineer and a successful railroad contractor with holdings in Spokane and British Columbia, Canada. Spokane building contractor E. William Larson built the home "at a cost of about $5,000" for Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd.




