HomeMy WebLinkAboutFinal Report on the Establishment of the Mount Independence Local Historic District, October 1, 2021FINAL REPORT ON THE ESTABLISHMENT
OF THE
MOUNT INDEPENDENCE LOCAL HISTORIC DISTRICT
LEXINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Prepared
by
Lisa Mausolf, Preservation Consultant
Edited by
Paul O'Shaughnessy & Anne Laurin Eccles
1 OCTOBER 2021
Summary Sheet
Contact Persons: Anne Laurin Eccles, 781.888.5247
anne. eccles@alelanddesicn.com
Paul O'Shaughnessy, 617.620.8123
frommaee a,comcast.net
Study Committee: Lexington Historic Districts Commission
Members
Anne Laurin Eccles, Chair
Robert W Adams
Edward H. Adelman
Paul O'Shaughnessy
Lee Noel Chase
Mark Connor
Daniel Hisel
Robin Lovett
Dates of Public Information Meetings: 14 September 2021
27 October 2021
Date of Public Hearing: 23 September 2021
Date of Town Meeting: November 2021
Total Number of Properties in Proposed LID. 9
Table of Contents
Introduction 4
Methodology 5
Preservation Need 5
Neighborhood Support 5
Report Documentation 6
Proposed Bylaw 7
Historical Significance 12
Brief Description of Buildings in Proposed Local Historic District 19
Boundary Description and Justification 22
Map of Proposed Local Historic District 25
Conclusion 26
Appendices 28
Property Index
Form B (Building) for each historic property
INTRODUCTION
Lexington is blessed with a diverse architectural character that includes a wide variety of historic
periods and styles. These include significant resources from the Revolutionary War period and
early 19th century, housing dating to the residential building boom of the late 19th and early 20th
century and Mid -Century Modern buildings of the Post World War II era which combine to give
the town a distinctive identity The cluster of buildings currently being proposed for local
historic district designation is one such microcosm showing how the town developed and the
overlapping themes and styles that make Lexington so unique.
The establishment of a local historic district is the most effective method to preserve the
architectural character of a neighborhood. The first local historic districts in Massachusetts were
established in 1955 to protect historic resources on Nantucket and on Beacon Hill in Boston.
Today, there are over 250 multi -property local historic districts established in the state under
Massachusetts General Law 40C. In a local historic district, a locally appointed historic district
commission reviews significant alterations to exterior architectural features that are visible from
a public way
Lexington currently has four (4) local historic districts: the Battle Green Historic District, the
Hancock -Clarke Historic District, the Munroe Tavern Historic District and the East Village
Historic District. A total of seven hundred eighty-six (786) properties are protected in the four
districts. The Lexington Historic Districts Commission is currently acting as the Historic District
Study Committee for the proposed Mount Independence Local Historic District and has voted to
forward this report to the Lexington Select Board and the Lexington Town Meeting Members as
supporting evidence for their request to establish this new local historic district.
4
METHODOLOGY
Preservation Need
The land at the crest of Mount Independence has long held importance to the Town of
Lexington. In the 19th century this was the location of a popular observatory built by a
prosperous East Lexington business owner for the enjoyment of all. Save for a surviving bridle
path, the land remained unbuilt upon until the 20th century Today, the Summit Road/Follen
Road neighborhood, composed of unique and impressive 20th century single-family houses in
landscaped settings, is at the precipice of dramatic change. The 1 74 -acre property at 12 Summit
Road which currently contains an early 20th century Italian -inspired villa is proposed for
redevelopment which would demolish part of the main house and would result in a subdivision
to include ten dwelling units. The redevelopment of the property would also result in the
demolition of significant landscape features designed by the prominent landscape architectural
firm of Olmsted Brothers, a landscape that has been described as perhaps the finest example of
early 20th century landscape architecture in Lexington. t On February 18, 2021 the Lexington
Historical Commission imposed a one-year demolition delay on the house. When that delay
expires, it is anticipated/feared that part of the house and surrounding landscape will be lost
forever
Neighborhood Support
Following the proposal for the subdivision and partial demolition of the property at 12 Summit
Road, there was an outpouring of support for preserving the property A group of concerned
citizens began to investigate the feasibility of establishing a local historic district. The meetings
(held weekly, below) including all the residents of Summit Road (except 12 Summit) and all the
residents on Pinewood Street.
Key Events in the development of the proposed Mt Independence Local Historic District (LHD):
1 February 5, 2021 - First weekly neighborhood Zoom meeting held to discuss threatened
demolition of 12 Summit Road. (Neighborhood Zoom meetings have been held most
Tuesdays since then with 10 to 25 households attending.)
2. February 17, 2021 — Lexington Historical Commission (LHC) hearing to review
application for demolition of 12 Summit Road. 5 abutters voiced strong support during
the hearing for preservation of 12 Summit Road. The LHC voted 5-0-1 to find 12 Summit
Road preferably preserved and imposed a 12 month demolition delay Wendall Kalsow
recused himself from the discussion and vote since he lives in the neighborhood.
3 March 23, 2021 - Fundraising effort to save 12 Summit Road begins with 24 households
contributing.
4 April 22, 2021 — Discussion of creating a local historic district begins
1Anne Grady, Inventory form for 12 Summit Road, Lexington (LEX.521), 1984.
5
5 May 2, 2021 — Massachusetts Historical Commission (MHC) Guidelines for Establishing
Local Historic Districts and preliminary district boundaries was distributed to the entire
neighborhood.
6. May 4, 2021 — Extensive discussion on establishing a Mt. Independence LHD was
conducted on the Tuesday evening Zoom with broad support received for the idea.
7 May 11, 2021 — MHC issues concurrence opinion that 12 Summit Road is eligible for the
National Register and supports the idea of a National Register District (NRD) which
includes 12 Summit Road and 52 Follen.
8. May 15, 2021 — Draft historical narrative of proposed LHD completed by neighborhood
volunteers.
9 May 20, 2021 — Formal request sent to Lexington Select Board to appoint the Lexington
Historic Districts Commission as the Study Committee for a proposed Mt. Independence
LHD Strong support of the LHD was voiced by 7 of the 8 property owners in the
proposed LHD Very strong support of the LHD was also voiced throughout the
neighborhood. It was decided not to include 6 Summit Road (1948 Cape) and 8 Summit
Road (1999) within the proposed LHD because of a lack of architectural and historic
significance. The proposed properties create a contiguous district.
10 May 31, 2021 — Neighborhood decision made to hire a professional historian to research
history and significance of properties within the proposed Mt Independence LHD
Report Documentation
The research for this report began with an historic building form that had been prepared for the
property at 12 Summit Road for the Massachusetts Historical Commission back in 1984
Interested residents began to delve more deeply into the history of the property at 12 Summit
Road and those who had shaped it, gathering information from a number of local and national
sources and detailing connections between several of the properties. In preparation for this
report, the historic building forms for two properties — 12 Summit Road and 52 Follen Road —
were revised and updated. New forms were completed for three additional historic properties
that had not previously been inventoried — 2 Summit Road, 22 Summit Road and 104 Follen
Road.
6
PROPOSED BYLAW
Draft, Subject to Further Review and Revision
Chapter XX
HISTORIC DISTRICT COMMISSION AND HISTORIC DISTRICTS BYLAW
SECTION 1 PURPOSE
This Bylaw is hereby enacted pursuant to MGL c. 40C to promote the educational, cultural,
physical, economic and general welfare of the public through the preservation and protection of
the architectural and other distinctive characteristics of buildings and places significant in the
history of the Town of Lexington or their architecture, and through the maintenance and
improvement of settings for such buildings and places and the encouragement of design
compatible therewith.
SECTION 2 DEFINITIONS
As used in this Bylaw, the following words and phrases shall have the following meanings:
(a) "Altering" means rebuilding, reconstructing, restoring, removing, demolishing, changing
exterior color, or any combination of the foregoing.
(b) "Building" means a combination of materials forming a shelter for persons, animals or
property
(c) "Commission" means the Lexington Historic Districts Commission as defined in Section
4
(d) "Constructing" means building, erecting, installing, enlarging, or moving.
(e) "Exterior architectural feature" means such portion of the exterior of a building or
structure as is open to view from a public street, public way, public park or public body
of water, including but not limited to the architectural style and general arrangement and
setting thereof, the kind, color and texture of exterior building materials, the color of
paint or other materials applied to exterior surface and the type and style of windows,
doors, lights, signs and other appurtenant exterior fixtures.
(f) "Historic District" means a historic district created under MGL c. 40C or this Bylaw, but
shall not, for the purposes of this Bylaw, include any Historic District created under the
Special Act.
(g) "Special Act" means Chapter 447 of the Acts of 1956, as amended, as defined in Section
3(b).
7
(h) "Structure" means a combination of materials other than a building, including but not
limited to a sign, fence, wall, terrace, walk or drive -way, tennis court and swimming
pool.
SECTION 3 ESTABLISHMENT OF HISTORIC DISTRICTS
(a) Mount Independence Historic District
There is hereby established an Historic District pursuant to MGL c. 40C entitled the
"Mount Independence Historic District," the boundaries of which are shown on the map
entitled "Mount Independence Historic District," a copy of which is on file with the
Town Clerk's office, and which also accompanies, and is hereby declared to be part of,
this Bylaw
(b) Other Historic Districts
Additional Historic Districts within the Town may be established from time to time in
accordance with the procedures set forth in MGL c. 40C, provided however, that nothing
in this Bylaw shall impair the validity of an historic district established under Chapter
447 of the Acts of 1956, as amended (the "Special Act"). Historic districts established
pursuant to the Special Act shall continue to be governed in all respects by the Special
Act and not this Bylaw and nothing herein shall be construed to in any way limit or
expand the Commission's powers under the Special Act with respect to historic districts
not subject to this Bylaw
SECTION 4 HISTORIC DISTRICTS COMMISSION
(a) Pursuant to MGL c. 40C, § 4, the Lexington Historic Districts Commission established
pursuant to the Special Act (the "Commission") shall serve as the Historic Districts
Commission for the purposes of this Bylaw
(b) The Commission shall have all the powers and duties of an Historic Preservation
Commission as described in MGL c. 40C, § 10 with respect to a Historic District subject
to this Bylaw
(c) The Commission may adopt rules and regulations for the conduct of its business, not
inconsistent with MGL c. 40C, the Special Act, or with the purposes of this Bylaw
SECTION 5 ADMINISTRATION OF HISTORIC DISTRICTS
(a) No building or structure within an Historic District shall be constructed or altered in any
way that affects exterior architectural features, and no building shall be moved into an
Historic District, unless the Commission shall first have issued a certificate of
appropriateness, a certificate of hardship or a certificate of non -applicability with respect
8
to such construction, alteration or movement.
