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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 /> 137 Grant St. is one of a number of Federal houses in Lexington but, having been moved, sided, and altered, is less intact than <br /> many of the others. (Other examples of moved and sided Federals are at 14 Sherman St. [MHC#6751 and 16 Manley Ct. <br /> [MHC#666]). The house is rectangular with a rear ell,two stories, five-by-one bays, and side-gabled with a rear chimney. It is <br /> set on a fieldstone foundation, clad with aluminum siding, and roofed with asphalt shingles. On the south end of the building the <br /> rear roof line has been extended to the eaves of the flat-roofed one-story rear addition on a cement block foundation,creating an <br /> integral leanto effect. The main entry is in the center of the facade;windows are 6/6 double hung sash. Behind the house is a <br /> large, side-gabled, 1%2-story three-vehicle garage with the second story clad with aluminum siding and first story with stucco. <br /> Two aluminum-clad gabled dormers in the second floor suggest that there is a residence over the garage. <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 on Massachusetts Ave. the second house east of Clarke St. where Cary Library is now located. The <br /> house was built on land owned by Stillman Spaulding(1788-1860), a physician, next to his 18th-century house on the corner of <br /> what are now Massachusetts Ave. and Clarke St. According to an antiquarian account, this house was started in August 1835 but <br /> not completed"till sometime later,"an account verified by Lexington assessors' records, which do not assess Spaulding for his <br /> "new store"until 1837. The house was built by David Tuttle(1782-1845), the father of the prominent 19th-century Lexington <br /> builder David A. Tuttle, and was probably called a store because it was used as both a retail facility and a residence. The <br /> antiquarian account says that the house was first rented to a Mr. Haskell, a bookbinder; then to a Mr. Sealey, a tailor from <br /> Woburn; then to three other tailors; and later to a Mr. Gossum,who ran an oyster saloon. After Spaulding's death the house was <br /> owned by his widow Lucy(1799-1887) and then by her heirs. A late 19th-century photograph shows this house facing <br /> Massachusetts Ave. next to the 18th-century house on the corner. In 1903 when Cary Library was built on this site,the 18th- <br /> century house was torn down and this one moved to its present location. <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 Mullin, 1913. 2: 656 <br /> Kelley, Beverly Allison. Lexington:A Century of Photographs. Lexington,Mass: Lexington Historical Society, 1980. 74. <br /> Lane, Ralph E. "Dr. Stillman Spaulding." Proceedings of the Lexington Historical Society 3 (1905): 19-24. <br /> Lexington Valuation Lists. 1831-1847. <br /> Middlesex Registry of Deeds. Deeds. Cambridge, MA. 243: 428; 176: 342; 170: 234; 162: 220; 155: 479; 137: 484; 128: 333; <br /> 1624: 294. <br /> Worthen, Edwin B. Notes on buildings burned,torn down, and moved. "Houses"file,Worthen Collection. Cary Library, <br /> Lexington, Mass. #7, #85 <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 />