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INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 10 FERN ST/15 PLEASANT ST <br /> MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No. <br /> 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD,BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125 <br /> 0 2222 <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 /> 10 Fern Street occupies a trapezoidal lot spanning between Fern and Pleasant streets,just south of their intersection. Due to <br /> the significant grade level change between the higher Fern Street and lower Pleasant Street, the building rises 2 '/z stories above <br /> Pleasant Street, but only 1 '/2 stories above Fern Street. The building is set close to the center of its lot, with a high stone <br /> retaining wall paralleling Fern Street, a short distance in back (west) of the house. The Fern Street frontage contains a semi- <br /> circular paved drive bordered by planting areas with trees, shrubs, and perennials, and a vinyl privacy fence between the <br /> driveway and the building. The north (right side)setback is mostly occupied by a large paved parking area. The deep front <br /> setback is maintained in lawn and small trees; it is lined by a low retaining wall of concrete block with a brick cap. A thick band <br /> of trees borders the house on the south (left)side. <br /> The rectangular building rises 2 '/z stories from a concrete foundation to a gable roof with twin interior chimneys near the end <br /> walls; no gable returns. Walls are clad in vinyl siding and trim. Windows typically have 6/1 double hung replacement sash with <br /> vinyl trim. The ground floor of the front fagade (east elevation, facing Pleasant Street) has a slightly off-center, single-leaf center <br /> door flanked by an 8/1 window on the left and paired 6/1 windows on the right. Two widely spaced, 6/1 windows are <br /> symmetrically set on the second floor, and a 1/1 window is centered in the half story. <br /> The asymmetrical right side (north)elevation contains a center entry at grade under a low shed roof with plain wood brace. <br /> Three 6/1 windows are set to the left. The second floor of this elevation contains four 6/1 windows. Little is visible of the rear <br /> (west) elevation, facing Fern Street. It contains two closely spaced and approximately centered windows at the Fern Street level <br /> and a 1/1 window centered in the half story. <br /> The building at 10 Fern Street/l5 Pleasant Street has lost much historic integrity through the application of artificial siding and <br /> the replacement of window sash. Its proportions and massing suggest an early 19th century construction date. The building's <br /> simplicity and its proximity to and historic associations with the adjacent house at 11 Pleasant Street suggest possible <br /> agricultural/commercial functions. <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 /> Pleasant Street may have originated as a Native American trail. It connects the arterial roads of Massachusetts Avenue and <br /> Concord Avenue (an early 19 century turnpike) and was employed early on as an important route from Lexington center to <br /> towns to the south. Fern Street appears as an offshoot by 1853, in the form of a long, unpaved path from Pleasant Street to a <br /> building (and presumably farmland)owned by W. Gleason. <br /> 10 Fern/15 Pleasant Street clearly shares a history with the adjacent house at 11 Pleasant Street, a 2 '/2 story, side-gabled <br /> building with a five bay fagade and center entrance, which was constructed in the early 19th century. The present 10 Fern/15 <br /> Pleasant Street may have been built as an accessory structure for the main house. <br /> The 1853 map shows a pair of buildings here in the acute triangle at the fork of Fern and Pleasant streets. F. Buttrick is shown <br /> owning the property in 1875, 1889, 1898, and 1906. Little information is presently known of this individual, although an F. <br /> Buttrick, E. Buttrick, and Isaac Buttrick also owned property nearby on the north side of Fern Street during that period. Francis <br /> Continuation sheet I <br />