Dr. Salsbury's Laboratories, Main Office and Production Laboratory Building

Dr. Salsbury's Laboratories, Main Office and Production Laboratory Building, also known as the Floyd County Museum, is a historic building located in Charles City, Iowa, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.[1] The two-story brick Modern Movement structure is built over a raised basement. It was designed by Waterloo architect Mortimer Cleveland. The facility was built in three parts. Completed in 1935, the part of the building that faces Gilbert Street housed administration and company related operations. The wing off the back was completed two years later, and housed research laboratories and related uses, and offices. To the west of the original block is a single-story wing built after the facility became a museum in the 1990s.

Dr. Salsbury's Laboratories, Main Office and Production Laboratory Building
The historic building is on the left.
Dr. Salsbury's Laboratories, Main Office and Production Laboratory Building is located in Iowa
Dr. Salsbury's Laboratories, Main Office and Production Laboratory Building
Dr. Salsbury's Laboratories, Main Office and Production Laboratory Building is located in the United States
Dr. Salsbury's Laboratories, Main Office and Production Laboratory Building
Location500 Gilbert St.
Charles City, Iowa
Coordinates43°03′47″N 92°40′44″W / 43.06306°N 92.67889°W / 43.06306; -92.67889
Arealess than one acre
Built1935, 1937
Built byC.E. Larson Construction
ArchitectMortimer Cleveland
Architectural styleModern Movement
NRHP reference No.96000235[1]
Added to NRHPMarch 7, 1996

The building's primary significance is its association with the development of health products that made the expansion of the poultry industry possible whereby large numbers of poultry could be concentrated together for poultry and egg production.[2] It is also significant for its association Dr. Joseph E. Salsbury, who established a veterinary practice in Charles City in 1923. He changed attitudes of applying veterinary medicine to poultry when he began to see the value of taking a flock approach rather than focusing on individual birds, which at the time were seen as low-value farm animals.[2] Salsbury ended his general veterinary practice in 1930 to devote his time to providing medicines to farmers who raised poultry and developed this laboratory.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b Scott Lamprich; Helen B. Webster. "Dr. Salsbury's Laboratories, Main Office and Production Laboratory Building". National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-08-22. with photos