(b) Any person who desires to obtain a certificate from the Commission shall file with the
Commission an application for a certificate of appropriateness, a certificate of non -
applicability, or a certificate of hardship, as the case may be, in such form as the
Commission may reasonably determine, together with such plans, elevations,
specifications, material and other information, including in the case of demolition or
removal a statement of the proposed condition and appearance of the property thereafter,
as may be reasonably deemed necessary by the Commission to enable it to make a
determination on the application.
(c) No building permit for construction of a building or structure or alteration of an exterior
architectural feature within an Historic District shall be issued until the certificate
required by this Bylaw has been issued by the Commission.
SECTION 6 HEARINGS, TIME FOR MAKING DETERMINATIONS
(a) The Commission shall determine promptly after the filing of an application for a
certificate of appropriateness as to exterior architectural features, whether the application
involved any such features. If the Commission determines that such application involves
any exterior architectural features, the Commission shall hold a public hearing on such
application. The Commission also shall hold a public hearing on all other applications
required to be filed with it under this Bylaw, except that the Commission may approve an
application for a change in exterior color features without holding a hearing if it
determines that the color change proposed is appropriate.
(b) The Commission shall fix a reasonable time for the hearing on any application and shall
give public notice thereof by publishing notice of the time, place, and purpose of the
hearing in a local newspaper and on the Town's website, at least fourteen (14) days
before said hearing and also, within seven (7) days of said hearing, mail a copy of said
notice to the applicant, to the owners of all property deemed by the Commission to be
affected thereby as they appear on the most recent local tax list, to the planning board,
and to such other persons as the Commission shall deem should be provided notice.
(c) As soon as convenient after such public hearing but in any event within sixty (60) days
after the filing of the application, or within such further time as the applicant shall allow
in writing, the Commission shall make a determination on the application. If the
Commission shall fail to make a determination within said sixty (60) days, or within such
further time allowed by the applicant, the Commission shall be deemed to have approved
the application.
SECTION 7 FACTORS TO BE CONSIDERED BY THE COMMISSION
9
(a) In reviewing an application for a certificate under this Bylaw the Commission shall
consider, among other things:
(1) the historic and architectural value and significance of the site, building, or structure,
(2) the general design, arrangement, texture, material, and color of the features involved,
and
(3) the relation of such features to similar features of buildings and structures in the
surrounding area.
(b) In the case of new construction or additions to existing buildings or structures, the
Commission shall also consider the appropriateness of the size and shape of the building
or structure both in relation to the land area upon which the building or structure is
situated and to buildings and structures in the vicinity
(c) The Commission may in appropriate cases impose dimensional and set -back requirements
in addition to those required by other applicable bylaws, including the Zoning Bylaw,
Chapter 135 of the Code of the Town of Lexington.
(d) When ruling on applications for certificates of appropriateness for solar energy systems,
as defined in MGL c. 40A, § 1(a), the Commission shall also consider the policy of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts and of the Town of Lexington to encourage the use of
solar energy systems and to protect solar access.
(e) The Commission shall not make any recommendation or impose any requirement except
for the purpose of preventing developments incongruous to the historic aspects or the
architectural characteristics of the surroundings and of the historic district.
SECTION 8 EXEMPTIONS TO REVIEW
The authority of the Commission is limited to the exterior architectural features within the
district. Further, no certificate shall be required under this Bylaw for the construction or
alteration of the following:
(a) Temporary signs or structures as defined by the Zoning Bylaw, Chapter 135 of the Code
of the Town of Lexington, provided, however, that the Commission may impose such
conditions as to duration of use, location, lighting, removal and similar matters as the
Commission may reasonably specify with respect to such signs and structures.
(b) Real estate signs of not more than three square feet in area advertising the sale or rental of
the premises on which they are erected or displayed, provided, however, that the
Commission may impose such conditions as to duration of use, location, lighting, removal
and similar matters as the Commission may reasonably specify with respect to such signs
and structures.
(c) Occupational or other signs of not more than one square foot in area and not more than one
such sign, irrespective of size, bearing the name, occupation or address of the occupant of
10
the premises on which such sign is erected or displayed where such premises are located
within a residential district as defined in the Zoning Bylaw
(d) Non-commercial signs displaying political, religious, or other speech protected under the
United States or Massachusetts Constitution.
Upon request the Commission shall issue a certificate of non -applicability with respect to
construction or alteration in any category then not subject to review by the Commission in
accordance with the provisions of Sections 8(a) through 8(d).
SECTION 9 MAINTENANCE, REPAIR, REPLACEMENT, PLANTING
Nothing in this Bylaw shall be construed to prevent:
(a) the ordinary maintenance, repair or replacement of any exterior architectural feature
within an historic district that does not involve a change in design, material, color or the
outward appearance thereof,
(b) landscaping with plants, trees or shrubs,
(c) the meeting of requirements certified by a duly authorized public officer to be necessary
for public safety because of an unsafe or dangerous condition, or
(d) any construction or alteration under a permit duly issued prior to the effective date of this
Bylaw
SECTION 10 ENFORCEMENT
(a) The Building Commissioner of the Town of Lexington shall enforce this Bylaw and, upon
a determination by the Commission or the Select Board that a violation exists, may institute
proceedings in Superior Court pursuant to M.G.L. c.40C § 13, for injunctive or other relief
or the imposition of fines.
(b) Violations of this Bylaw or any regulation hereunder shall be punishable by a fine of not
less than $10.00 nor more than $500.00 for each offense pursuant to M.G.L. c.40C § 13
SECTION 11 SEVERABILITY
In case any section, paragraph or part of the Bylaw be for any reason declared invalid or
unconstitutional by any court of last resort, every other section, paragraph or part shall continue
in full force and effect.
SECTION 12 SCHEDULE OF FEES
A filing fee shall be included with all applications for certificates. Said fees shall be set, and may
be amended from time to time, by the Select Board.
11
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE
The proposed Mount Independence Local Historic District (MILHD) is comprised of six
residential structures located on one of the highest points in Lexington. The area reflects various
important themes in the town's history from Revolutionary War roots to the growth of East
Lexington and the 19th vision of Eli Robbins to early 20th century suburban planning and design.
The six dwellings within the proposed MILHD were constructed between 1912 and 1996. Early
homeowners included prominent artists, professionals and building owners and subsequent
owners were also quite accomplished. The distinctive architecture, landscaping and history of
these homes and the land they occupy has engendered local pride and has united neighborhood
residents in their efforts to preserve the historic structures from inappropriate alterations and
demolition.
Standing 335 feet high, Mount Independence (now known as Follen Hill) reportedly received its
name after a citizen of East Lexington (likely Eli Robbins) presented a cannon to the
townspeople in 1816 or 1824 It was near the foot of the hill that the British had committed one
of their first acts of aggression on April 19, 1775 by disarming one of the Lexington Militia,
Benjamin Wellington. Other accounts suggest Mount Independence was named to
commemorate General Lafayette's visit to Lexington in 1824
Eli Robbins (1786-1856) was a prosperous dealer and manufacturer of furs who did much to
contribute to the growth of East Lexington and owned this land in the early 19th century He
succeeded his father, Stephen, in a fur business which at times employed 80-100 men. Being a
public-spirited man, Eli Robbins contributed much to the village. The most visible surviving
reminder of Robbins' largesse is the Stone Building at 735 Massachusetts Avenue which he had
built in 1833 to serve as a lyceum lecture hall and residence. The building hosted various
lectures and in the 1840s these included leaders in the Abolition movement such as Theodore
Parker and Charles Sumner who were excluded from speaking elsewhere in town. Eli Robbins,
his wife and daughters became leading abolitionists in town. In 1835 the Lyceum Hall was also
the site of religious services for East Lexington residents, led by Charles Follen and later by
Ralph Emerson and others until the Follen Church was completed next door in 1839
Many of Eli Robbins' progressive civic efforts were focused on the acres of land he owned on
Mount Independence. In the 1830s he erected a liberty pole on Mount Independence and built a
three-story tower or summer house around it. The observatory offered views in all directions,
including directly into Boston Harbor Julia Robbins, Eli's daughter, noted in her diary that she
watched the reflection of the moon in the harbor's water.' At his own expense Robbins built a
road to the top of Mount Independence for the benefit of those living in the village, the first local
example of a citizen opening private property for the use by the general public. According to an
historical account Robbins "laid out drives to and walks around the summit, connecting the two
driveways to the summit by a walk an eighth of a mile long. This walk was built of two solid
stone walls filled in with gravel, the side towards the summit having a trellis, the whole distance
2 Mary E. Keenan, In Haste, Julia: Julia Robbins Barrett, Abolitionist, Artist, Suffragist.
12
covered with Isabella grape vines. Many citizens and strangers visited this observatory and it
was not unusual, especially on holidays and Sundays, to see many carriages along the roadside,
whose owners were at the observatory" 3
In order to raise funds for the building of Follen Church, a two-day fair was held on Mount
Independence in August 1839 An article in a Boston newspaper described the landscape and
event: we "had pictured to ourselves a gentle eminence like most of the mounts in the vicinity
We were, however, surprised on arriving within half a mile of the place to see, as it were, in the
distant clouds, a crowd of people in every direction, around several marquees over which floated
our national flag, all animating us to spur our horses and be among them. As we approached
nearer we were still more surprised to see in reality a mountain whose almost perpendicular sides
seemed to de& us. .(we) wound our way along the sides of the mountain over a good road made
by the enterprising owner of the grounds, Mr. Robbins, and as we approached the summit it
seemed as those above were actually hanging over us. The ascent was truly delightful and we
soon found ourselves where all was joy and gayety" 4 The Observatory was used for the sale of
ice cream and cake, there was entertainment and a supper was served for a dollar per plate.' A
total of about $1,100 was raised at the fair
The spectacular flagpole was almost certainly the cause of the demise of the tower as it was
struck by lightning and the surrounding structure was destroyed by fire. Reportedly the
insurance company refused to reinsure and by then Robbins' personal finances had suffered in
the Financial Panic of 1837, making rebuilding impossible. Into the 1890s, residents continued
to picnic at the top of Mount Independence. One of the two drives Robbins constructed survives
today as the Bridle Path. There may also be archeological remains of the tower A stone circular
base is located on the property at 12 Summit Road. The archaeological component of the
district awaits further investigation.
The land at the top of Mount Independence remained unbuilt upon for many years. Eli Robbins
died in 1856 and ownership of the land passed to his widow and daughters. The 1898 Stadly
map shows that the Robbins descendants still owned a large parcel of 27.98 acres of land west of
the Massachusetts Avenue/Pleasant Street intersection. Clearly delineated on the map is the
c.1830 Bridle Path that still survives today
3 George 0. Smith as quoted in the Lexington Minute -man, August 7, 1915.
° Boston Daily Evening Transcript, August 14, 1839 as reprinted in the Lexington Minute -man, August 17, 1900.
