A late 19th century mansion in Grand Boulevard that currently serves as the home of a Chicago nonprofit is on the market for $1.3 million.

Called the Swift Mansion, the house was originally a gift to Helen Swift, the daughter of a powerful Chicago meatpacker, and her husband, Edward Morris. Out of place on a South Michigan Ave. corner, it’s a relic of a time when this South Side street was lined with stately mansions.

On the outside, the home combines Romanesque and Queen Anne styles and inside, there’s the kind of rich, meticulous woodwork found in historic Chicago homes. The mansion was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

Currently, the Inner City Youth and Adult Foundation runs its operations out of the mansion. The founders of the nonprofit, which helps people coming out of state prisons find jobs and reenter society, are retiring. Men released from prison live in the home while they apply for jobs.

While the home is on the National Registry of Historic Places, it is not protected by a city landmark designation, so the owners hope the next owner will preserve the Swift Mansion’s historic character.