Encyclopedia Dubuque
"Encyclopedia Dubuque is the online authority for all things Dubuque, written by the people who know the city best.”
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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.
HIGHLAND STOCK FARM
HIGHLAND STOCK FARM. Home of NUTWOOD. In 1894 Henry L. STOUT purchased the five hundred acre Carter and Cheney (Chaney) farm and developed the land as a stock farm. In 1895 the site was incorporated with a capital stock of $24,000. A half-mile track and a quarter-mile covered track were constructed along with stables. Brood mares, brought from across the United States, were bred to Nutwood, the prized stallion owned by the Stouts. Breeding was done on a cash basis with each mare costing approximately one thousand dollars.
In 1899, three years after the death of Nutwood, the Stouts sold all their horses and closed the farm. Stout died the next year and willed the farm to his son Frank D. STOUT. When business kept Frank away from Dubuque, he divided the farm. The stables, tracks, and stock barns were given to his sister, Fannie STOUT.
Fannie, who had received what became Egelhof-Casper-Strueber funeral home as a wedding gift from her father, had the outdoor track seeded and the area within the track flooded to make a pool. White swans were imported to live in the pond and the covered track and farm buildings were demolished.
Fannie died on December 28, 1914, with an unsigned will. The property became part of the estate and was purchased by Joseph J. NAGLE who sold the land to the Sisters of Mercy. Fannie's house was replaced with a brick building in 1921. Later this building was purchased by the ARCHDIOCESE OF DUBUQUE and the Province of Iowa. A new building was constructed facing the lake. This complex of buildings, known as Mount Saint Bernard Seminary, was opened in 1951. In 1969 the SISTERS OF THE PRESENTATION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY (PBVM) took possession of the property and called it Mount Loretto.