HomeMy WebLinkAbouthill-street_0050 FORM B -BUILDING
Assessor's number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
57/112A Boston N. 1070
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Town Lexington
Place (neighborhood or village)
Address 50 Hill Street
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• Historic Name George and Alta Walker House
Uses: Present Residential
Original Residential
t " Date of Construction 1902
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1. � Source Lexington Valuation Lists
Style/Form Colonial Revival
�t F Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
Foundation fieldstone
Wall/Trim wood clapboard
Roof asphalt shingle
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
garage, shed
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Major Alterations (with dates) date? -rear additon,
some modern windows
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Condition good
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32
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Moved ® no ❑ yes Date
Acreage 138,956 SF
Recorded by Lisa Mausolf Setting located off long window drive, not visible from
Organization Lexington Historical Commission street
Date (month/year)
Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
BUILDING FORM (50 Hill Street)
ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION
Describe architectural features. Evaluate the characteristics of the building in terms of other buildings within the
community.
Setback from the road by a long winding drive, 50 Hill Street is a two-story, clapboarded Colonial Revival structure
constructed in 1902. The 3 x 2-bay main block is capped by an asphalt-shingled hip roof pierced by two tall interior brick
chimneys. On the facade,the second story overhangs the lower level slightly with brackets at the ends. A wide frieze caps
the first floor. The central bay on the second story consists of a boxed like projection which rests on the roof of the entrance
porch. Set above wooden steps the entrance porch is supported by paired Roman Doric columns which support a wide frieze
with a single triglyph with guttae and modillion block with incised holes located at each end. A dentil molding further
embellishes the porch cornice. Underneath the porch the center entrance contains a two-panel door with sidelights and a
semi-elliptical fanlight filled with leaded glass. The entrance displays a fluted surround and dentil molding and flanking
pilasters with the adjacent wall consisting of recessed panels.
On either side of the entrance porch there is a tripartite window consisting of a single pane window flanked by 4/1 sash and
shutters. Above the entrance is another tripartite unit,this time featuring a 6/1 sash flanked by leaded tracery. Simple 6/1
windows fill the remaining facade bays. A hip-roofed dormer rises from the front roof slope and is fronted by a wooden
geometric balustrade.
A secondary entrance is located on the left side of the house which is two bays deep with 6/1 and modern tripartite windows.
The iaised entrance is fronted by a concrete stoop and capped by a shallow,hip-roofed overhang supported by small
bracyets. The right side elevation is three-bays deep. At the rear is a two-story,hip-roofed addition resting on a concrete
foundation with an exterior brick chimney. The side entrance has a hip roof and Roman Doric columns.
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE
Describe 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 was constructed in 1902 for George and Alta Walker. George Walker was the editor of Boston Commercial.
Local assessors records indicate that in 1902 Alta Walker owned seven acres of pasture. By the time of the 1903 assessment,
a house valued at$5000 had been constructed on the property. By 1912 a garage had been added. George Walker served on
the school committee from 1907 to 1910.
John and Ida Cranston rurchased the property prior to 1922 and continued to own it until 1948. He was employed as an
inspector for the Street Railway. Svend and Virginia Nielsen sold the property to Arthur Ruge in 1951, who sold it to the
present owners in 1977. The owners have copies of the original drawings for the house although the name of the architect has
been lost.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
InVrview with Claire Bertucci,August 2000.
Ldington Assessors Records.
Le.�ington Directories, various dates.
Lexington Valuation Lists, various dates.
Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked,you must attached a completed
National Register Criteria Statement form.