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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 /> 40 Forest St. is one of several ells in Lexington that have been separated from their original house and moved to a new location <br /> (other examples are at 29 Hayes Ln. [MHC#6681, 15 Belfry Terr. [MHC#683], and 9-11 Cedar St. [MHC#688]; in this <br /> case,the ell was placed right behind its associated horse. The former ell is now a rectangular house,two stories,three-by-one <br /> bays,and side-gabled. At the rear is a front gabled two-story addition with an asymmetrical roof and a side chimney, a second- <br /> story overhang on the north elevation, a one-story gabled addition on a concrete block foundation at the rear,and a one-story <br /> addition on concrete posts on the south elevation. The main entry is under a full-width enclosed porch on the facade;windows are <br /> 1/1 double hung sash. There is a two-story three-sided oriel on the south elevation. At the rear of the property is a tiny front- <br /> gabled one-car garage and a shingled and screened octagonal gazebo. <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 originally the ell of the Amos Muzzey House, which now stands right in front of it on the same lot with the address <br /> 42 Forest St. (MHC#444). The Amos Muzzey House was probably built in the second quarter of the 18th century and has since <br /> been moved twice. The house originally stood on Massachusetts Ave. on the site of what is now the Edison Station,that is,on the <br /> northwest corner of Massachusetts Ave. and Grant St. In 1834 Benjamin Muzzey moved the Amos Muzzey House to some land <br /> he owned on Waltham St., now the northeast corner of Waltham St. and Vine Brook Rd. where the house now at 52 Waltham St. <br /> (MHC#20) is located, and in 1835 built a new house on the Massachusetts Ave. site(see 14 Glen Rd. South [MHC#6791 <br /> form). This ell was probably built soon after the Amos Muzzey House was moved to Waltham St., for an interior inspection <br /> revealed that the roof is framed with principal rafters nailed to a center ridge board, a type of construction characteristic of the <br /> early to mid-19th century. <br /> When the Amos Muzzey House was first moved to Waltham St. it was occupied by the foreman of Benjamin Muzzey's farm, a <br /> Mr. Hill, but for much of the 19th century it was owned by Isaac Huffinaster or his heirs. Then, in 1894 Bradley C.Whitcher, <br /> who owned a grain mill near what is now Depot Square, bought the property on Waltham St. and, since he intended to build a new <br /> house on the lot,William Glenn moved the Amos Muzzey House to a lot that he, Glenn, owned at what is now 42 Forest St. <br /> BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES ❑see continuation sheet <br /> "Amos Muzzey House Gets Historic Tablet from DAR." Lexington Minute-man, 26 April 1951. <br /> Clippings book. "Muzzey House." Scrapbook of late 1940s—early 50s clippings from Lexington Minute-man. In possession of <br /> Nancy S. Seasholes, Lexington, MA. <br /> Muzzey,Helen. Story of the Homestead. In possession of Kathy Mockett and John Oberteuffer, Lexington, MA. <br /> Whipple, S. Lawrence. Reminiscences of Bernice Mulvay, 3/22/84. In possession of S. Lawrence Whipple, Lexington, MA. <br /> Worthen, Edwin B. Notes on buildings burned,torn down, and moved. "Houses"file,Worthen Collection. Cary Library, <br /> Lexington, Mass. #33 <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 />