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HomeMy WebLinkAboutconcord-avenue_0503 AREA FORM NO. FORM B - BUILDING T 563 i i MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION 294 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON, MA 02108 Wn Lexington dress 503 Concord Avenue storic Name Cutler Farmhouse .e: Present residential Original residential DESCRIPTION: ite c. 1804 Source John Coles and Associates SKETCH MAP Show property's location in relation Style Federal to nearest cross streets and/or geographical features. Indicate Architect all buildings between inventoried ,property and nearest intersection. Exterior wall fabric clapboard Indicate north. Outbuildings attached garage 04 _ EDMajor alterations (with dates) ell ti o (1827) ; roof raised and rear addition, east porch, bracketed door hood (1874) Co coKD Moved Date Approx. acreage 2964.1 ft.2 Cecorded FITancy by S. Seasholes Setting Screened from street with continual traffic by a row of hemlocks; Organization Lexington Historical Commission surrounded by much newer houses built on the farmland formerly associated with Date February, 1984 this house. (Staple additional sheets here) ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE (Describe important architectural features and evaluate in terms of other buildings within the community.) Built c. 1804, the Cutler farmhouse is one of the remaining Federal farmhouses along the old Cambridge-Concord Turnpike, now Concord Avenue. Very little of the original Federal finishes remain, however. On the exterior only the five-bay facade and the two end chimneys of the central portion date from - the Federal period. On the interior, the only Federal elements are the "ribbed molded" chair rail and cornice in the west front parlor; the filled holes on the stair treads indicating the original balusters were slender, square in - (see Continuation Sheet) HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE (Explain the role owners played in local or state history and how the building relates to the development of the community.) The land on which this house is located was owned in the eighteenth century by Ebenezer White. After his death, it was sold in about 1789 to a Joseph Underwood who, in turn, sold the lot to his son Joseph Jr. in 1804. The house was apparently built about this time, for the deed refers to Joseph Underwood Jr. 's "new house." Further corroboration is supplied by the Middlesex County Commissioners records for 1804 which, in describing the Cambridge-Concord Turnpike built that year (the present Concord Avenue) , mention "the new house of Joseph Underwood, Jr." (Burgess 1965:84-85) . This house was apparently a two-story Federal farmhouse, five bays wide, one room deep, with brick ends, two end chimneys, either a hip or a gable roof, and perhaps an attached shed at the east end of the back (John F. Cole to Mr. and Mrs. Theodore J. Nussdorfer, March 20, 1969) . The part of Ebenezer White's estate south of present Concord Avenue was sold in 1790 to Thomas Cutler who, in turn, sold it in 1802 to his son Nathaniel. The latter lived in the old White farmhouse (south of the present 502 Concord Avenue) until 1822 when he purchased Joseph Underwood Jr. 's house from Underwood relatives. Nathaniel Cutler (1773-1849) was a prosperous farmer, raising and - selling large quantities of herbs and dealing in lumber. He was also an important figure in town affairs, serving as moderator, selectman, district school committeeman, surveyor of highways, overseer of the poor, surveyor of lumber, and a member of various special town committees. In 1837 the west ell was apparently added to the house, for the assessors' records mention "sheds and (see Continuation Sheet ;t BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES (name of publication, author, date and publisher) Burgess, Marjorie Cutler. 1965. A Genealogy of the Cutler Family of Lexington, Massachusetts, 1634-1964. Concord, New Hampshire: Evans Printing Company. Burgess, Marjorie Cutler. Cutler Farm, 503 Concord Avenue, Lexington, Massachusetts. Typescript, June 1964. On file at Lexington Historical Commission. John F. Cole to Mr. and Mrs. Theodore J. Nussdorfer. Letter, March 20, 1969. On file at Lexington Historical Commission. 10M - 7/82 INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET Community: Form No: MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL CC"d SSION Lexington 563 Office of the Secretary, Boston Property Name: 503 Concord Avenue Indicate each item on inventory form which is being continued below. ARCHITECTURAL SIGNIFICANCE section, and set on the diagonal; and the original brick ends, visible in the attic and the west ell basement. The house has had many additions or alterations: the west ell was added in 1837, the bracketed hood over the front door and the east porch during an extensive 1874 remodeling (the trellis over the front door is undoubtedly a later addition) , and the garage before 1923. HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE betterments on the house" (Burgess 1965:85) , and in 1842 Nathaniel Cutler deeded the farm to his son Thomas in return for the right to live in the west ell. The ell has subsequently almost always been occupied by a separate household; it is now a rental apartment. Thomas Cutler (1801-1890) was also a successful farmer, but not active in town affairs. He ran the farm with his son Thomas Everett Cutler (1830-1875) ; under the latter the farm began to specialize in apples and milk and its holdings were increased, especially in the area north of Shade and east of Spring streets, in what is now the Woodhaven area (1875 map) . In 1874 the original house was completely remodeled: the roof was raised, the house was made two rooms deep, the brick ends covered with clapboards, and the bracketed front doorway and east porch added. Thomas E. Cutler died in 1875 and his inventory lists the rooms then existing in the main house: kitchen, dining room, sitting room (east front) , front hall, parlor (west front) , parlor chamber, chamber over front hall, sitting room chamber, bath room, dining room chamber, north chamber, attic, workmen's chamber, wardrobe (Burgess 1964:8-9) . This inventory also mentions improvements to a barn and outbuildings; the former, at least, was located on the south side of Concord Avenue (site of present 502 Concord Avenue) . Thomas Cutler died in 1890 and his inventory cites the house, barn, and three outbuildings (Burgess 1965:54) . Thomas Cutler left the 150 acre farm to his son's widow and children. It was purchased in 1898 by Clarence H. Cutler (1869-1933) , a son of Thomas E. Cutler. Like his great-grandfather, Clarence Cutler was very active in town affairs, serving as a town meeting member, on the finance committee, planning board, as a fence viewer, and a delegate to Republican conventions. He was also a member of the Lexington Grange, Minutemen, Rotary Club, and First Parish Church. During his ownership of the Cutler farm he continued to specialize in apples and - milk and many outbuildings were added, all of which have since disappeared: a wagon shed (late 1890s) next to the barn; a summer house (c. 1915) at the Parker pine (see Concord Avenue area form) ; a cottage (1920) on the east side of the property (site of present 501 Concord Avenue) ; workmen's housing (before 1920) above the wagon shed (Burgess 1964:5, 1965:85-86) . Clarence Cutler apparently wanted the farm to remain in the Cutler family, but he left it to his wife who, on her death in 1938, had left it to a niece, so the farm, which had been owned and operated by the same family for over 100 years, ceased to be owned by the Cutlers. After World War II the Cutler farmland was divided up and sold off for residential developments: Woodhaven in the late 1940s, Benjamin Road in the 1950s, and Five Fields, on the south side of Concord Avenue, in the early 1950s (see Five Fields area form) . The Cutler barn and workmen's house were torn down in 1953 as part of the latter development. Staple to Inventory form at bottom