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INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 34 HAYES AVENUE <br /> MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No. <br /> 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD,BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125 <br /> �H 2141 <br /> ❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. <br /> If checked,you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form. <br /> Use as much space as necessary to complete the following entries, allowing text to flow onto additional continuation sheets. <br /> ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION: <br /> Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community. <br /> 34 Hayes Avenue is located in the center of a modest lot, with a deep front setback. The land slopes up gradually from the <br /> street, and is maintained chiefly in lawn, with several mature evergreen trees, foundation plantings, and small deciduous trees <br /> and shrubs lining the street edge. A paved driveway extends up the left side of the property. The building consists of a 1 '/2 story <br /> main block with rear appendages and a small detached garage. <br /> The roughly L-shaped building has a side gable on the left wing and a front gabled projection with a recessed entry porch on its <br /> left side. Both gable roofs have clipped peaks and no gable returns. Walls are sheathed with brick. An exterior chimney rises <br /> from the left side of the front gable, within the entry porch. Windows typically have multi-light double-hung sash, with multi-light <br /> casement windows in the gable peaks. Window openings are trimmed with brick header course sills and soldier course lintels. <br /> The fagade contains an offset, tripartite window in the front gable on the first floor and a narrow six-light casement window <br /> centered in the half-story. The entrance porch has arched openings on the fagade (semi-circular) and left side (segmental); the <br /> single-leaf wood paneled door has a flat, soldier course header. The left side wing has a tri-partite window/door unit with multi- <br /> light sash on its fagade elevation. <br /> The right side elevation contains a one-story enclosed sunroom with a flat roof and three 6/6 windows facing the street, and two <br /> wide, hip-roofed dormers at the half-story, each with three grouped windows. The end gable (left) elevation of the left wing is not <br /> clearly visible from the street. One large window with a brick header is visible toward the front, and a narrow six-light window is <br /> centered in the half-story. A wood addition (possibly a greenhouse) is attached to the back of this wing. <br /> A very modest, one-vehicle bay garage stands at the back left corner of the lot. It has a front gable roof, wood shingle cladding, <br /> and double-leaf garage doors constructed of vertical wood boards. <br /> Well preserved, 34 Hayes Avenue is a good example of modest, early 20th century suburban housing in Lexington. The building <br /> is notable for its similarities to the adjacent house at#32 and for its use of the Tudor Revival style, clipped gable roofs, well- <br /> detailed entrance porch, brick window sills and lintels, and early garage. <br /> HISTORICAL NARRATIVE <br /> Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local(or state)history. Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the <br /> owners/occupants played within the community. <br /> 34 Hayes Avenue represents the later development of the north slope of Merriam Hill, which continued to attract middle-class <br /> professionals. In 1903, much of this area was surveyed and subdivided for house lots according to a plan prepared by civil <br /> engineers H. T. Whitman and Channing Howard. By 1906, however, buildings appeared only along the perimeter roads <br /> (Adams and Grant streets). Unfortunately, the portion of Hayes Avenue between Castle Road and Meriam Street is not <br /> illustrated on the 1927 Sanborn maps, but by 1935 it was almost completely developed. The assessors' records for this house <br /> show a construction date of 1928, which has not yet been confirmed. <br /> Discrepancies in the street numbering systems for Hayes Avenue make it difficult to pinpoint the residents in this house from the <br /> directories and censuses. The first known occupants of 34 Hayes Avenue are thought to be Allen W. Rucker, in advertising and <br /> business consulting, his wife Elise M., and Minnie C. Bond, relationship and occupation unknown (1935). Reported to have <br /> moved to Lexington ca. 1926, the Ruckers are identified at 20 Hayes Avenue from 1930 through 1935. (They are listed on a <br /> different street in Lexington by 1942.) <br /> Continuation sheet I <br />