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BUILDING FORM <br /> ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION ❑ see continuation sheet <br /> Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community. <br /> 39 Adams St. is one of the most intact patterned-shingled Queen Anne houses in Lexington. It is essentially square with several <br /> projecting bays and a rectangular rear ell. Hip-roofed(the rear ell is gable-roofed)and 2%2 stories in height,the house has two <br /> ridge chimneys, one at the intersection of the main house and the ell and the other in the ell. The entire house is set on a fieldstone <br /> foundation, clad with wood clapboards broken by bands of octagonal wood shingles, and roofed with asphalt shingles. The main <br /> entry, on the facade, has transom lights and the windows are 1/1 or 2/2 double hung sash. The main block has a canted gabled- <br /> roofed 2'/2-story bay on the front and two-story hip-roofed bays and shed dormers on the side elevations. A screen porch extends <br /> across the facade; it has a dentil course at the cornice and a doorway flanked by pilasters. At its north end is a projecting <br /> octagonal corner porch with a peaked roof surmounted by a simple finial. A rear entrance, on the south side of the ell,has a porch <br /> with turned posts and a spindle frieze. The two-car garage is front-gabled, on a cement foundation, and clad with wood drop <br /> siding. <br /> HISTORICAL NARRATIVE ❑ see continuation sheet <br /> Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the <br /> role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community. <br /> This house was built in 1884 by George F. Chapman, who owned a 31-acre farm at the corner of Adams and East streets. The <br /> farmhouse had formerly been the house now at 43 Adams St. (MHC 4706), but after Chapman built this house it became the <br /> main farmhouse and the one at 43 Adams St. was probably rented out. In 1893 Chapman's widow sold the farm to William Prior, <br /> a fish dealer at Quincy Market in Boston, and at that time 5%2 acres containing this house was set off as a separate parcel and sold <br /> to Prior's wife, Edna. The Priors lived in this house until 1896 when Edna Prior, by then a widow, sold both the 25'/2 remaining <br /> acres of the farm at 43 Adams St. and the 5%2 parcel on which this house is located to Irving Johnson of Arlington. The Johnsons <br /> were market gardeners, or truck farmers; Irving Johnson lived in this house and his son Frederick W. lived in the house at 43 <br /> Adams St. After Irving Johnson's death in 1917,the Johnsons sold the property to the William B. Porter family—the farm in <br /> 1922 and this house in 1924. The Porters lived in this house and brother-in-law Matthew Wilson, who was a partner in the farm, <br /> lived at 43 Adams. This house remained associated with the farm until it was subdivided after World War II; in 1948 this house <br /> was sold to Carlton Warren, who owned it for the next 50 years before selling it to a developer in 1998. <br /> BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES ❑ see continuation sheet <br /> May Baskin,personal communication 1998. <br /> Lexington Directory, 1887, 1894, 1899. <br /> Lexington Minute-man, 24 April 1884. <br /> Middlesex Registry of Deeds. Deeds. Cambridge, MA. 2244: 247; 2505: 152, 156; 4512: 326; 4745: 216; 7310: 424. <br /> ❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked,you must attach a completed National <br /> Register Criteria Statement form <br />