HomeMy WebLinkAboutburlington-street_0119 FORM B — BUILDING
Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION 10077000032 1Boston N. 743
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD Town Lexington
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Place (neighborhood or village)
c
to Address 119 Burlington St.
11 Historic Name Sidney Butters House
J)s Uses: Present Residential
Original Residential
Date of Construction 1847
4
Source Lexington Valuation lists
vo R'1
Style/Form Italianate(altered)
i_.
Architect/Builder
INExterior Material:
s
Foundation Brick/Fieldstone
;q
to Wall/Trim Vinyl Siding
Roof Asphalt Shingle
�h
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures Garage
T o Major Alterations(with dates)
p' Shed dormer, side and rear additions (dates unknown)
LpNGFELLOW
tib. tida
Condition Fair
°
Moved ® no [:] yes Date
4
1°
Acreage 0.9-A.
Setting Far back from the street and isolated from other
houses
Recorded by Nancy S. Seasholes
Organization Lexington Historical Commission
Date(month/year) February 1998
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
BUILDING FORM
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION ❑ see continuation sheet
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community.
119 Burlington St. is a greatly altered Italianate farmhouse and one of the few in Lexington that retains a sense of its original rural
setting. The most comparable house maybe the one at 34 Valley Rd. (MHC#1011)but 119 Burlington St. is more intact. The
house is rectangular, 1'/2 stories,three-by-four bays, and front-gabled with a side chimney. It is set on a brick foundation, clad
with vinyl siding, and roofed with asphalt shingles. On the southeast elevation is a two-story side-gabled three-by-one bay
addition on a fieldstone foundation, and in the rear reentrant angle is a one-story shed-roofed extension. The main entry is on the
facade and widows are 6/6 double hung sash. The roof of the front porch is supported by square posts, and there is a shed-roofed
wall dormer on the northwest slope of the roof. The small side-gabled garage is clad with wood shingles.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE ❑see continuation sheet
Discuss the history of the building. Explain its associations with local(or state) history. Include uses of the building, and the
role(s) the owners/occupants played within the community.
This house built in 1847 by Sidney Butters,who bought the land that year and the next year was assessed for a house on it.
Interestingly, Butters sold the property in 1850 for the same price he had paid for it in 1847 before the house was built. This
house was apparently not the farmhouse for a larger farm, for the lot Butters purchased in 1847 was only was two acres—later
divided to make the lots on which this house and the one now at 117 Burlington St. are located, and it is not clear why this house
was placed so far back from the road. In 1869 Michael McGann bought the house and the McGanns owned it for the rest of the
19th century.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES ❑see continuation sheet
Hudson, Charles. History of the Town of Lexington. Revised and continued to 1912 by the Lexington Historical Society.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1913. 2: 394-95.
Lexington Valuation Lists. 1847-1848.
Middlesex Registry of Deeds. Deeds. Cambridge, MA. 509: 485; 596: 442; 1049: 204; 1103: 570.
❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked,you must attach a completed National
Register Criteria Statement form.