HomeMy WebLinkAboutmarrett-road_0039 FORM B -BUILDING Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
L EX.610
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION 31163B
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD Town/City: LEXINGTON
BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Place: (neighborhood or village): East Lexington
Photograph
=_ Address: Imarrett Road
Historic Name: Richard Gleason Tower House
Uses: Present: Lexington Masonic Headquarters
Original: single-family residence
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' Date of Construction: 1905
Source:
Style/Form: Colonial Revival
Architect/Builder: Fehmer and Page
Exterior Material:
1984 photo Foundation:
W all/Trim:
Locus Map Roof:
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures:
large carriage house(190 1) (LEX.611)
Major Alterations(with dates):
Enlarged with office addition (2000)
Condition: Good
Moved: no® yes ❑ Date:
Acreage: 10.3 acres
Setting:
Recorded by: MHC,adopted from LEX.516 (1984)
Organization:
Date(month/year): June 2014
12112 Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for completing this form.
INVENTORY FORM B CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON VMARRETT
RD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD,BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02I25
LEX.610
❑Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places,
c hecked you must attach a completed,atioual Register Criteria Statement farm.
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.
The Richard Tower House is a two-story Colonial Revival structure, rendered in brick with decorative tiles set in the fagade.A tall
semi-circular portico is the focal point of the fagade.
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.
See attached 2093 update
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES
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1901 Carriage house(LEX.611)
Continuation sheet 1
LEX.610
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INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET C inzty: Form No
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MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL. CUVISSION I,e :'ngten -��-
Office of the Secretary, Bostcm
Property Nam: 33 Marrett Road
Indicate each item on inventory form which is being continued below.
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Masonic Headquarters Building, Fehmer and Page, Architects
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Stp:-le to Inventory form at b--tom
INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET Town Property Address
LEXINGTON 39 MEIRRETT RD
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD 610
BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS 02125
Richard Gleason Tower House/Lexington Masonic Headquarters(Leg.610)
(formerly part of National Heritage Museum(Lex,516))
HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE:
The brick building once used as a Masonic headquarters was constructed in 1905 for Richard Gleason Tower(1857-
1921),youngest child of William Augustus Tower(1824-1904). On August 19, 1905,the Lexington Minute-Man
reported that"Mr.Richard Tower's new house,on Middle Street,not far from his old home,is commenced, inasmuch as
Mr.Bartlett Harrington will build the cellar and John Daley,with men, is making the necessary excavation". Tower's
previous home had been destroyed by fire. A few months later,Richard Tower married Henrietta Lockwood(Minute-
Man,Oct. 7, 1905).
The Richard Tower House was designed by Boston architects Fehmer and Page(Carl Fehmer and Samuel F.Page). Carl
Fehmer was born in Germany in 1835.He immigrated to the U.S.with his mother and siblings in 1852 and attended
public school in Boston. He received training in the office of prominent Boston architect George Snell for eight years
before beginning an architectural practice some time during the 1860s. He performed all of the architectural work for the
Massachusetts General Hospital for 25 years and later designed a number of buildings for the McLean Hospital as well as
a number of Back Bay houses and lesser numbers of residences in Brookline,Easton,and Weston. Fehmer was a charter
member of the Boston Society of Architects. The firm of Fehmer and Page formed about 1890. Fehmer died in Boston in
1917.
The mansion contains many of its original features, including a grand living room with fireplace.It is sited next to a
wooded area on the western side with steep slopes and a retaining wall terraces the main entrance to the building from a
parking lot near the property line to the adjoining museum.
The Richard Tower House was substantially enlarged by the construction of a modern office addition in 2000. Designed
by Flansburgh Architects,the addition consists of two 2-story wings on either side of a central entrance/atrium. The
building has brick exterior walls and slate roofing;the interior of the south wing features premium wood finishes and a
fully equipped conference room.The north wing was primarily used for classroom space and is more utilitarian in its
design and materials. Taken together,the mansion and addition comprise 17,840 square feet of officelfunction space.
The 10.3 acre complex also includes a 5,260 square foot two-level carriage house,built in 1901 and used primarily for
storage. The lower level still contains its original horse stalls. Also on the property is a gambrel-roofed,wood frame
home on Marrett Road,consisting of 3,494 square feet.
The Tower property was purchased by the Scottish Rite Masons in April, 1968,for use as their regional headquarters; in
1973 the adjacent land was purchased,and in 1975 the National Heritage Museum was constructed on the site. The Town
of Lexington purchased the Mansion and its modern addition,the Carriage House,and surrounding grounds(but not the
Marrett Road house),totaling 9.94 acres,in March,2013,to be converted into a Community Center. The Community
Center was purchased on December 5,2013 and formally opened to the public on October 17,2015.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Lexington Minute Man,Aug. 19, 1905; Oct. 7, 1905.
Massachusetts Historical Commission,MACRIS database.
www.bosarchitecture.com
http://en.wikipedia.org
Narrative Appraisal Report and Valuation Analysis dated January 3,2013,prepared for the Town of Lexington by Avery
Associates
Appraisal Report dated October 2,2012.Prepared for the Town of Lexington by The Foster Appraisal and Consulting
Company,Inc.,updated by Amending Letter dated February 19,2013.
Supplement prepared by:
Lisa Mausolf, Feb. 2009
Updated by
Marilyn Fenollosa,November,2015
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Photo by Flansburgh
Architects