William Livingstone House
The William Livingstone House (commonly called Slumpy) was a house constructed in 1894 and located in the Brush Park district of Detroit, Michigan.
William Livingstone Jr. (1844–1925), publisher of the Detroit Evening Journal, was the second president of the Dime Savings Bank. He hired a young Albert Kahn, who was working for the architectural firm of Mason & Rice, to design his residence on Eliot Street. When he obtained this commission – presumably with Mason’s help – Kahn was only 22 or 23 years old and had just returned from spending 1891 in Europe, studying the classical architecture of the Old World: his decision to design the home in the French Renaissance Revival style reflected the time he spent sketching the best Gallic architecture.