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BUILDING FORM (25 Adams Street) <br /> ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION <br /> Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of the building in terms of other buildings within the <br /> community. <br /> Located at the northeast corner of Adams and Meriam Streets, 25 Adams Street(MHC #1019) is a good example of the <br /> Colonial Revival style of the early 20th century. The two-story,hip-roofed dwelling is set above a rubble foundation and <br /> sheathed in wood shingles. The three-bay facade is spanned by a single-story porch supported by clusters of three Roman <br /> Doric columns that are echoed by single pilasters mounted on the facade. The columns are spanned by a turned balustrade. <br /> A center pediment decorated by modillions marks the entrance. Both the pediment and adjacent porch display a plain frieze. <br /> The entrance is sheltered by a glazed projecting vestibule and is flanked by large 2/2 windows with blinds. Above the <br /> entrance, on the second floor of the facade, a three-sided bay window rests on the porch roof and is lit by 2/1 windows with <br /> the adjacent windows identical to those on the first floor. A bold modilion cornice wraps around the building and a pair of <br /> hip-roofed dormers rise from the front and rear roof slopes. The asphalt-shingled hip roof is crowmed by a balustrade of <br /> simple square posts arranged in an intersecting, star-like pattern. <br /> On the remaining elevations,the shingles are flared between the first and second stories. There is an exterior brick chimney <br /> on the north elevation and a single-story,three-sided bay window. <br /> The yard is enclosed by a simple wooden picket fence and there is a mature maple tree adjacent to the concrete front walk <br /> rwith large pine trees near Meriam Street. A stone wall marks the northern property line. To the north of the house is a side- <br /> gabled, wood-shingled garage (MHC #1020)which is capped by a jerkinhead roof There are two sets of double doors on <br /> Ae broad facade. Each leaf displays 4 x 2 lights over four vertical panels. Other fenestration on the garage includes a 6/1 <br /> window and a vertical board door in the attic. <br /> HISTORICAL NARRATIVE <br /> Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building and <br /> the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community. <br /> This house is located on Lot 49 of the Oakmount Park subdivision. The earliest valuation record found for the property <br /> indicates that in 1906 Anna Russell was assessed for a house on the 13,290 square foot lot. Directories indicate that her <br /> husband was employed as a bookkeeper at 141 Milk Street in Boston. The Russells continued to live here into the late 1910s. <br /> By 1920 the house was occupied by Nathan and Mary Bidwell. He was a lawyer. The house was known as 13 Adams Street <br /> until about 1927, and as 15 Adams Street until the mid 1930s. In addition to this property, the Bidwells also owned two <br /> other houses on Adams Street, which were identified as 10 and 12 Adams Street in 1920. The Bidwells continued to own 25 <br /> Adams Street until the 1940s. Donald and Allegra Fifield owned and occupied the house from the late 1940s until 1990. <br /> BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES <br /> Lexington Assessors Records. <br /> JLexington Directories, various dates. <br /> Lexington Valuation Lists, various dates. <br /> Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked,you must attached a completed <br /> National Register Criteria Statement form. <br />