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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 /> 149 Adams St. is a very intact example of a large Queen Anne house in Lexington. The side-gabled, 2Y2-story house is <br /> rectangular in form, approximately two-by-two bays with a 2'/2-story gabled rear ell. A ridge chimney is located in the ell near the <br /> main block. The house is set on a fieldstone foundation, clad with clapboards on the first story and staggered shingles above, and <br /> roofed with asphalt shingles. The main entry is on the facade and windows are 2/2 and 1/1 double hung sash. A projecting bay <br /> surmounted by a gabled dormer is located over the entry; next to it, a larger three-sided second-story bay is carried up into a <br /> hexagonal tower capped with a peaked roof. There are staggered windows on the north elevation and a dentil course and spindle <br /> frieze on the wraparound porch. In the ravine to the east of the house is a circular fieldstone well house with a conical roof. <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 1883-1884 by Delmont A. Butterfield, who had been born in 1855 in the house now at 43 Adams St. <br /> (MHC#706). Butterfield's wife bought the land on which this house is located in August 1883 and the house was probably <br /> started that year, for she was assessed for the completed house in 1884. In 1889 Butterfield leased the pond behind the house,then <br /> called Grangers Pond, and reportedly cut ice from it; the pond is now known as Butterfield's Pond. In the late 1920s and early <br /> 1930s this house was the site of a local radio station,WLEX; the antenna was located on the gravel pit behind it. The station was <br /> reportedly run by a member of the Moakley family, Lexington electricians, and in 1941 Richard Moakley purchased the house. <br /> This house has had only three main owners in the over 100 years of its existence and the present owners, James Long, Jr. and <br /> Patricia Hardiman Long, have received visits from descendants of both the Butterfields and the Moakleys. <br /> BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES ❑ see continuation sheet <br /> Hudson, Charles. History of the Town of Lexington. Revised and continued to 1912 by the Lexington Historical Society. <br /> Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1913. 2: 85-86. <br /> Lexington Directory. 1922-1942. <br /> Lexington Valuation Lists. 1883-1884. <br /> Patricia Hardiman Long. Personal communication 1998. <br /> Middlesex Registry of Deeds. Deeds. Plans. Cambridge, MA. 1643: 428; 1926: 470; 6500: 187; Pl. Bk. 12,Pl. 54; Plan No. <br /> 565 of 1941. <br /> S. Lawrence Whipple. Personal communication 1998. <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 />