5 Lexington Minute -Man, April 11, 1935.
13
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1898 Stadly Atlas of Lexington showing land owned by the Robbins heirs and the survival of the
e.1830 Bridle Path
In 1914 Ellen Stone, granddaughter of Eli Robbins, sold the land which she held in trust,
including the large section of highlands known as Mount Independence. It was purchased by
two prominent citizens, Richard G. Tower and ex -Selectman Edward Bliss of Oakland Street
who "rescued the property from what might have proven undesirable ownership" 6 Bliss in
particular had long been a proponent of laying out an avenue in East Lexington in the vicinity of
Mt. Independence, along the high ridge of land, and connecting with Massachusetts Avenue and
Pleasant Street. A year later, in March 1915, the land remained unbuilt upon and a large forest
fire burned through the parcel, destroying more than 30 acres of valuable pine and cedar
6 Lexington Minuteman, January 17, 1914.
14
woodlands and requiring fifty firefighters to bring the inferno under control.' Soon thereafter,
another prominent East Lexington resident, Frank D Peirce, acquired the land. In September
1915 Peirce filed his first subdivision plan for the land.
On October 1, 1915 Frank Peirce sold Hermann Dudley Murphy of Winchester a piece of land
measuring 81,560 square feet (1.87 acres), the first parcel to be developed on what would
become Summit Road.' The deed included specific language that would guide development and
insure high quality construction on the land for the next twenty years, until September 1, 1935
No buildings were to be erected other than single dwelling houses and any dwelling house had to
cost at least $7,000. A setback of at least forty feet to the street was also required.
Hermann Dudley Murphy (1867-1945) was a major artist in the Boston School of painting who
was active in the first half of the 20t" century He reportedly asked the architect, Harold W
Hathaway, then practicing in Boston in partnership with John T Vining, to recreate the Italian
villa where Murphy had lived in Florence but incorporate an artist's studio. Construction of the
house was occurring in anticipation of his upcoming June 1916 wedding to his second wife,
Nelly Littlehale Umbstaetter (1867-1941). Nelly Murphy was also an artist, specializing in
watercolors. Architecturally speaking the house at 12 Summit Road (LEX.521) is a good
example of eclectic early 20th century residential architecture mixing elements of the Italian Villa
mode of the early 20th century with concurrent Craftsman style aesthetics and concrete
construction. Architect Hathaway also had acquired a reputation for working with concrete,
having had designs for two solid reinforced concrete houses in Winchester (WNT 1169) and in
Belmont (BLM.16) included in books published by the Atlas Portland Cement Co.
When H. Dudley Murphy died at 12 Summit Road on April 16, 1945, he was considered one of
the best-known artists in the United States of the day, with paintings in many major institutions.
His subject matter included portraits, still lifes, seascapes and landscapes and he was especially
known for his floral still lifes, a subject which he embraced in the 1920s. Born in Marlborough,
Massachusetts, H. Dudley Murphy studied at the school of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and
at the Julian School in France and in 1895 he exhibited portraits at the Paris Salon. In France he
was introduced to the work of James Abbott McNeill Whistler who influenced his work both in
tonality and in the believe that frame and painting should harmonize in color and style. Murphy
returned to the U.S. in 1897 In 1903 he opened a frame shop, Carrig-Rohane, in Winchester and
became the first American frame -maker to sign and date his work. By 1907 he was the leading
frame manufacturer in Boston of high priced, hand -carved frames of gesso and gold leaf.
Murphy ceased making frames during World War I and was the chief of camouflage for the
United States Shipping Board when this house was being built. Murphy was also known for his
prowess in sailing canoe contests. Murphy was passionate about sharing his art with others. He
was a devoted teacher and taught for 35 years at Harvard's School of Architecture. He served as
a member of the Massachusetts Art Commission from 1918 to 1943 and was a founding member
of the Guild of Boston Artists. His home studio must have been a beehive of artistic activity
Lexington Minute -man, March 20, 1915.
$ Middlesex County Registry of Deeds, Book 4001, Page 524.
15
The grounds surrounding and complementing the Murphy house were designed by the Olmsted
Brothers and have been considered perhaps the finest example of early 20th century landscape
architecture in Lexington.' W.L. Phillips of the Olmsted Brothers was staking and surveying the
land in October 1916. (William Lyman Phillips (1885-1966) went on to play a seminal role in
the landscaping of Florida). A series of retaining walls, many of them curved, were introduced
at the Murphy property, to provide a level area at the rear (view side of the house) and to
landscape the high points to the east and west. The street side of the property consisted of a
formal Italian sunken garden. Vines were planted for the walls and plans were made for a
vineyard, vegetable garden and croquet court. Tall Italian jars arranged along the top of walls
were an original feature of the design and survive today The extensive flower gardens and
surrounding landscape were the inspiration and setting for paintings by H. Dudley Murphy,
Nelly Littlehale Murphy and later, John Esner. In 1898 Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr (1870-1957)
and his half-brother, John Charles Olmstead (1852-1920) had formed the partnership of the
Olmsted Brothers after Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr.'s retirement. In 1917 the firm had a staff of
47 and was the largest landscape practice in the U.S., designing important, high profile projects
across the country as well as smaller residential commissions such as the Murphy House. About
1918 H. Dudley Murphy painted a portrait of Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr suggesting a definite
bond between the two men.10
A subdivision plan for "Follen Heights" was filed with the Registry of Deeds in May 1917 11
The subdivision included approximately fifty lots on Follen Road, Summit Road and Pinewood
Street and the plan incorporated the location of the historic bridle path. The plan was revised in
January 1921 (see Page 17). At that time (1921) only a handful of the lots had been sold. The
largest of the lots that had been sold to date was the land Hermann Dudley Murphy purchased in
1915 However, the arrival of the street railway in 1900 had begun a new period of speculative
development and made the town more attractive to businessmen and professionals who could
now commute into the city
In July 1921 Francis and Dorothy Chamberlain of Arlington purchased land at Follen Heights.
The construction of their new stone house (22 Summit Road) near H.D. Murphy's took over a
year to build; they finally moved into the house in August 1923 They named the house
"Stonesides"; it was constructed of fieldstone from stonewalls that were running through the lot.
Francis Chamberlain was a talented yachtsman and navigation expert and thus the house was
sited to align with the North Star He worked as a financial statistician for a Boston investment
banking firm. It is also interesting to note that Francis Chamberlain was a great grandson of Eli
Robbins.
In 1922 Thomas J Bishop of Boston bought three lots at Follen Heights and planned to build an
attractive house "in keeping with the other high class homes in that section" 12 In order to
preserve the quality of the area, Frank Peirce continued to sell the land with restrictions that
would endure for twenty years. Thomas J Bishop owned a prosperous Boston express business
that operated between Boston, Fitchburg, Leominster and Clinton as well as a second line that
9 Anne Grady, Inventory form for 12 Summit Road, Lexington (LEX.521), 1984.
19 The portrait is now owned by the National Academy of Design.
11 Middlesex County Registry of Deeds, Plan Book 297, Plan 35.
12 Lexington Minute -man, February 10, 1922.
16
ran between Fitchburg and Worcester The house that Bishop built is the present 2 Summit
Road.
While Chamberlain and Bishop were examples of the professionals that moved to Lexington in
the early 20th century, the neighborhood was also a center of artistic activity and the reputations
of these artists continued to command attention. In 1930 H. Dudley Murphy and his wife Nelly
Murphy held their first joint showing in a new Boston art gallery A news account of the exhibit
opening declared "Man and Wife Far Apart in Art Technique, Both Superb" 13 In addition to he
and his wife, Nelly, another painter, John Enser (1898-1968) also lived at 12 Summit in the
1930s and 1940s. Enser was born in Texas and studied painting in Chicago. He arrived in
Boston in 1929 and struck up a close friendship with Murphy He lived with the Murphys for
more than a decade, also working in the Murphy home studio. Enser is best known for his
landscapes and is known to have painted several paintings of the Murphy yard and garden.
In June 1932 H. Dudley Murphy sold fellow artist Aiden Lassell Ripley a triangular lot of land to
the east of his property and Ripley built a modest house/studio (52 Follen Road. LEX.1051).
Originally the house had only one bedroom for he and his wife, a kitchen, dining room and a
north -facing 20 foot high, light -filled studio. Ripley could easily climb a flight of stone steps up
the hill to the Murphy house/studio to socialize or collaborate with the other artists. Ripley also
taught at Harvard with H. Dudley Murphy for a number of years. In 1936 the Murphys, Enser
and Ripley came together in what must have been a noteworthy exhibition of their paintings at
the Lexington Arts and Craft Society The local paper described them as "four distinguished
Lexington artists who have won wide reputation in their field" 14
Nelly Littlehale Murphy died in 1941 but John Enser continued to live at 12 Summit Road until
the death of H. Dudley Murphy in 1945 The property at 12 Summit was sold the following
year. The advertisement for the property read as follows:
Here, in his later years, a world-famous artist built a home of inspiration, beauty and
quietude. Set well back from the road and surrounded by about 2 acres of exquisite
gardens, lawns, trees and shrubs, is centered a lovely residence of Italian influence.
Flanked by graceful columned patio, its hospitable front entrance bids welcome to an
interior of charming livability A gem in one of Lexington's choicest settings, this
property offers atmosphere beyond the usual.15
The advertisement also gives a most complete description of the interior components of the home
which included a living room, dining room, kitchen, library, large high-ceilinged studio,
conservatory, sun room, 6 large chambers and maid's room, 3 baths, and guest lavatory It also
had seven fireplaces and accommodations for four cars. Although H Dudley Murphy died in
1945, down the hill from the Murphy home, A. Lassell Ripley continued to occupy his
house/studio at 52 Follen Road until his death in 1969
13 Boston Globe, April 19, 1930.
14 Lexington Minute -man, December 12, 1936.
15 Boston Herald, June 9, 1946, p. 91.
17
Over the years, the other homes in the proposed district were purchased by new owners, many of
whom were also quite respected in their fields. In the 1930s Truman and Grace Kelley
purchased the former Thomas Bishop house at 2 Summit Road. Dr. Truman Kelley (1884-1961)
was a professor at Harvard and was credited with introducing statistical methods into
psychological studies. In 1924 he was a co-author of the Stanford Achievement Test (SAT) and
during World War II, Dr. Kelley was a consultant to the armed forces focusing on psychological
testing. In June 1947 Grace Kelley, then of Santa Barbara, California, sold the western portion
of the property to Spencer Smith who built the house next door at 104 Follen Road. In contrast
to the more traditional dwellings in the neighborhood, the Smith House was an early example of
Mid-Century Modernism in Lexington. Spencer Smith had received an architecture degree from
Yale University in 1937 with a BFA in Architecture. He subsequently worked for the
engineering and architectural firm, Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill (SOM), in New York City
The firm had started in Chicago in 1936 and opened a New York office in 1937 with talented
architects on staff like Gordon Bunshaft whom Smith likely worked with. Smith had the house
at 104 Follen built while he was stationed at the Charlestown Navy Yard and also attended
Harvard Business School. Among the other noteworthy individuals who have lived in the
proposed historic district are prominent physicist Robert Van de Graaf who lived at 2 Summit
Road from 1955 to 1967 William and Sheila Widnall purchased the house at 22 Summit Road
in 1968. William Widnall is a scientist who was instrumental in the Apollo lunar program.
