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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLowell Street_0051Inventory No:LEX.655 Historic Name:Reed,Josiah H.-Litchfield, William House Common Name:Patch,Charles B.-Monahan, Eugene House Address:51 Lowell St City/Town:Lexington Village/Neighborhood: Local No:28-104; Year Constructed:1872 Architectural Style(s):Italianate;Queen Anne; Use(s):Agricultural;Multiple Family Dwelling House;Single Family Dwelling House; Significance:Agriculture;Architecture; Area(s): Designation(s): Building Materials:Roof:Slate; Wall:Wood;Wood Clapboard;Wood Shingle; Foundation:Brick;Stone,Uncut; Demolished No The Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC)has converted this paper record to digital format as part of ongoing projects to scan records of the Inventory of Historic Assets of the Commonwealth and National Register of Historic Places nominations for Massachusetts.Efforts are ongoing and not all inventory or National Register records related to this resource may be available in digital format at this time. 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Commonwealth of Massachusetts Massachusetts Historical Commission 220 Morrissey Boulevard,Boston,Massachusetts 02125 www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc This file was accessed on:Wednesday,July 26,2023 at 1:27 PM FORM B - BUILDING MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Recorded by Nancy S. Seasholes Organization Lexington Historical Commission Date (month /year) February 1998 Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number 0028000104 Boston N. 655,656 Town Lexington Place (neighborhood or village) Address 51 Lowell St. Historic Name Josiah H. Reed House Uses: Present Multi-Family Residential Original Residential Date of Construction 1872 Source Lexington Valuation lists Style/Form Italianate w. Queen Anne finishes Architect/Builder Exterior Material: Foundation Brick Wall/Trim Wood Clapboard/ Wood Shingle Roof Slate Outbuildings/Secondary Structures Attached barn Major Alterations (with dates) Condition Good Moved Dno ^ yes Date 1996 Acreage 0.4 A. Setting At one side of a new development of closely- spaced houses RECEI v rui AUG 2 7 1998 Follow Massachusett ''statical Commission Survey Manual instructions f completing this HIST COlViK/3 ( ' ' C BUILDING FORM ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION • see continuation sheet Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community. 51 Lowell St. is one of several L-shaped Italianate farmhouses in Lexington, but the only one with Queen Anne finishes. The cross-gabled house (MHC #655) has a rear ell, is 2Vt stories, and has two ridge chimneys. It is set on a brick foundation, clad with wood clapboards and wood shingles, and roofed with slate. The main entry is now under a porte cochere on the south elevation, a secondary entry is located in the reentrant angle, and windows are 2/1 double hung sash. Some Italianate finishes still remain: the paired curved brackets at the cornice and single brackets at the comers, the shed-style window hoods roofed with fishscale slates, and a double former front door in the reentrant angle. More prominent are the Queen Anne finishes: diamond patterned shingles above the first story, second-story walls that flare outward at the base, a distinctive scroll design along with flowers and paterae on the barge boards, another distinctive design on the panels of the projecting bays, turned porch posts with cut-out brackets, a spindle balustrade, and a spindle frieze under the porte cochere. The attached bam (MHC #656) with a cupola vent is now a residence with a two-car garage. HISTORICAL NARRATIVE ^ see continuation sheet DiscUss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the rolef^) the owners/occupants played within the community. This house was built in 1872 by Josiah H. Reed (1827-1890), who had grown up in the Reed homestead house at 72 Lowell St. (MHC # 658). After his father's death in 1864, Josiah's brother, Reuben W., apparently lived at the homestead farm and Josiah lived in Somerville before building this house. By 1881, however, Reuben W. had moved to Somerville and Josiah had acquired the Reed homestead farm; Josiah then sold this house in 1882 to a William Litchfield. It was undoubtedly Litchfield who made the Queen Anne additions to the house and he made many other changes as well. An August 1882 item in the Lexington Minute-man related : "Mr. Litchfield contemplates making quite extensive improvements and is now engaged in sinking a well, which will not be less than forty feet deep, through the ledge, and when this is finished he will erect a wind mill to pump water to the highest point of his land, where he will build a reservoir to contain it for domestic and other purposes. He will also have an artificial duck pond in front of his residence. A new bam has been built for him this last spring. When finished, this will be another beautiful estate." In 1893 Litchfield's estate included the house, bam, windmill (built in 1889), 3A acre mowing and tillage, 8 acres pasture, 3 horses, 1 cow, 60 fowl, and 3 carriages. BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES • see continuation sheet Hudson, Charles. History of the Town of Lexington. Revised and continued to 1912 by the Lexington Historical Society. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1913. 2: 568. Lepngton Minute-man, 26 August 1882. Lexington Valuation Lists. 1872-1873. M(ddlesex Registry of Deeds. Deeds. Cambridge, MA. 1582: 27; 1595: 55, 56. Sileo, Thomas P. Research on Monahan House, Lowell St. In possession of Thomas P. Sileo, Chelmsford, MA. Sullivan, Mark. "Family Feuds over Historic Home." Boston Globe, 26, March, 1995. [j Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form. Town Lexington Property Address 51 Lowell St. Area(s) Form No. 655, 656 INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 HISTORICAL NARRATIVE (continued) In 1901 the house was acquired by Charles B. Patch, who worked in Boston, and in 1913 by Eugene and Agnes Monahan. Monahan was a produce dealer and by 1915 had added two greenhouses. In 1995 the property became the center of a controversy when two Monahan descendants sold it to developer Mark Moore, who planned to build 12 new houses on the lot, a development that would force the Monahan's daughter to move out of the farmhouse. The dispute was somewhat resolved in 1996 when the farmhouse was moved forward and to the side of the lot to permit the construction of the new houses and, in the process, the barn converted to a residence. Roll #8, Negative #36A-37