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HomeMy WebLinkAboutarea-aw Follow Massachusetts Historical Commission Survey Manual instructions for comple ting this form. FORM A - AREA MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION MASSACHUSETTS ARCHIVES BUILDING 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Photograph Assessor’s Sheets USGS Quad Area Letter Form Numbers in Area 51 Boston North AW Town: Lexington Place (neighborhood or village): Name of Area: Wellington Estates Present Use: residential Construction Dates or Period: 1940-1950 Overall Condition: fair to good Major Intrusions and Alterations: Acreage: approx. 5 acres Recorded by: Lisa Mausolf Organization: Lexington Historical Commission Date (month/year): March 2010 Topographic or Assessor's Map _x__ see continuation sheet INVENTORY FORM A CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON WELLINGTON ESTATES MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area Letter Form Nos. 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Continuation sheet 1 AW INVENTORY FORM A CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON WELLINGTON ESTATES MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area Letter Form Nos. 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Continuation sheet 2 AW ___ Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, you must attach a completed National Register Criteria Statement form. ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION Describe architectural, structural and landscape features and evaluate in terms of other areas within the community. The Revolutionary Road/Constitution Road (Wellington Estates) neighborhood in Lexington is notable for containing a cluster of Royal Barry Wills Cape Cod-style and Colonial dwellings dating from about 1940 to 1950. The curvilinear subdivision is located just east of Rt. 128 and north of Massachusetts Avenue and is divided into small lots containing about a third of an acre. The modest single-family dwellings are constructed in several variations including 1 !-story, side-gabled Cape Cod buildings with three and five bay facades, with and without gable dormers. Several of the houses (1 Constitution Road, 2663 Massachusetts Avenue, 7 Paul Revere Road and 3 Revolutionary Road) are capped by gambrel roofs. The most interesting variation on the Cape Cod theme is the house at 2 Constitution Road which has a bowed roof line and corner quoins. The house at 2685 Massachusetts Avenue is a singular example of a Garrison Colonial. Common features include large off-center brick chimneys, 8/12 double-hung windows, the tops of which are tucked under the front eaves and clapboarded exteriors which extend nearly to the ground. Most of the houses have mudroom wings and/or shed/garages sheathed in vertical boards. In a few cases the buildings have been sheathed in vinyl or aluminum siding. Several of the houses including 4 Constitution Road have seen later additions or substantial alterations. There are also several instances of recent infill including 2643 Massachusetts Avenue and 6 Paul Revere Road. The houses on Revolutionary Road, Constitution Road and Paul Revere Road constitute the largest concentration of Royal Barry Wills’ designs in Lexington but are by no means his only local designs. Other Wills’ designs include the James Barrington House at 39 Meriam Street (1938), the John Rich house at 43 Woodland Road (1941) The firm also designed the Pilgrim Congregational Church (1960), the Russell Square Condos (1973), and Potter Pond Condos (1980). HISTORICAL NARRATIVE Explain historical development of the area. Discuss how this relates to the historical development of the community. The area including Revolutionary Road and parts of Constitution Road, Massachusetts Avenue, Ross Road and Paul Revere Road was originally laid out as “Wellington Estates” in 1937 by the Ross Realty Corporation although construction did not begin until 1941. The subdivision plan (Plan number 294 of 1941) shows that it was laid out adjacent to the “proposed circumferential highway” which would become Rt. 128. The neighborhood reflects an early local phase of the Cape Cod house construction that intensified in Lexington during the post-World War II building boom. As was typical of the era, many of the original owners were young families where the husband was the breadwinner (occupations included engineer, salesman, bank teller) and the wife stayed home with the children. The subdivision includes approximately seventeen houses which were designed for Ross Realty by Royal Barry Wills (1895- 1962), preeminent Boston architect and master of the Cape Cod style house in its mid 20th century incarnation. Royal Barry Wills grew up in Melrose and graduated from MIT in 1918. After working as a design engineer with the Turner Construction Company from 1919 to 1925, Wills opened an architectural office in Boston in 1925 which he maintained