Sheila Widnall, also an aeronautical engineer, was the first woman ever to lead a division of the
United States military, becoming Secretary of the Air Force in 1993 under President Clinton.
18
Brief Description of Properties within the Proposed District
52 Follen Road. Aiden and Doris Ripley House, 1932
Single-family dwelling/artist studio designed in an early 20`h century Eclectic style. Architect
and builder are unknown. A fieldstone lower level, wood siding including live edge boards
above and multi -light casement windows. The land was sold by neighbor and fellow artist
Hermann Dudley Murphy (see 12 Summit) to Aiden and Doris Ripley of Boston in June 1932.
The interior originally had only one bedroom for Ripley and his wife, a kitchen, dining room,
and a north -facing 20 foot high, light -filled studio. The front door to the home is actually at the
back, uphill side of the house, and was no doubt designed to provide easy access to the artists
and grounds at 12 Summit. Abuts historic bridle path; property includes some stone walls,
terraces.
Aiden Lassell Ripley (1896-1969) is considered one of the premier masters of American sporting
art and is best known for his landscape paintings of hunters and game and fly-fishing on pristine
rivers. He also did several Works Progress Administration (WPA) projects including a series of
historical murals for the Winchester Public Library and the Lexington Post Office. Ripley
continued to live in this house until his death in 1969 The property was sold by Doris Ripley in
1973
Known Alterations
1968. Roof on southern portion raised to add second story bedrooms
104 Follen Road. Spencer R. and Elizabeth Smith House, 1947
Single-family residential dwelling designed in a Mid -Century Modern/Contemporary mode.
Spencer R. Smith likely designed the home himself; Kelly Brothers of Arlington were the
builders. An early, modest example of Mid -Century Modern/Contemporary domestic
architecture in Lexington. Single story house with U-shaped plan, entrance courtyard facing the
road and a carport. Capped by low gable roof with simple lines and a lack of traditional
ornament. Features radiant heat and steel framing. Wing addition with garage to the north dates
to 1951
Spencer R. Smith (1915-2005) graduated from Yale University in 1937 with a BFA in
Architecture and then worked for the engineering and architectural firm, Skidmore, Owings, and
Merrill, in New York City for several years. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II.
In 1947 he was assigned to the Boston Naval Shipyard and bought a lot of land from Grace
Winifred Kelley (originally part of 2 Summit Road) and had this house built. In 1949 Smith was
reassigned and the house was purchased by Howard and Jean Hamacher Current owners
purchased the house in 1973
Known Alterations
1951 Wing addition built facing Follen Road, including attached garage
19
c.1973 Original louvered openings replaced with glass windows; larger windows also
added front and back
2 Summit Road. Thomas and Mary Bishop House, 1922.
Single-family residential dwelling in a Craftsman Colonial mode. Architect and builder are
unknown. Two-story house capped by slate hip roof with overhanging eaves displaying
exposed, notched rafter tails. Colonial details include pedimented entrance portico with Roman
Doric columns and 6/6 windows. Detached hip -roofed garage appears to be of same period.
Half acre lot includes stone retaining walls and terraces and stone steps leading up from Follen
Road.
The original owner of this house (originally known as 90 Follen Road and later 4 Summit Road)
was Thomas J Bishop of Boston who was the owner of a Boston express business. Later
owners included Dr. Truman Kelley, a professor at Harvard and Robert Van de Graaff, a
prominent physicist. In 1995 the land was subdivided, creating what is now 4 Summit Road.
Known Alterations
1947 Land west of house subdivided (104 Follen Road)
1995 Land south of house subdivided (4 Summit Road)
4 Summit Road. Michael & Kathleen Martino House, 1997
Single-family residential dwelling in a Colonial Revival mode. The house was built on land that
was subdivided from 2 Summit Road. A small portion of the historic Bridle Path abuts the east
edge of the property
Known Alterations
2017 Interior renovations, third garage bay
8 Summit Road. Jasbir and Jagjeet Gandhi House, 1999
Single-family Contemporary residence constructed with red veneer brick and cedar clapboard
siding and an asphalt shingle roof. The house has 4 bedrooms and a 2 car garage. The house was
constructed on land sub -divided from 12 Summit Road.
Known Alterations
None
20
12 Summit Road. Hermann Dudley Murphy & Nelly Murphy House, 1916.
Single-family residential dwelling/artists' studio Harold Hathaway, architect; Olmsted
Brothers, landscape architects. Unique local example of the early 20th c. Italian Villa style
combined with Craftsman/Prairie style elements. Substantial two-story stuccoed dwelling with
slate hip roof and U-shaped plan featuring artists' studio to the left and kitchen wing to the right,
latter is fronted by ornate Florentine -inspired arcade with foliate capitals. Significant early 20th
century landscape designed by Olmsted Brothers firm with extensive views, Italian sunken
garden at street, and retaining walls on higher ground to east and west. Site may retain remnants
of stone walls and paving stones and roads relating to c.1830 observatory and road system built
by Eli Robbins.
The first house to be built on the crest of Mount Independence. Constructed for Hermann
Dudley Murphy (1867-1945), a major artist in the Boston School of Painting in anticipation of
his 1916 wedding to Nelly Littlehale Umbstaetter (1867-1941) who was a watercolorist.
During Murphy's occupancy, this was the center of a small artists' colony with painter John
Enser living here in the 1930s and 1940s and another painter Aiden Ripley building a house
down the hill at 52 Follen Road on land he bought from the Murphys. Owned by attorney John
Groden from 1948 to 1972 and by Maurice and Helen Kilbridge from 1972 to 1982. At the time
Maurice Kilbridge was dean of the Graduate School of Design at Harvard.
Known Alterations
date?. New windows, removal of rear trellises
c.1970: Detached garage constructed, reportedly designed by Rem Huygens of
Huygens & DiMella Architects.
1996: Detached garage demolished and new house (8 Summit Road) built on
subdivided new lot
22 Summit Road. Francis & Dorothy Chamberlain House, 1922
Single-family residential dwelling. Architect and builder are not known. "Stonesides" is a
unique early 20 century residence, inspired by English -Tudor prototypes but using stone from
the site as the predominant building material under a slate roof. Long, asymmetrical profile with
contrasting gables and varied cave line heights, and a variety of windows including casements,
oriel windows and two-story bays.
The original owners, Francis Chamberlain and Dorothy Homer of Lexington had married in
1915 He was reportedly a great grandson of Eli Robbins. Chamberlain was a renowned
navigator and yachtsman and like many Lexington residents, worked in Boston, in this case for a
Boston investment firm. The property may also include remnants of Eli Robbins' early 19th
21
century system of paths, roads, and stone walls. The current owners also own two additional lots
of land to the east that were never built upon but abut the Bridle Path and are included in the
proposed local historic district.
Known Alterations
1975 Interior repairs after fire
Wooded lots. Map 22 -Lot 140 & Map 22 -Lot 63 (no street addresses assigned)
Both lots are both owned by 22 Summit Road (above) and included in the proposed new local
historic district.
BOUNDARY DESCRIPTION AND JUSTIFICATION
The boundaries of the proposed Mount Independence Local Historic District are drawn to
highlight the small artists' compound and the high-end suburban residences which were first
developed in the Follen Heights Subdivision beginning in 1915 In addition to the residential
structures the proposed district boundary also includes portions of the historic bridle
path/footpath and other features dating back to the tower Eli Robbins built on Mount
Independence in the 1830s as well as historic landscape features of these properties, including
those understood to be associated with designs prepared by the Olmsted Brothers firm. The
boundaries of the proposed district align with the tax assessor's property lines of the seven
dwellings proposed for inclusion and also includes two parcels of land which abut the historic
19th century Bridle Path but were never developed. These two lots are adjacent to 22 Summit
Road and 52 Follen Road respectively, also owned by the same owner
Both the Massachusetts Historical Commission and Lexington's Planning Board recommended
approval of the new local historic district and both recommended the inclusion of additional
properties and enlarging the boundaries. After careful consideration, the Study Committee voted
to include one additional property, 8 Summit Road, as this would mean all abutters of the
historically significant properties were part of Mt. Independence Historic District. Further
properties could be included in the future, enlarging these boundaries, but the Study Committee
concluded the current boundaries capture the essential landscape and direct abutters that are
appropriate.
The boundary begins at the southeast corner of Summit Road and Follen Road and extends to the
east and south following the curve of Follen Road until it reaches the northwest boundary of the
property at 30 Follen Road (an early 20' century Cape Cod dwelling which is not included).
From here it continues southeast along Bridle Path and then jogs to the southwest along the
western boundary of 18 Bridle Path (not included). It continues westward 246' along the south
property line of the vacant lot corresponding to Map 22 -Lot 63 According to the original
subdivision plan, this southern boundary was also the location of a historic stone wall and
footpath. From here the boundary jogs northward to the southern property line of 22 Summit
Road extending west to Summit Road. The boundary continues north along Summit Road,
22
following the road frontage of 22, 12, and 8 Summit Road before continuing inland and eastward
to follow 8 Summit Road's property line before reaching the boundary line of 4 Summit Road.
The boundary jogs along the west boundary of 4 Summit Road before extending westward to
Summit Road and continuing northward along Summit Road to the point of beginning. Map 22 -
Lot 145 is excluded at the property owners request as it is not considered historically significant.
Two maps are provided on the following pages.
23
Lev yn4"• �y�•.,,,
Me - w.s4Y ceneio May
camp/wf wM,
Plan of Follen Heights, May 1917 (revised 1921)
24
Town of Lexington Assessors' Map showing proposed boundary for local historic district
25
CONCLUSION
The Lexington HDC Study Committee recommends the creation of a nine (9) property historic
district named the Mount Independence Local Historic District. The historic significance of this
peak of Follen Hill is an invaluable historic resource for the town of Lexington, and one of
critical importance to protect. As noted in MGL Chapter 40C, the proposed historic district will
"promote the educational, cultural, economic and general welfare of the public through the
preservation and protection of the distinctive characteristics of buildings and places significant in
the history of the Town of Lexington or their architecture, through the maintenance and
improvement of settings for such buildings and places and the encouragement of design
compatible therewith" The Study Committee also recommends that this new local historic
district be governed by MGL 40C, and that the new district created will be administered by
Lexington's existing Historic Districts Commission.
