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INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 30 EDGEwooD ROAD <br /> MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No. <br /> 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD,BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125 <br /> 0 2117 <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 /> 30 Edgewood Road occupies a modest lot on the crest of a gently curving road. The building is raised above street level with a <br /> poured concrete retaining wall at the sidewalk edge. Maintained chiefly in lawn with foundation plantings, mature trees grow at <br /> the right side and rear of the property. An asphalt driveway extends along the right side of the property. A fieldstone stairway <br /> with bluestone treads, contained by a decorative metal railing, rises at the beginning of the driveway and extends to a slate <br /> pathway that curves to the front entrance. The building consists of a 1 '/2 story main block with an enclosed sunroom on one <br /> side and an attached garage wing on the other. <br /> The five bay wide main block rises from a poured concrete foundation to a side gable roof with an exterior chimney on the left <br /> side; no gable returns. Walls are clad with wood shingles and trimmed with flat frieze boards with a narrow crown molding. <br /> Windows typically contain 6/6 double-hung sash with narrow band molding and hinged and louvered wood shutters. The eight- <br /> light casement window sash in the sunroom extension have no trim. The fagade consists of a slightly-projecting cross-gabled <br /> pavilion on the right side with two symmetrical windows on the first floor and one centered in its flushboarded half-story; two <br /> windows to the left; and an approximately centered single-leaf doorway. The doorway is ornamented with fluted pilasters, a <br /> decoratively sawn frieze board, and narrow crow molding. Two small gabled dormers with flushboard siding punctuate the front <br /> slope of the roof. <br /> The right side elevation of the main block has irregular fenestration, with one large and one small window on each floor. The <br /> back slope of the roof is raised on this elevation. The garage wing attached to this elevation has a side gable roof, two individual <br /> vehicle bays and a small 6-light horizontal window on the fagade, and two narrow dormer windows (with flushboard siding) <br /> centered above the garage doors. The left side elevation contains an exterior chimney in the center, flanked in the half-story by <br /> a window on each side. Set back slightly from the fagade of the main block, a one-story enclosed sunroom on the left side <br /> elevation has a low-pitched shed roof, flushboard siding, and paired casement windows. <br /> Well preserved and well maintained, 30 Edgewood Road is a good example of modest early-20th century suburban development <br /> in the Colonial Revival style. It is notable for its well-proportioned and interesting massing, combination of wall surface textures, <br /> and decorative front entrance. <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 /> Edgewood Road was a turn-of-the 20th-century addition to the development of Merriam Hill, appearing between 1898 and 1906. <br /> The street developed slowly, with only one house built along it in 1906, and two others appearing between 1918 and 1927. By <br /> 1935, however, all but one of the lots along Edgewood were finally developed. The lot that is now 30 Edgewood Road was <br /> subdivided from its neighbor to the left (west) sometime between 1927 and 1935, but was still undeveloped in the latter year. <br /> The town directories and U.S. census place the construction of this house between 1935 and 1940; assessors' records show a <br /> construction date of 1938. <br /> The first known occupants of 30 Edgewood Road were Charles R. Metchear, Jr., who worked in electrical fixtures, as an <br /> assistant treasurer, and later salesman, his wife Perle C., and two children (one of whom, Martha, was employed as a social <br /> worker while living here). The Metchear family occupied the house from at least 1940 through 1965. <br /> Continuation sheet I <br />