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BUILDING FORM (8 Oakmount Circle) <br /> ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION <br /> Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of the building in terms of other buildings within the <br /> community. <br /> Constructed in 1922, 8 Oakmount Circle (MHC#1105) is a brick Colonial Revival dwelling which displays considerable <br /> latitude in its adaptation of historical precedent. The 2 1/2-story, five bay-wide, side gabled dwelling is constructed of brick <br /> laid in a Flemish bond with a row of soldier brick serving as a watertable. The center entrance contains a six-panel door <br /> flanked by partial sidelights and capped by a semi-elliptical fanlight filled with tracery with a recessed panel outer surround. <br /> The single-bay entrance porch is supported by Roman Doric columns with a cluster of three at each of the two front corners, <br /> echoed by paired pilasters adjacent to the door. On either side of the entrance is a narrow 4/1 window with a flat arch brick <br /> lintel. Further to the right there is a 8/8 window with a 6/6 sash on the opposite side. The upper level of the facade has four <br /> 6/6 windows, all flanked by louvered blinds. Deviating from the pattern,the fourth bay contains two narrow 4/4 windows <br /> with a panel below. Rising from the front roof slope are three pedimented dormers containing casement windows. There is a <br /> brick chimney with concrete cap rising from the rear slope and an exterior brick chimney on the south elevation. On the south <br /> side,the old single-story screened porch has been replaced by a glazed sunporch lit by casement windows. <br /> A paved driveway extends to the north of the house. To the north of the driveway, facing the main house is a single-story <br /> garage/gardener's cottage(MHC#1106). The garage is stuccoed with a large, double-wide garage door facing the house. A <br /> pent roof extends below the gable. Attached to the east end of the garage is a gardener's cottage set above a brick foundation. <br /> Fenestration includes an arched door and 3 x 3-light and 6/6 windows. An inground pool is located in the back yard. <br /> HISTORICAL NARRATIVE <br /> Describe the history of the building. Explain its associations with local(or state) history. Include uses of the building and <br /> the role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community. <br /> This property comprises lots 133-135 of the Oakmount Park subdivision which was laid out in 1903. Town Valuation <br /> Records indicate that in 1922 Mary Prescott paid taxes on just a lot but by the following year she was assessed for a house <br /> valued at$25,000. The first mention of a garage appears on the 1924 valuation. The present owners, Stephen and Louise <br /> Berry,have copies of the original drawings for the house which indicate it was designed by Lewis Sise of the Boston <br /> architectural firm of Haven and Hoyt. Directories indicate that Mary Presoctt's husband, Sherburne,was a Christian Science <br /> practitioner. By 1950 the house was occupied by Ann and Harrison Biggi who sold the property to Kenneth and Eleanor Fox <br /> in 1963. Peter and Linea Gabriel purchased the property in 1973 and sold it to the present owners in 1988. <br /> BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES <br /> Information from Louise Berry, June 2000. <br /> Lexington Assessors Records. <br /> Lex:' gton Directories, various dates. <br /> Lexpngton Valuation Lists, various dates. <br /> Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attached a completed <br /> National Register Criteria Statement form. <br />