26
APPENDICES
27
Tax map/
Parcel #
22-141
22-143
22-144
22-142
22-146A
22-147
Mount Independence Local Historic District
Address
52 Follen
Road
104 Follen
Road
2 Summit
Road
4 Summit
Road
12 Summit
Road
22 Summit
Road
22-63 Bridle Path
22-140 Bridle
Path/Follen
Rd
22-146B 8 Summit
Road
Historic
Name
Aiden Ripley
House
Spencer
Smith House
Thomas
Bishop
House
Michael
Martino
House
Hermann
Dudley
Murphy
House
Francis
Chamberlain
House
"Stonesides"
Jasbir &
Jagjeet
Gandhi
House
28
Year Built
1932
1947
1922
1997
1916
Style Survey
Form
Eclectic yes
Mid -Century yes
Modern/
Contemporar
y
Craftsman yes
Colonial
Colonial no
Revival
Italian Villa yes
Revival
1923 English
Revival
yes
no
no
1999 no
FORM B - BUILDING
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Photograph
Locus Map (north at top)
Recorded by. Lisa Mausolf
Organization:
Date (month /year). June 2021
Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
22-146A
Lexington
LEX.521
Town/City. Lexington
Place: (neighborhood or village).
East Lexington
Address: 12 Summit Road
Historic Name: Hermann Dudley Murphy House
Uses: Present: residential
Original: residential/art studio
Date of Construction: 1916
Source: deeds, newspapers
Style/Form: Italian Villa
Architect/Builder Harold W Hathaway, architect
Olmsted Brothers, landscape architect
Exterior Material:
Foundation: not visible
Wall/Trim. stucco/wood
Roof: slate
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
none
Major Alterations (with dates).
Date? — new windows, removal of rear trellises
1996 — loss of acreage at NW corner including detached
garage
Condition: good
Moved: no ® yes ❑ Date:
Acreage: 1 75 acres
Setting: crest of Mt. Independence, setback from
residential street, surrounded by stone walls and terraces
12/12 Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
® Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
If checked, you must attach a completed National Register Crterta Statement form.
12 SUMMIT ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
LEX.521
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community
Constructed in 1916, the H. Dudley Murphy House is a unique example of the early 20th century Italian Villa style in Lexington
which also reflects to a lesser degree Craftsman/Prairie style elements that were also popular at construction. The substantial
two-story, stuccoed building is capped by a low slate hip roof with overhanging eaves and a bracketed cornice, several shed
dormers and stuccoed chimneys. The U-shaped plan was intended to be reminiscent of a Florentine villa. A three -sided
entrance courtyard faces the road; originally the wing to the left was an artist's studio and the kitchen wing was located to the
right. The courtyard features an arcade with carved foliate capitals, roundels and columns and the arch shape is repeated in
several arched window openings on the first floor of the facade. Remaining openings contain rectangular openings. The rear
elevation is six bays wide with three sets of double doors leading to the brick patio. The first floor windows are topped by
transom lights. The openings contain 1/1 replacement windows. The trellises that were originally mounted on the rear elevation
have been removed.
In the 1984 inventory form for this property Anne Grady describes the landscape as follows: "This property is perhaps the finest
example of early twentieth century landscape architecture in Lexington. The almost three -acre site with extensive views to the
east occupies the crest of Mt. Independence and incorporates the location of the nineteenth century observation tower
Retaining walls, many of which are curved, are used extensively to provide a level portion on the rear (view) side of the house
and to landscape the high points to the east and west. The street side of the property has been fashioned into a formal Italian
sunken garden enclosed by retaining walls. There are several arbors and many of the walls terminate in urn -shaped posts. The
many scotch pines on the property were, according to the present owners, the only trees which the sheep which formerly grazed
there did not molest. At the site of the observatory are remnants of stone walls and some shaped paving stones, but it is difficult
to determine the original layout. Below the retaining walls on the eastern edge of the property is part of the original carriage road
to the summit" Today (2021), the acreage has been reduced to 1 76 acres in part due to the construction of the adjacent house
at 8 Summit Road. The features described by Grady in 1984 including terraces, stones on the site of the observation tower and
the bridle path all appear to survive. In front of the property, along the street, there is also a notable redwood or sequoia tree.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations
owners/occupants played within the community.
h local (or state) history Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the
In the early 19th century the land on the top of Mount Independence (including this land) was the site of a three-story observation
tower erected by Eli Robbins (1786-1856), a successful East Lexington fur processor At his own expense Robbins built a road
to the summit for the benefit of those living in the village, the first local example of a citizen opening private property for the use
by the general public. According to an historical account Robbins laid out drives to and walks around the summit, connecting the
two driveways to the summit by a walk an eighth of a mile long. This walk was built of two solid stone walls filled in with gravel,
the side towards the summit having a trellis, the whole distance covered with Isabella grape vines. The tower was destroyed by
fire in the 1840s and not rebuilt but the summit continued to be a popular destination for picnics into the 1890s.
In 1914 Ellen Stone, granddaughter of Eli Robbins, sold the 27+ acre tract of land including the large section of highlands known
as Mount Independence. In September 1915 owner Frank Peirce filed his first subdivision plan for a residential subdivision
which he called "Follen Heights"
On October 1, 1915 Peirce sold Hermann Dudley Murphy of Winchester a parcel of land measuring 81,560 square feet (1.87
acres), the first parcel to be developed on what would become Summit Road. (Middlesex County Registry Book 4001, Page
524). The deed included specific language that would guide development and ensure high quality construction on the land for
the next twenty years, until September 1, 1935. No buildings were to be erected other than single dwelling houses and any
dwelling house had to cost at least $7,000. A setback of at least forty feet to the street was also required.
Continuation sheet 1
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEXINGTON 12 SUMMIT ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
11 LEX.521
Hermann Dudley Murphy (1867-1945) was a major artist in the Boston School of painting who was active in the first half of the
20th century He reportedly asked the architect, Harold W Hathaway, then practicing in Boston in partnership with John T
Vining, to recreate the Italian villa where Murphy had lived in Florence but incorporate an artist's studio. Construction of the
house was occurring in anticipation of his upcoming June 1916 wedding to his second wife, Nelly Littlehale Umbstaetter (1867-
1941). Nelly Murphy was also an artist, specializing in watercolors. In August 1917 Nelly's daughter was married at the
Murphy's new home (Boston Globe, August 16, 1917).
When H. Dudley Murphy died at 12 Summit Road on April 16, 1945, he was considered one of the best-known artists in the
United States of the day, with paintings in many major institutions. His subject matter included portraits, still fifes, seascapes
and landscapes and he was especially known for his floral still fifes, a subject which he embraced in the 1920s. Born in
Marlborough, Massachusetts, H. Dudley Murphy studied at the school of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and at the Julian
School in France and in 1895 he exhibited portraits at the Paris Salon. In France he was introduced to the work of James Abbott
McNeill Whistler who influenced his work both in tonality and in the believe that frame and painting should harmonize in color
and style. Murphy returned to the U.S. in 1897 In 1903 he opened a frame shop, Carrig-Rohane, in Winchester and became
the first American framemaker to sign and date his work. By 1907 he was the leading frame manufacturer in Boston of high
priced, hand -carved frames of gesso and gold leaf. About 1902 he built a home/studio in Winchester designed by Robert Coit at
314-316 Highland Avenue (WIN.278) which he occupied until he moved to this house in Lexington. Murphy ceased making
frames during World War I and was the chief of camouflage for the United States Shipping Board when this house was being
built. Murphy was also known for his prowess in sailing canoe contests. Murphy was passionate about sharing his art with
others. He was a devoted teacher and taught for 35 years at Harvard's School of Architecture. He served as a member of the
Massachusetts Art Commission from 1918 to 1943 and was a founding member of the Guild of Boston Artists.
The Murphy studio must have been a beehive of artistic activity H. Dudley Murphy and his wife Nelly Murphy held multiple joint
exhibitions of their paintings. A news account of a 1930 exhibit opening declared "Man and Wife Far Apart in Art Technique,
Both Superb" (Boston Globe, April 19, 1930). In addition to the Murphys, another painter, John Enser (1898-1968) also lived at
12 Summit in the 1930s and 1940s. Enser was born in Texas and studied painting in Chicago. He arrived in Boston in 1929
and struck up a close friendship with Murphy He lived with the Murphys for more than a decade, also working in the Murphy
home studio. Enser is best known for his landscapes and is known to have painted several paintings of the Murphy yard and
garden. In June 1932 H. Dudley Murphy sold fellow artist Aiden Lassell Ripley a triangular lot of land to the east of his property
and Ripley built a modest house/studio (52 Folien Road, LEX.1051). In 1936 the Murphys, Enser and Ripley came together in
what must have been a noteworthy exhibition of their paintings at the Lexington Arts and Craft Society The local paper
described them as "four distinguished Lexington artists who have won wide reputation in their field" (Lexington Minute -man,
December 12, 1936).
Nelly Littlehale Murphy died in 1941 but John Enser continued to live at 12 Summit Road until the death of H. Dudley Murphy in
1945. Robert Vose wrote "With the passing of Mr Murphy, the world of art has lost one of its most delightful members and
one of its best influences for technical skill, refinement, and beauty His paintings are outstanding examples of conscientious
development of perfection in drawing and technique. His rich, luscious flowers in oil are seldom equated in our generation, and
his later work has a technique that is a joy today His opinions, like his art, were the result of profound study, and when formed,
could not be shaken, for his courage was equal to any controversy His home in Lexington was as perfect an "Arcadia" as
humans could desire" (Catalogue for Memorial Exhibition, 1945).
The property at 12 Summit was put up for sale in 1946. The advertisement for the property read as follows:
Here, in his later years, a world-famous artist built a home of inspiration, beauty and quietude. Set well back from the
road and surrounded by about 2 acres of exquisite gardens, lawns, trees and shrubs, is centered a lovely residence of
Italian influence. Flanked by graceful columned patio, its hospitable front entrance bids welcome to an interior of
charming livability A gem in one of Lexington's choicest settings, this property offers atmosphere beyond the usual.
