HomeMy WebLinkAboutmassachusetts-avenue_0109 FORM B - BUILDING
Assessor's Number USGS Quad Area(s) Form Number
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION 10013000412 Boston N. L_J 634
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD Town Lexington
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 0212$ Place (neighborhood or village)
1
I Address 109 Massachusetts Ave.
Historic Name Locke/Alderman House
IUses: Present Commercial (offices)
Original Residential
Date of Construction 18th century
Source Interior inspection
Style/Form Georgian (altered)
Architect/Builder
Exterior Material:
Foundation Granite
Wall/Trim Aluminum Siding
Roof Asphalt Shingle
Outbuildings/Secondary Structures
Major Alterations(with dates)
•aa- N Italianate details added (ca. 1868-1870)
Roof line(194 8)
Rear addition, second story porch (dates unknown)
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K9 Condition Fair
G� Z_
Mks5. hVfc. Moved ® no ❑ yes Date
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Acreage 0.1 A.
Setting On a major street with commercial buildings on
Recorded by Nancy S. Seasholes this side and residences opposite
Organization Lexington Historical Commission
Date(month/year) April 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.
109 Massachusetts Ave. is a Georgian house that retains its center chimney but has lost most of its architectural integrity. The
house is rectangular,two stories, five-by-two bays, and hip roofed with a center chimney. It is set on a granite foundation, clad
with aluminum siding, and roofed with asphalt shingles. A one-story three-by-one bay gabled rear addition is set on a concrete
block and fieldstone foundation. The center entrance is under a gabled hood supported by turned posts with curved brackets; there
is a separate entrance in the rear addition. Windows are 6/6 double hung sash. A projecting second-story porch supported by
posts is on the west elevation. In the basement massive beams and large floor joists are visible as is the brick arch that supports
the center chimney. On either side of this arch are a number of brick piers with wooden shelves set into the bricks, suggesting that
these shelves date from the original construction of the house. No other original interior finishes appear to have survived.
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.
It is not clear when this house was built nor by whom. Deed research indicates that Joshua Russell owned it in 1809 when he sold
a half interest in the property to a Job Hill, but it is not clear if this is the house listed for Joshua Russell in the Direct Tax of
1798. In any event,the arch under the center chimney strongly suggests the house was built in the 18th century, and historical
photographs show that it originally had a side-gabled roof. In 1812 Russell and Hill sold the property to Micajah Locke(1786-
1842), who came to Lexington from a part of West Cambridge that is now in Winchester. Locke acquired a large farm along what
is now Massachusetts Ave. in East Lexington and Arlington and was also in the"meal business." Meal dealers reportedly
delivered ground corn meal on a regular route in Boston, much as "milk men"delivered their milk. After distributing the day's
load of meal, the dealers would buy unground corn at the docks in Boston and take it to one of the three grist mills in West
Cambridge (now Arlington)to be ground for the next day's deliveries.
After Micajah Locke's death, the house was owned by his widow and then sold in 1858 to a Timothy Eaton of West Cambridge.
It may have been Eaton who"Italianated"the house, for its assessed value almost doubled between 1867 and 1870 and a ca. 1923
photograph shows it with a center gable. (The 1923 photo also shows the present gabled entry hood with its turned posts and
brackets.) In 1871 Eaton sold the house to Franklin Alderman (1829-1900),who had come to Lexington about 1858 and first
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES ® see continuation sheet
Bryant, Albert W. "Lexington Sixty Years Ago." Proceedings of Lexington Historical Society 2 (1900): 21-22.Middlesex
Registry of Deeds. Deeds. Cambridge, MA. 199: 151, 316; 797: 587; 1166: 584.
Church, Burr. Photograph Collection. Lexington Historical Society, Lexington, MA.
Direct Tax of 1798.
Hudson, Charles. History of the Town of Lexington. Revised and continued to 1912 by the Lexington Historical Society.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1913. 2: 378, 11.
Lexington Valuation Lists. 1862-1870.
❑ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked,you must attach a completed National
Register Criteria Statement form.
INVENTORY FORM CONTINUATION SHEET Town Property Address
Lexington 109 Massachusetts Ave.
MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area(s) Form No.
MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING
220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD 634
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125
HISTORICAL NARRATIVE (continued)
lived in the house at 18 Independence Ave. (MHC#644)where he ran a butchering business. When he moved to this
house he went into the business of buying, selling,and boarding horses,which he pastured near Great Meadow. Worthen
describes Mr. Alderman as "short, stout,florid, and excitable" and very argumentative at town meeting. The Alderman
family owned this house into the 20th century. An 1898 map shows the house with an series of rear ells connecting it with
the barn,which is now detached and a separate property at 3 Bow St. (MHC#635). The present rear ell was reportedly
built in the 1940s as a dance hall. On March 1, 1948,a fire destroyed the old side-gabled roof, which was then replaced
with the present hip one.
BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES (continued)
Worthen, Edwin B. Tracing the Past in Lexington, Massachusetts. New York: Vantage Press, 1998. 68.
Stadley, George W. & Co. Atlas of the Towns of Watertown, Belmont, Arlington and Lexington, Middlesex County,
Massachusetts. Boston: George W. Stadley &Co., 1898. Pl. 32.
Lexington Minute-man. 4 March 1948.
Douglas Touart, personal communication 1998.