until his death in 1962. His office specialized in small house design including traditional two-story, central hall houses and two-story, garrison houses but became especially well known for their Cape Cod cottages. The houses were set low to the ground with eaves just above the windows. Other character-defining features included an oversized central chimney and a roof pitch that ranged from 8 inches to 10 inches vertically, in twelve inches of run. The sash were made up of from twenty-four to thirty-six individual lights, and clapboards were graduated from a 2 "-inch exposure at the foundation to a typical 4-inch that was continued from top of window sill to eaves. INVENTORY FORM A CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON WELLINGTON ESTATES MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area Letter Form Nos. 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Continuation sheet 3 AW Wills’ simple designs met with considerable success. Between 1935 and 1942 he won awards in more than two dozen design competitions including those sponsored by Pencil Points, House Beautiful, Better Homes and Gardens and Ladies’ Home Journal. In 1938 Life magazine selected him as one of eight architects (four modern and four traditional) to prepare home designs for families in four income categories. In the category for families with $5,000 to $6,000 income, Wills’ traditional design competed against a modern design by Frank Lloyd Wright. The selected family in the article chose the Wills house over the Wright design and subsequently the home was built in Edina, Minnesota. In 1940-1 (the same year these houses on Constitution Road were constructed), Royal Barry Wills wrote three books on architecture that were widely read and publicized in both the popular and professional architectural press. By 1946 over a half million copies of his books had been sold and Life Magazine declared him the nation’s most popular architectural author. Royal Barry Wills went on to win a number of national contests and was also featured in the Saturday Evening Post. He received a Certificate of Honor from the Massachusetts State Association of Architects in 1949 and a fellowship in the American Institute of Architects in 1954. BIBLIOGRAPHY and/or REFERENCES Gebhard, David. “Royal Barry Wills and the Colonial Revival”, Winterhur Portfolio, 1992. Middlesex South Registry of Deeds, Cambridge, Mass. (Plan 294 of 1941) Royal Barry Wills Associates, Communication with Richard Wills, Dec. 2009. See also firm website http://www.royalbarrywills.com INVENTORY FORM A CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON WELLINGTON ESTATES MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area Letter Form Nos. 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Continuation sheet 4 AW Area AW Wellington Estates (Ross Realty/Royal Barry Wills Area) MHC # Name of Original Owner if known Address Form/Style Est. Date 1835 1 Constitution Road Gambrel Cape 1941 1836 Donald Harter House 2 Constitution Road Bowed Cape 1941 1837 3 Constitution Road Cape Cod 1941 1838 4 Constitution Road Cape Cod 1940 1839 5 Constitution Road Cape Cod 1946 1840 7 Constitution Road Cape Cod 1946 1841 2627 Massachusetts Avenue Cape Cod 1940 1842 Roland Hill House 2663 Massachusetts Avenue Gambrel Cape 1940 1843 2685 Massachusetts Avenue Garrison Colonial 1941 1844 Marvin Bock House 5 Paul Revere Road Cape Cod 1941 1845 Elliot Worcester House 7 Paul Revere Road Gambrel Cape 1941 1846 10 Paul Revere Road Cape Cod 1942 1847 12 Paul Revere Road Cape Cod 1942 1848 Alton Hathaway House 1 Revolutionary Road Cape Cod 1941 1849 3 Revolutionary Road Gambrel Cape c.1950 1850 4 Revolutionary Road Cape Cod c.1950 1851 5 Revolutionary Road Cape Cod c.1950 1852 6 Revolutionary Road Cape Cod c.1950 INVENTORY FORM A CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON WELLINGTON ESTATES MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area Letter Form Nos. 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Continuation sheet 5 AW 10 Paul Revere Road 12 Paul Revere Road INVENTORY FORM A CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON WELLINGTON ESTATES MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area Letter Form Nos. 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Continuation sheet 6 AW 2 Constitution Road INVENTORY FORM A CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON WELLINGTON ESTATES MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area Letter Form Nos. 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Continuation sheet 7 AW 1 Revolutionary Road 2627 Massachusetts Avenue 2663 Massachusetts Avenue INVENTORY FORM A CONTINUATION SHEET LEXINGTON WELLINGTON ESTATES MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL COMMISSION Area Letter Form Nos. 220 MORRISSEY BOULEVARD, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02125 Continuation sheet 8 AW 2685 Massachusetts Avenue