Continuation sheet 2
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 12 SUMMIT ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS IIISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEX.521
The advertisement also gives a most complete description of the interior components of the home which included a living room,
dining room, kitchen, library, large high ceilinged studio, conservatory, sun room, 6 large chambers and maid's room, 3 baths,
and guest lavatory It also had seven fireplaces and accommodations for four cars (Boston Herald, June 9, 1946, p. 91). An
auction of the contents of the house and studio including antique and modern furniture, china, glass and paintings was held by
Murphy's daughter, Mrs. Carlene Murphy Samoiloff in May 1947 (Boston Globe, May 18, 1947).
After H. Dudley Murphy died in 1945, the property was sold by his daughter Carlene Bowles Samoiloff of Winchester It was
owned by attorney John F Groden and his wife Helen from 1948 until 1972. Maurice and Helen Kilbridge owned the property
from 1972 to 1982 when it was sold to William and Kathleen Corcoran who owned it until 1996. In 1996 a portion of the original
lot at the northwest corner containing almost 16,000 SF and originally contained a detached garage was subdivided. A new
house (8 Summit Road) was subsequently built on the site of the former garage.
The Murphy residence was designed by Boston architect Harold W Hathaway (1872-1927), then practicing in partnership with
John T Vining (Hathaway & Vining). Hathaway studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and in Paris. He was
working with Allen, Collens, & Berry when the Marlborough City Hall was designed (MRB.64, 1904) and worked for Frank Mills
Andrew who designed the Kentucky State Capitol in 1905. In 1909-1910 H.W Hathaway had designs for two solid reinforced
concrete houses in Winchester (WNT 1169) and in Belmont (BLM.16) included in books published by the Atlas Portland Cement
Co. Hathaway was also later associated with Kendall, Taylor & Co. assisting in the design of the Cushing Academy Main
Building in Ashburnham (ASB.140, 1924).
The grounds surrounding and complementing the Murphy house were designed by the Olmsted Brothers and have been
considered perhaps the finest example of early 20'h century landscape architecture in Lexington (Anne Grady 1984). W.L.
Phillips of the Olmsted Brothers was staking and surveying the land in October 1916. (William Lyman Phillips (1885-1966) went
on to play a seminal role in the landscaping of Florida). A series of retaining walls, many of them curved, were introduced at the
Murphy property, to provide a level area at the rear (view side of the house) and to landscape the high points to the east and
west. The street side of the property consisted of a formal Italian sunken garden. Vines were planted for the walls and plans
were made for a vineyard, vegetable garden and croquet court. Tall Italian jars arranged along the top of walls were an original
feature of the design and survive today The extensive flower gardens and surrounding landscape were the inspiration and
setting for the resident artists. In 1898 Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr (1870-1957) and his half-brother, John Charles Olmstead
(1852-1920) had formed the partnership of the Olmsted Brothers after Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr 's retirement. In 1917 the firm
had a staff of 47 and was the largest landscape practice in the U.S., designing important, high profile projects across the country
as well as smaller residential commissions such as the Murphy House. About 1918 H. Dudley Murphy painted a portrait of
Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr that is now owned by the National Academy of Design (https://npg.si.edu/object/npg_909-P-1746).
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Ancestry.com
"Artist Couple Hold First Joint Showing: Exhibition by H. Dudley and Nelly L. Murphy, Man and Wife Far Apart in Art Technique,
Both Superb", Boston Globe, April 19, 1930, p. 5.
Boston Globe, various dates.
Enser, John. Painting of Hermann Dudley Murphy's Garden at Lexington, c.1930.
httos://www lstdibs.com/art/paintings/landscape-oaintinas/john-enser-hermann-dudlev-murohvs-Garden-lexinaton-
massachusetts-c-1930/id-a 4711332/ (accessed June 24, 2021)
Grady, Anne. Inventory form for 12 Summit Road, Lexington, LEX.521, 1984
Hall, Alexandra. "Outside Influence", Boston Magazine, February 8, 2007
Continuation sheet 3
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 12 SUMMIT ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
H LEX.521
"Harold W Hathaway" (obituary), Boston Herald, December 21, 1927, p. 9.
"H. Dudley Murphy Artist, Former Canoe Sailing Champion", Boston Globe, April 16, 1945, p. 12.
"H. Dudley Murphy Funeral Services Today for Widely Known Artist", Boston Globe, April 17, 1945, p. 11
"H.Dudley Murphy Memorial is Outstanding Painting Exhibit", Boston Globe, November 5, 1945, p. 5.
"Hermann Dudley Murphy", httos://www.hisour.com/hermann-dudlev-murohv-13976/ (accessed June 22, 2021).
Josefson, Jayna M. "A Finding Aid to the Hermann Dudley Murphy Papers, circa 1878-1982, in the Archives of American Art",
Smithsonian Archives of American Art, September 23, 2013.
Lexington Minute -man, various dates.
Memorial Exhibition of Paintings by H. Dudley Murphy Boston: Guild of Boston Artists, 1945.
Massachusetts Historical Commission. Inventory forms on file.
Middlesex County Registry of Deeds, Cambridge, MA.
National Portrait Gallery Portrait of Frederick Law Olmsted Jr by Hermann Dudley Murphy, c.1918. Catalog of American
Portraits, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D C. httos://noa.si.edu/obiect/noa 909-P-1746 (accessed June 22, 2021)
Olmsted Associates. Olmsted Associates Records: Job Files, 6379: Murphy, Hermann D., Winchester, Mass. 1916 to 1919.
Manuscript/Mixed Material. https://www.loc.aov/resource/mss52571.mss52571-02-301 0301 0307/?sn=5 (accessed June 22,
2021)
Spencer, Ellen. "Robert Coit: Houses and Public Buildings in an Age of Suburban Growth", The Architects of Winchester,
Massachusetts, Number 8, 2007 Winchester Historical Society
Town of Lexington, Building Records.
Gouache of front portico by H. Dudley Murphy
Continuation sheet 4
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 12 SUMMIT ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
LEX.521
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Painting by John Enser showing landscaping at 12 Summit and view to Mt. Independence
Source: Cary Library, Lexington
c.1930 Painting by John Enser showing Murphys' garden at 12 Summit
Continuation sheet 5
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEXINGTON 12 SUMMIT ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
LEX.521 I
Portrait of Frederick Law Olmsted Jr painted by Hermann Dudley Murphy c.1918
Source: Catalog of American Portraits, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Painting by Nelly Littlehale Murphy
Continuation sheet 6
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 12 SUMMIT ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
LEX.521
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Realtor photos showing landscaping including terraces, stone steps and Italian pottery
Continuation sheet
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 12 SUMMIT ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
1 LEX.521
National Register of Historic Places Criteria Statement Form
Check all that apply
❑ Individually eligible ❑ Eligible only in a historic district
® Contributing to a potential historic district ❑ Potential historic district
Criteria: EA EB ECED
Criteria Considerations: ❑ A ❑ B ECED ❑ E ❑ F ❑ G
Statement of Significance by Lisa Mausolf
The criteria that are checked in the above sections must be justified here.
Constructed in 1916, the Hermann Dudley Murphy House at 12 Summit Road in Lexington is eligible for
listing in the National Register under Criteria A, B, and C at the local level as a contributing property to a
potential National Register historic district associated with artists Hermann Dudley Murphy, Nelly
Littlehale Murphy, Aiden Lassell Ripley and John Enser. The potential district consists of a small artists'
compound dating to the period of high-end suburban residential development in Lexington in the early 206
century The district would include the Murphy House at 12 Summit Road, the Ripley House at 52 Follen
Road (MHC #LEX.1051), the historic path/right of way between the two properties and historic landscape
features of these properties, including those understood to be associated with designs prepared by the
Olmsted Brothers firm.
Continuation sheet 8
FORM B - BUILDING
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Photograph
Locus Map (north at top)
Recorded by Lisa Mausolf
Organization:
Date (month /year). June 2021
Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
1 22-141 1
Lexington
1 LEX.1051 1
Town/City Lexington
Place: (neighborhood or village).
East Lexington
Address: 52 Follen Road
Historic Name: Aiden Lassell Ripley House
Uses: Present: residential
Original: residential/studio
Date of Construction: 1932
Source: Lexington Valuation Lists
Style/Form: Early 20th C. Eclectic
Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation: fieldstone
Wall/Trim: live edge siding/wood
Roof: asphalt shingles
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
none
Major Alterations (with dates):
1968 — roof raised to add second story
Condition: good
Moved: no ® yes ❑ Date:
Acreage: 0.54 acre
Setting: end of long driveway leading uphill from Follen
Road, surrounded by woods
12/12 Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this for
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
® Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
If checked, you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form.
LEXINGTON 52 FOLLEN ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
LEX.1051 I
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community.
Constructed in 1932, the Ripley House is a simple 1 %-story gable -roofed dwelling which features a mortared fieldstone first floor
with the upper level sheathed in wood siding. The north gable end is sheathed in fairly regular wood clapboards but visible on
the side elevations is live edge siding in which the bottom edge of the board is not cut straight but reflects the natural curves of
the tree. The house is set above Follen Road down a long driveway and is surrounded by woods. It was designed as a
home/studio for the original owner, artist Aiden Ripley The north portion of the house served as his studio with twenty foot -high
ceilings and north light coming in through the set of three multi -light windows punctuating the north gable end. Below the studio
on the north side there is a single -car garage with an arched opening punctuating the stone, filled with vertical board double
doors with large iron hinges. A set of stone stairs go up the hill at the northwest corner of the house leading to the_front door on
the west elevation which faces 12 Summit Road.
The southern portion of the house is a separate but attached structure, comprised of a kitchen and dining room on the ground
floor (east side). The house originally had only one bedroom on the south side above the dining room. In the 1960s the roof
was raised and two additional bedrooms were added on the south side. Where the roof was raised, the wall is sheathed in
regular wood clapboards. A vertical panel door on the east elevation accesses the kitchen and dining room. The predominant
windows on the building are multi -light casements.
The house is surrounded by woods. According to the present owner, in 1980 one could see the shape of the original gardens
although they were no longer maintained. On the south side of the house, stepped garden areas extended up the hill next to the
house with a stone walkway beside. Another flat growing area was located higher up. On the west (uphill) side of the house in
1980, one could see a walkway in the location of the bridle path.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the
owners/occupants played within the community
The triangular lot is shown as Lot 27 on a "Plan of Follen Heights" dated May 1917, recorded with Middlesex South Registry of
Deeds (Plan Book 297, Plan 35). The land was sold by neighbor and fellow artist Hermann Dudley Murphy (see 12 Summit) to
Aiden and Doris Ripley of Boston in June 1932. The interior originally had only one bedroom for Ripley and his wife, a kitchen,
dining room, and a north -facing 20 foot high, light -filled studio. The front door to the home is actually at the back, uphill side of
the house, and was no doubt designed to provide easy access to the artists and grounds at 12 Summit. The Ripleys were first
assessed in 1933 for a house valued at $7,000.
