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1970's |
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Ann and Nick Abraham bought it in 1982 (she was Louis Attick’s daughter). It is located on Spring Street. A cupola and 4 chimneys top the roof. The concrete walls of the house, now an apartment building, are about 12 inches thick. Jose Nunez acquired the home in 2004 after the Abrahams’ deaths and it fell into disrepair. In 2015 the city planned to purchase and repair the octagon house. The Western Connecticut State University had a library exhibit on octagon houses in 2015.
News-Times, The (Danbury, CT), William E. Devlin NEWS-TIMES CORRESPONDENT
Monday, August 23, 2004
Located at 21 Spring St., listed on the National Register of Historic Places, has been sold by the family that held it for more than 75 years and it is getting a facelift.
After decades in the Attick and Abraham families, the eight-sided house was purchased as an investment this spring by Jose Nunez, a Danbury resident who has a travel business in New York. The selling price was $246,000, according to City Hall records.
For now, workmen are "putting everything the same as it was" on the old house, says Nunez. That includes patching leaks and putting in new woodwork on the Victorian-era verandas.
Nunez says he is not sure at this point if he'll rent it, sell it or live in it.
Spring Street was not even there when John Earle had the house built in 1853. For the first few years of its existence the house stood back from Elm Street.
Earle was a plumber and steamfitter at a time when Danbury hat firms were undergoing a boom and building the city's first big factories. Earle was probably busy and doing pretty well in 1853. All of those new factories were powered by steam engines with complicated piping and water supply systems which would have required the skills of someone like him.
The house is a reminder of a fad started by an author named Orson Fowler, who believed that eight-sided buildings were healthier and more affordable. The arrangement, he believed, created more space and provided more light. His 1848 book, "The Octagon House: A Home For All," was a best-seller of his day, and more than a thousand of the homes were built across the country.
Today they're rare. A list compiled by an architectural historian in 1983 found only 13 octagon homes in Connecticut.
Earle seems to have had the Spring Street house constructed straight from Fowler's book. The four rooms on each floor are eight-sided like the house, with fifteen-foot ceilings and odd pie-shaped closets, an innovation at that time. A spiral staircase through the house's center begins in the basement and rises all the way to a cupola on the roof that provides light to the interior and views of the city.
The home's thick walls are of concrete - Fowler called it "gravel wall construction" and believed it to be stronger and cheaper than wood or brick. The basement is at ground level. Three stories of wide verandas with light Victorian scrollwork posts surround the house.
The neighborhood that grew up around the Octagon House on Spring and Elm Streets was full of hatters who worked at nearby factories. In time, the local Yankees who built its first houses were replaced by wave after wave of immigrants who worked at the same hat and fur factories - Italians, Greeks, Slovaks, Lebanese and Syrians.
In 1925, one of those Lebanese families, hatters and brothers Albert and Louis Attick, acquired the Octagon House.
In 1980 Danbury businessman Nicholas Attick, Albert's son, lost the property to foreclosure.
But at the bank's auction in 1982, the house was purchased by his cousin, Ann Abraham and her husband Nick. She was Louis Attick's daughter and had grown up next door.
"My father and mother both wanted to keep it in the family," says Fred Abraham, their son. "We didn't know if it would be torn down or what would happen to it."
The couple repaired and did some renovations to the historic building that year.
"The place meant a lot to both my parents," says Abraham. But during the last couple of years the house needed more and more work, and the decision was made last year to put it on the market. "It was a real heartbreaker for us to let it go," says Abraham.
Ann Abraham died of lung cancer on June 29. On trips to the hospital for chemotherapy, Fred Abraham says, they would pass through Spring Street to see the progress being made by Nunez' crew.
"My mother was very encouraged," her son says. "She was happy."
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1905 - hospital staff |
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March 5, 1899 |
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Shows the original porch. |
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2002 photo - front. |
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April, 2006 - front. |
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As it looked until about 2005. |
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