HomeMy WebLinkAboutcrescent-hill-avenue_0012 FORM B BUILDING Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
0 0 2215
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION 20/5
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD Town/City: Lexington
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Place: (neighborhood or village):
Photograph
Address: 12 Crescent Hill Avenue
Historic Name:
* Uses: Present: residential
Original: residential
f Date of Construction: ca. 1898-1906
Source: historic maps, town directories
Style/Form: Queen Anne/Colonial Revival
..� Architect/Builder:
Exterior Material:
Foundation: fieldstone
Front(facade) and right side elevations. Wall/Trim: artificial siding and trim
Locus Map Roof- asphalt shingles
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
�� ry _ ., , ■� None
r ,r Major Alterations (with dates):
Artificial siding (L 20th c). replacement windows (L 20th-E
„ tp 20-221St c), rear addition (mid 20th c.)
. 10,06
97
Condition: good
Moved: no ❑ yes ❑ Date:
° 5 Acreage: 0.17
y, ~'�G� N `•`' r 0tHSetting� Residential subdivision dominated b earl 2
20-
z¢s century houses similar to each other in scale, style, and
7.500 -aS `• setting. Houses set close together with modest setbacks,
sidewalks with planting strips, and street trees on both
sides.
Recorded by: Wendy Frontiero
Organization: Lexington Historical Commission
Date (month/year): September 2015
12/12 Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 12 CRESCENT HILL AVE.
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD,BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125
0 2215
❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places.
If checked,you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form.
Use as much space as necessary to complete the following entries, allowing text to flow onto additional continuation sheets.
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION:
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of this building in terms of other buildings within the community.
12 Crescent Hill Avenue is located on a small lot near the top of a low hill. Generally flat, the property is raised above the
sloping level of the street with a fieldstone retaining wall, which is partially parged. The yard is maintained chiefly in lawn, with
foundation plantings and an asphalt-paved walk between the street and the front entrance. A narrow paved driveway is located
to the right of the house.
The roughly L-shaped main block of the house rises 2 '/2 stories from a fieldstone foundation to a front gable roof. A one-bay
deep appendage with a shed roof extends across the back (east)of the building. One interior chimney rises from the left slope
of the main roof, near the center. Walls are clad with artificial siding and trim. Windows are typically 6/6 double hung
replacement sash, without trim. The asymmetrical fagade (west) elevation contains an offset entrance and paired windows on
the first floor and two individual windows asymmetrically set on the second floor, and one window centered in the pedimented
half-story. The front entrance is composed of a rectangular porch with a hip roof, turned posts, a low wood railing with thick
square balusters, concrete steps, and a single-leaf, period door with wood panels and one large, square glass pane.
The left (north) side elevation contains one window bay on the main block. A two-story hip roof ell at the back has one 6/6
window facing the street at the second story, and modern awning windows with transoms at the corner of the first floor. The
irregular right(south) elevation has three windows on the first floor, one at an intermediate level, and one towards the back of
the second floor. A small shed-roofed dormer on this elevation has a one window. The shed-roofed addition has one window at
each of its ends.
Well-maintained, 12 Crescent Hill Avenue has lost important original trim but remains a good example of turn of the 20th century
suburban middle class housing. It is notable for its pedimented front-gable fagade, ornamental entrance porch, distinctive
vertical massing, and relatively large scale in a subdivision of mostly smaller and more compact houses.
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.
Crescent Hill Avenue is part of a turn of the 20th century subdivision off Lowell Street, adjacent to the Arlington town line. Lowell
Street appears to have originated as a Native American trail that was developed as an important transportation corridor in the
Colonial period. A new regional turnpike system radiating from Boston was established in the early 19th century; Lowell Street
formed part of the Middlesex Turnpike (ca. 1806), which extended from Cambridge to Tyngsborough and the New Hampshire
border. This peripheral area of East Lexington remained mostly agricultural and sparsely developed through the early 20th
century, however. The Great Meadow marshlands occupy an extensive area bordered by Lowell Street to the east, the Arlington
town line to the south, the railroad to the west, and Maple Street to the north.
Crescent Hill Avenue is part of a subdivision also known as Crescent Hill, which was laid out between 1875 and 1898, under the
ownership of Thomas Elder"et al" in the latter year. Its grid of streets sprawls across the town line into Arlington; its many small
lots were apparently intended for modest suburban housing, although there was no street railway service along Lowell Street.
Hugh Thomas Elder(1844-1902)worked as a printer and later foreman for the Boston Herald. He was active in union
organizing, political activities, and the development of cooperative banks, "eventually becoming a prosperous... real estate
agent' in Arlington Heights. (Stevens: 5)
Continuation sheet I
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 12 CRESCENT HILL AVE.
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD,BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125
0 2215
12 Crescent Hill Avenue first appears on the historic maps between 1898 and 1906, although its footprint in the latter year is not
an exact match to the present. Alfred Crosby is the first known owner and resident of the property; he is identified here in 1906.
Born in England, Crosby was a furniture maker and repairer. He lived in the house with his wife Sarah, also born in England,
and their four children at least through 1922. Subsequent residents included John Podmore, a book finisher, his wife Adeline,
and a grown daughter, a clerk (1935). For many years afterward, the house was occupied by the Harvey family, consisting of
Russell (insulation business and carpenter), his wife Marjory, and at various times their four sons (including a member of the
Marines, a draftsman, sheet metal worker, and meteorologist) and a daughter-in-law(1945, 1955, 1965).
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
Historic maps and atlases: Walling 1853; Beers 1875; Walker 1889; Stadly 1898; Walker 1906; Sanborn 1908, 1918, 1927,
1935, 1935/1950.
Lexington Directories: 1899, 1908-09, 1922, 1934, 1936
Lexington List of Persons: 1935, 1945, 1955, 1965.
Massachusetts Historical Commission. "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report: Lexington." 1980.
Stevens, Doreen and Aimee Taberner and Sarah Burks. Arlington's Cultural Heights: 1900-1925. [Arlington, Mass.:] Arlington
Historical Society and Cyrus Dallin Art Museum, 2013.
U.S. Census: 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930.
SUPPLEMENTARY IMAGES
,w
■
Left side and front (facade) elevations
Continuation sheet 2
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON 12 CRESCENT HILL AvE.
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD,BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125
2215
Continuation sheet 3