Aiden Lassell Ripley (1896-1969) is considered one of the premier masters of American sporting art, best known for his
paintings of hunters and game, fly-fishing on pristine rivers and southern plantation life but also taking commissions to paint
portraits and history paintings. He studied at the Fenway School of Illustration and Museum of Fine Arts School in Boston and In
1924 was awarded a traveling scholarship by the Museum of Fine Arts and traveled to Europe and North Africa. He returned to
this country in 1926. The Great Depression diminished demand for traditional artistry such as portraiture and he began to focus
his attention on illustration work. In order to supplement his income he taught a life class and freehand drawing at the Harvard
School of Architecture with longtime friend Hermann Dudley Murphy He also did several Works Progress Administration (WPA)
projects including a series of murals for the Winchester Public Library and the Lexington Post Office. The Winchester work
(1934) depicts the Pilgrims purchasing land from the Native Americans while the post office mural of 1939 illustrates "The Ride
of Paul Revere" His 1950 mural of "The Four Scasons", originally painted for a private home in Lexington, was installed in Cary
',raw in 1977 He also completed murals for a building in Atlanta, Georgia and a series of 14 murals depicting episodes in the
Continuation sheet 1
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 52 FOLLEN ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Areas) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
II LEX.1051
life of Paul Revere for the Paul Revere Insurance Company in Worcester Ripley produced many works based on the
landscape around his home in Lexington and the urban landscape of Boston. He was elected president of the Guild of Boston
Artists in 1959 and held that position until his death in 1969 He was also elected a member of the National Academy of Design.
His work is represented at the Art Institute of Chicago, the High Museum in Atlanta and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston which
had a show of his work in 1942. In recent years there has been renewed interest in his work including several books and
exhibits.
Ripley was also an ardent conservationist and over the years served terms as a member of Lexington's Planning Board, Town
Meeting, Conservation Commission and Zoning Board of Appeals. Ripley continued to live in this house until his death in 1969;
the second floor addition containing two bedrooms on the south side was constructed in 1968. The property was sold by Doris
Ripley in 1973. It was owned by Joseph Kilbridge from 1973 to 1980 and by Gail Hubbell from 1980 to 1986 when it was
purchased by the present owner, Robert Westervelt.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
A. Lassell Ripley papers, 1873-1973. Archives of the American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
"A.L. Ripley, Lexington Artist, at 72", Boston Globe, September 1, 1969
Ancestry.com
"The Art of Aiden Lassell Ripley", Antiques and the Arts Weekly, July 9, 2010.
Boston Globe, various dates.
Chester, Alexander and Robert M. Kahler "Aiden Lassell Ripley on the 50th Anniversary of His Death", Illustration, August 2019.
Hunter, Elizabeth Ives. "Aiden Lassell Ripley (1896-1969): A Retrospective"
httos://www.findaarave.com/memorial/138269949/aiden-lassell-riolev (accessed June 22, 2021)
Lexington Minute -man, various dates.
Massachusetts Historical Commission. Inventory forms on file.
Middlesex County Registry of Deeds, Cambridge, MA.
O'Brien, Stephen B., Jr and Julie Carlson Wildfeurer The Art of Aiden Lassell Ripley Boston: Stephen O'Brien Fine Arts,
2009.
Town of Lexington, Building Records.
Westervelt, Robert (owner). Information, June 2021
Wheer, Siobhan M. The Work of Aiden Lassell Ripley (1896-1969) [Contained in Vose Art Notes: A Guide for Collectors, Vol. XI
Winter 2003]
Zitso Studio. Aiden Lassell Ripley, ca. 1955. Macbeth Gallery records, 1947-1948. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian
Institution.
Continuation sl
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEXINGTON 52 FOLLEN ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
IILEX.1051 j
North elevation, stairs lead up to west entrance and bridle path
Continuation sheet 3
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 52 FOLLEN ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
LEX.1051
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
East elevation
View down driveway from Follen Road
Continuatior
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 52 FOLLEN ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
IILEX.1051
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Ly/ bye?-,2the / �---�
Portrait of Aiden Lassell Ripley in his studio at 52 Follen Road
Source: Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
Continuation sheet 5
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEXINGTON
National Register of Historic Places Criteria Statement Form
Check all that apply
❑ Individually eligible 0 Eligible only in a historic district
/1
Contributing to a potential historic district ❑ Potential historic district
Criteria: ® A ® B Z C❑ D
52 FOLLEN ROAD
Area(s) Form No.
II LEX.1051
Criteria Considerations: ❑ A ❑ B ❑ C ❑ D 0 E 0 F ❑ G
Statement of Significance by Lisa Mausolf
The criteria that are checked in the above sections must be justified here.
Constructed in 1932, the Aiden Lassell Ripley House at 52 Follen Road in Lexington is eligible for listing
in the National Register under Criteria A, B, and C at the local level as a contributing property to a potential
National Register historic district associated with artists Hermann Dudley Murphy, Nelly Littlehale
Murphy, Aiden Lassell Ripley and John Enser The potential district consists of a small artists' compound
dating to the period of high-end suburban residential development in Lexington in the early 20th century
The district would include the Ripley House at 52 Follen Road, the Murphy House at 12 Summit Road
(MHC #LEX.521), the historic path/right of way between the two properties and historic landscape features
of these properties, including those understood to be associated with designs prepared by the Olmsted
Brothers firm.
Continuati
FORM B - BUILDING
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Photograph
Locus Map (north at top)
Recorded by Lisa Mausolf
Organization:
'•ate (month /year) June 2021
Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
22/143
Lexington
LEX.
Town/City Lexington
Place: (neighborhood or villager
East Lexington
Address: 104 Follen Road
Historic Name: Spencer & Elizabeth Smith House
Uses: Present: residential
Original: residential
Date of Construction: 1947
Source: Town building records
Style/Form: Contemporary
Architect/Builder Spencer Smith, architect?
Kelly Brothers, builders
Exterior Material:
Foundation: concrete, concrete block
Wall/Trim: wood clapboards
Roof: asphalt
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
none
Major Alterations (with dates).
1951- wing addition facing Follen Road including attached
garage
c.1973 — louvered openings replaced with glass windows
and larger windows added front and back
Condition: good
Moved: no ►1 yes ❑ Date:
Acreage: 0.30 acre
Setting: 20th century residential neighborhood on Follen
Hill
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 104 FOLLEN ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEX. 1
❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
If checked, you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form.
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community
Located at the corner of Follen Road and Summit Road, 104 Follen Road is a single -story Contemporary dwelling built in 1947
with a wing addition with garage constructed to the north in 1951 Clad in wood clapboards, it is set on a concrete/concrete
block foundation and capped by a very low-pitched gable roof from which a low, wide brick chimney emerges. As originally
constructed, the house had a U-shaped plan with an entrance courtyard facing the road, a carport to the north and living space
to the south. In the original design all the windows were actually screened louvered openings (not glass) like onboard a ship.
These were replaced with glass windows by the present owner after 1973 and were supplemented by additional large windows
facing the front and rear patios. Typical of its style, the building lacks decorative detailing or embellishment. There is a simple
front door facing the street inside the courtyard. A metal tally column supports the roof of the carport. The house was built on a
slab with radiant heat, which had only recently become used to any degree in residential construction.
The Smith House at 104 Follen Road is an early, modest example of Contemporary domestic architecture in Lexington. Its
simple lines and lack of traditional detailing reflect the work of Walter Gropius and other architects who came to this country after
World War II, dreaming of revolutionizing residential architecture. It incorporated an interest in the latest in technology such as
radiant heating, steel framing and unique design ideas such as the original screened louvered openings. Radiant heat was first
used in this country by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1937 but achieved more publicity in 1945 after it was used by developer William
Levitt (Bean 2010). The house was constructed prior to Lexington's well known significant Mid Century Modern Developments
such as Six Moon Hill, Five Fields and Peacock Farms. According to the owner, local architect Walter Pierce (1920-2013) who
developed the Peacock Farms model with Danforth Compton in the 1950s, was fascinated by the modern house at 104 Follen
Road and labeled it "one of a kind" (Sonin 2021).
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Discuss the histouy of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the
owners/occupants played within the community.
This house was built on land that Grace Winifred Kelley, then of Santa Barbara, California sold in June 1947 to Spencer R.
Smith, then of Hamburg, New York (Middlesex County Registry Book 7150, Page 344). Grace and her husband, Dr Truman
Kelley, had previously lived at what is now 2 Summit Road. On July 9, 1947 Spencer R. Smith received a building permit from
the town for a dwelling and garage at 104 Follen Road (Lexington Minute -man, July 17, 1947, p. 1).
Spencer R. Smith likely designed the home for himself and his wife Elizabeth. Spencer R. Smith (1915-2005) graduated from
Yale University in 1937 with a BFA in Architecture and subsequently worked for the engineering and architectural firm,
Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill, in New York City In 1941 he was commissioned as an Ensign in the U.S. Navy and was serving
as Officer in Charge of Construction at the Naval Air Station, Barbers Point, Hawaii when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor
on December 7, 1941 In 1947 he was assigned to the Boston Naval Shipyard and had this house built by Kelly Brothers of
Arlington. While on duty in Boston, Smith also attended the Harvard Business School. Town Building Department records detail
the steel used in the construction of the house.
In 1949 Smith was reassigned and the house was purchased by Howard and Jean Hamacher The newspaper included a brief
mention announcing the sale of a "five room moderne ranch type house located at 104 Follen road" (Lexington Minute -man,
Dec. 29, 1949). (Spencer Smith retired from the Navy in 1972 after 31 years of service, having attained the rank of Rear
Admiral.) Howard F Hamacher (1915-2003) was an executive at Arthur D. Little Co. for many years and was also on the faculty
at Harvard. In order to accommodate their four children, the Hamachers added a wing in 1951 facing Follen Road and
containing three rooms, a garage and small basement.
Continua
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 104 FOLLEN ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEX. 1
In 1973 the Hamachers sold the property to Ain Sonin and Epp-Karike Sonin; he was a MIT professor The Sonins replaced all
the original louvered openings with glass windows and added more large windows to the front and back facing front and back
patios.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Ancestry.com
Bean, Robert. History of radiant heating and cooling, 2010.
htto://www.healthvheatina.com/History of Radiant Heating and Cooling/history of radiant heating chronolooical.htm# YNOi6
mhKhaQ (accessed June 23, 2021)
Boston Globe, Dec. 11, 1949 (sale of house)
Lexington Minute -man, various dates.
Middlesex County Registry of Deeds, Cambridge, MA.
Sonin, Epp. Information on 104 Follen Road, 2021
"Spencer Smith" (obituary), Monterey (CA) Herald, March 26, 2005.
httos://www.leaacv.com/obituaries/monterevherald/obituarv.asox?n=spencer-smith&oid=3337430 (accessed June 10, 2021)
Town of Lexington, Building Records.
Aerial view of house; later garage wing is at top
Continuation sheet 2
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 104 FOLLEN ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MOARISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Area(s) Form No.
LEX. 1
Assessor's photo
Continu
FORM B - BUILDING
MASSACHUSEYI S HISTORICAL COMMISSION
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Photograph
Locus Map (north at top)
Recorded by Lisa Mausolf
Organization:
Date (month /year) June 2021
Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
22-144
Lexington
LEX.
Town/City Lexington
Place: (neighborhood or village):
East Lexington
Address: 2 Summit Road
Historic Name: Thomas J. & Mary Bishop House
Uses: Present: residential
Original: residential
Date of Construction: 1922
Source: deeds, newspaper
Style/Form: Craftsman Colonial
Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation:
Wall/Trim: wood clapboard, wood
Roof: slate
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures.
garage
Major .Alterations (with dales):
1947, 1995- loss of original acreage to construct 104 Follen
and 4 Summit
Condition: good
Moved: no ❑ yes 0 Date:
Acreage: 0.5 acre
Setting: 20th century residential neighborhood on Follen
Hill
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 2 SUMMIT ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Areas) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEX.
❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
If checked, you must attach a completed Nacional Register Crirerrcr Statement Jortn.
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community.
Set down a long driveway from Summit Road and above stone walls along Follen Road, 2 Summit Road is a two-story
Craftsman Colonial -style dwelling constructed in 1922. Although lacking the symmetrical massing of a true Colonial, overtures
to the Colonial Revival style including the pedimented entrance portico with sidelit entry and Roman Doric columns, double -hung
6/6 windows flanked by blinds, and the high slate -covered hip roof with hip dormers front and back. The overhanging eaves with
exposed notched rafter tails are a Craftsman -style detail. A single -story sun porch spans the east end of the building.
To the west of the main house is a c.1922 garage that is square in plan, capped by a slate, hip roof with skylight. The half -acre
lot includes stone walls and terraces including some curved sections. The frontage along Follen Road also is lined by stone
retaining walls with a set of stone steps leading up to the backyard.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the
owners/occupants played within the community.
The original owner of this house (originally known as 90 Follen Road and later 4 Summit Road) was Thomas J. Bishop (1862-
1929). In February 1922 the newspaper reported "Three lots of land, Nos. 28, 29 and 30 at Follen Heights, Lexington,
containing about 56,000 feet, have been bought by Thomas J. Bishop of Boston, who will build an attractive house in keeping
with the other high class homes in that section" (Lexington Minute -man, February 10, 1922, p. 1). In selling the land to Mary
Bishop, Frank Peirce included various restrictions on what could be built, restrictions which would stay in effect until 1941
There was a limit of one dwelling on the property with a minimum value of $7,000 and the dwelling could not have a flat roof
(Book 4488, Page 67). There was also to be no mechanical, manufacturing or mercantile business conducted on the property
Bishop also bought an additional lot (Lot 31) from John Sharman in 1923 (Book 4658, Page 193).
The original owner, Thomas J. Bishop, had a Boston express business that operated between Boston, Fitchburg, Leominster
and Clinton as well as a second line that ran between Fitchburg and Worcester Mrs. Bishop died in 1927 and her husband
passed away two years later In August 1931 Thomas F Bishop, their son, issued a quitclaim deed for the property to Zylpha
and Russell Allen who held the mortgage (Book 5582, Page 101). On December 10, 1932 a public auction was held to sell the
property The Perle Burgess family was living here from about 1933 to 1935.
By 1936 this was the home of Truman and Grace Kelley Dr Truman Kelley (1884-1961) was a professor at Harvard and was
credited with introducing statistical methods into psychological studies. In 1924 he was a co-author of the Stanford Achievement
Test (SAT) and during World War II, Dr Kelley was a consultant to the armed forces focusing on psychological testing. In June
1947 Grace Kelley, then of Santa Barbara, California, sold the western portion of the property to Spencer Smith who built the
house next door at 104 Follen Road (Book 7150, Page 344).
John B. Ward, of the Ward Steel Company in Cambridge, owned the house at 2 Summit Road from 1949 to 1954. Robert and
Catherine Van de Graaff purchased the house in 1955 and Catherine sold it after her husband's death in 1967 Robert Van de
Graaff was a prominent physicist who developed the high-voltage electrostatic generator that bears him name. The house was
owned by Norman and Rita Connolly from 1967 to 1997 In 1995 the land was subdivided, and the present house at 4 Summit
Road was subsequently built to the south.
Conlin?
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 2 SUMMIT ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEX. 1
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Ancestry.com
Boston Globe, various dates.
Lexington Minute -man, various dates.
Middlesex County Registry of Deeds, Cambridge, MA.
Smithsonian Institute Archives. httos://siarchives.si.edu/collections/siris arc 397756 (accessed June 17, 2021)
Photograph of Truman Kelley
Town of Lexington, Building Records.
"Truman Kelley, 76, Taught at Harvard", New York Times, May 3, 1961, p. 37
Dr Truman Kelley
Continuation sheet 2
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 2 SUM[IIIT ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Stone wall along Follen Road looking up toward 2 Summit backyard
Area(s) Form No.
LEX.
Contin?
FORM B - BUILDING
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Photograph
Locus Map
Recorded by Lisa Mausolf
Organization:
''a (month /year)' June 2021
01.1"17.63
Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
22-147
Lexington
LEX.
Town/City. Lexington
Place: (neighborhood or village)'
East Lexington
Address: 22 Summit Road
Historic Name: Francis & Dorothy Chamberlain House
"Stonesides"
Uses: Present: residential
Original: residential
Date of Construction: 1923
Source: deeds, directories, newspaper
Style/Form: English Revival
Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation:
Wall/Trim:
Roof:
stone, concrete
rubble, stucco, wood
slate
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
none
Major Alterations (with dates).
1975 — fire damage inside
Condition: good
Moved: no ® yes ❑ Date:
Acreage: 1 12 acres
Setting: 20th century residential neighborhood on Follen
Hill
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 22 SUMMIT ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEX.
❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
If checked, you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community.
The Chamberlain House at 22 Summit Road is a unique early 20th century residence, its eclectic design inspired by English -
Tudor prototypes which are freely mixed. Known as "Stonesides", the dwelling utilizes stone from the site with lesser stuccoed
details. Constructed for a noted navigator/yachtsman, the house was reportedly purposely sited to align with the North Star
Typical of the English Revival, the house has a long, asymmetrical massing with a mix of overlapping gables and varied eave
line heights. The house is capped by a hip slate roof with tall stone chimneys. The variety of windows includes multi -light bands
of casement windows, individual casements, some topped by transom lights, an oriel window in the north front gable and a two-
story bay window suspended near the main fagade entrance which is set in a simple arch and topped by an iron lantern. The
garage at the south end of the fagade consists of an architect opening filled with double vertical board wooden doors with iron
hinges.
Although the interior suffered fire damage in 1975, the exterior appears virtually unchanged since its construction.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the role(s) the
owners/occupants played within the community
The land on which this house stands, Lot 32 on a "Plan of Follen Heights" dated May 1917, recorded with Middlesex South
Registry of Deeds (Plan Book 297, Plan 35), was sold by Frank D. Peirce to Francis & Dorothy Chamberlain of Arlington in July
1921 The conveyance included various restrictions to last twenty years about what could be built on the land. This included not
more than two dwellings, a garage for not more than two automobiles and no trucks, no flat roof, a construction cost of not less
than $7,000, and prohibited mechanical, manufacturing and mercantile buildings.
A brief article entitled "The New Stone House" concerning the Chamberlain House appeared in the newspaper in October 1922.
It read "Of unique construction is the stone house being built on Follen Heights, near Mr H.D Murphy's. The building is Mr
Francis Chamberlain's, formerly of Arlington. It seems as tho a favorite pasttime for our ancestrors must have been to build
stone walls as there was one in particular, six feet wide and four feet high running thru his lot. Mr Chamberlain could, therefore,
use a local product in his building" (Lexington Minute -man, October 20, 1922). Chamberlain's great grandfather was Eli Robbins
who lived at the foot of Follen Road.
In August 1923 the local newspaper reported that the Chamberlain family had moved into their "new field stone house, located at
24 Summit road, which has been building for the past year" (Lexington Minute -man, August 24, 1923, p. 1). During the
Chamberlains' ownership, the house was known as "Stonesides" (Lexington Minute -man, January 16, 1925; Sept. 19, 1935).
Francis Chamberlain (1891-1965) and Dorothy Homer of Lexington had married in 1915 (her mother lived at 143 Pleasant
Street). He was a 1915 Harvard graduate where he rowed crew During World War I he served as a management engineer with
the Army Ordinance Department in Washington DC He developed a system of celestial navigation on which he wrote a
textbook and conducted a navigation school in Boston teaching the area's leading yachtsmen, later serving as rear commodore
of the Boston Yacht Club. When the house at 22 Summit Road was built, it was sited to perfectly align with the North Star
Chamberlain worked for many years as a financial statistician for a Boston investment banking firm and also served as a
Lexington selectman in 1928-30 and a town meeting representative in 1931-1937 His father was Allen Chamberlain who wrote
for the Boston Transcript.
Contin
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 22 SUMMIT ROAD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
LEX.
The house at 22 Summit Road was sold to Walter and Madgeline McCrea in 1939. He was an engineer with the Cambridge
Gas Company Grace Johnson owned the house from 1944 to 1953. The current owners, William and Sheila Widnall
purchased the house in 1968. Like the original owner, William Widnall is a scientist, navigator and yachtsman and was
instrumental in the Apollo lunar program. Sheila Widnall, also an aeronautical engineer, was the first woman ever to lead a
division of the United States military, becoming Secretary of the Air Force in 1993 under President Clinton.
A fire in January 1975 resulted in extensive interior damage in the living room, kitchen and upper level of the house and claimed
the lives of three persons and injured two others who were occupying the house (Lexington Minute -man, January 16, 1975).
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Ancestry.com
Boston Globe, various dates.
"Francis Chamberlain, 74, Navigator, Scientist, Dies", Boston Globe, April 25, 1965, p. 95.
Lexington Minute -man, various dates.
Middlesex County Registry of Deeds, Cambridge, MA.
"Miss Dorothy Homer Weds Francis Chamberlain", Boston Globe, June 30, 1915, p. 5.
"The New Stone House", Lexington Minute -man, October 20, 1922.
Town of Lexington, Building Records.
Continuation sheet 2