Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1900 |
||
1879 |
||
1884 |
||
1922 |
1900 |
1905 |
1880 |
1970 |
1919 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
c1975 |
c1975 - carriage houe. |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1990 |
2013 |
|
2013 |
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1910 |
September 17, 1917 |
|
1880 |
1882 |
|
1917 |
1970 |
1970 - watercolor |
1970 |
1889 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1876 |
2017 |
|
1876 |
1893 |
|
1895 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
"It was built by two brothers, Orange and George Stearns around the time of the civil war. It is made with poured concrete. The walls are well over a foot thick. I do not know if there is any reinforcement, probably not. At the time it was built, the people in the town called it the mud house, because they did not know about cement and thought it would fall down in the first rain storm. At one point in time it had a railing around the roof and the owners kept bees.
It has a triangular chimney which also serves as a structural support in the center of the house. I tried to draw a floor plan, but it was not accurate, so I did not include it. It actually has some closet space, which is unusual for houses of that time period, although its possible that they were added at some time after initial construction. There are no square angles in the house making the floor plan hard to draw from memory. At one point in time it was divided into a 2 family but it has since been converted back to a single family house. It had significant renovation in the 80s with new wiring, plumbing, bathrooms and kitchen and removal of the asbestos shingles. The exterior was then finished with stucco."
Old hexagon houses are quite rare. Only a half dozen are known here. The appeal and promotion of octagon houses did not seem to extend to hexagon houses.
The current owner supplies the following photographs. As can be seen in
the 1978 photo, the stucco is actually white, although it appears pink in
many of the photographs.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
About 1945 |
1978 |
Orange Scott Sterns c1861 |
George Fredric Sterns - undated. |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1876 |
||
1911 |
1871 |
|
1893 |
||
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1911 |
||
1871 |
1881 |
1980 |
1888 |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1871 |
1885 |
1891 |
1889 |
1899 |
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1895 |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1875 |
1895 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1895 |
1895 |
1871 |
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Inspiration for the house. |
Historical information. |
Historical information. |
1897 |
1894 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1896 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1877 |
1877 |
|
History. | ||
1872 |
||
c1975 |
||
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1946 |
August 2, 1919 |
|
Pierson clan. |
Pierson biography May 21, 1910 |
Recorder Gazette January 4, 1957 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1877 |
||
August 23, 2001 |
November, 2015 |
|
March 20, 1920. |
1914 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1852 |
April 5, 1852 |
1885 |
1905 |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1889 |
1881 |
|
1915 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1875 |
|||
1894 |
1870 |
1889 |
1895 - porch added. |
1895 |
1917 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1870 |
1875 |
1894 |
1912 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1886 |
1929 |
October 5, 1939 |
1873 |
1943 |
|
1887 |
1890 |
|
1969 |
1973 |
|
1892 |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Circa 1955. |
||
1875 |
1895 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1876 |
1896 |
|
1906 |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1870 |
1876 |
1906 |
1924 |
1936 |
1930 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1889 |
||
2019 |
1920 td> |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1874 |
1903 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Pre 1908 |
1908 |
|
1895 |
1900 |
1903 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
2012 |
2012 |
2012 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
January 22, 1854 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left side. |
Front view. |
Right front. |
Front - new paint scheme. |
Right front - new paint scheme. |
Left side. |
Back stairs. |
Cellar carriage door. |
Second set of stairs. |
Contemporary drawing. |
1878 |
|
1875 |
1906 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1970 |
||
1868 |
1875 |
1906 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1979 or before. |
||
1878 |
1875 |
|
1906 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1889 |
1875 |
1917 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
c1950 |
2013 |
c1979 |
1875 |
||
March 13, 1921 |
||
1917 |
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
2013 |
||
1886 |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1921 - altered |
1875 |
|
1898 |
1889 |
1886 - shows both houses. |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1889 |
1875 |
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1888 |
2014 |
|
1898 |
2021 |
|
2021 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1882 |
1876 |
1888 |
1892 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1876 |
1876 |
1888 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on some of the images below for larger versions.
1885 |
||
2013 |
||
1874 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1981 or before. |
1911 or before. |
|
1879 |
1903 |
|
1937 |
1915 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Taken in September, 2009. |
1970s photograph. |
Undated. |
2009 satellite image. |
1870 |
|
Kitchen area |
||
Full height windows for porch access in the summer. |
||
Floor place - a root cellar is below the kitchen area. |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1903 |
||
1962 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1930's photograph. |
2012 |
||
2012 |
|||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
A 1908 Boston Globe article states the following:
Out in Jamaica Plain is a most peculiar and interesting house. It is dodecagonal in shape — or, in other words, has 12 sides. The odd dwelling is located at 17 Cranston St. Cranston St., formerly known as Terrace Ave., is a short street, the only exits of which are onto Sheridan St. Two of the three exits are so steep that to drive a horse and vehicle through them is an extremely hazardous undertaking. The remaining outlet is an excellent piece of roadway.
The house is on the topmost part of an eminence known some years ago, and still called by the older residents, Cedar Hill. When it was built there were but few structures on the hill, which was at that time covered with cedar trees. The district is now thickly settled, and the cedar trees have disappeared with but few exceptions. The house is owned by Mrs. N.K. Rich of Salem, who speaks of it as her “castle.” It is occupied by Mr. and Mrs. George J. Alpers, with their four children.
About 40 years ago two brothers from Scotland began the erection of a dwelling, which they intended should be used for their bachelor apartments. That they were expert carpenters and builders of the old school who were able to do their own architectural work is proven by the skill and genius with which the construction was carried on. The house stands today as a monument to their ability, but is a nameless memorial, as nobody can recall their names.
Before the house was completed it is said that the Scotsmen became involved in financial difficulties and lost their all, including their long-cherished bachelor apartments. It was their intention to build a reproduction of an old Scotch castle.
They first pitched a tent on the property, and lived in it until the building was sufficiently completed to allow occupancy. The excavation for the foundation was of the most arduous kind, as they were obliged to blast and cut a way into solid ledge. There is evidence in the cellar of their extremely hard task.
About 30 feet from the foundation at the rear is a precipitous drop of over 50 feet, where thousands of tons of rock have been removed from a quarry which was in operation until a few years ago. The quarry faced Paul Gore St. and the back wall, with the houses apparently on its uppermost edge, is over 100 feet from the street.
The view of the dodecagonal house from Paul Gore St. in an excellent one, as it is the only way that a person can get a clear conception of the plan of the exterior, there being portions of three sections in sight.
On the very edge of the quarry wall is a shed, which was almost dislodged by the blasting and gives the appearance of being ready to tumble over the edge at the least provocation. Added to the labor of digging the foundation was that of making a cistern, which was also blasted out of the solid ledge. It is still in existence, but not in use.
An interesting incident is told about the condition of the water supply on top of Cedar Hill about the time West Roxbury was made a part of Boston. The only water on Cranston St., then Terrace Ave., was that stored in the cisterns, and the residents depended on rain to keep up the supply. Shortly after the taking over of the town by Boston a drought occurred, and the residents on the hill were soon without water.
After strenuous efforts permission was obtained from the Boston Fire Department to use the fire engine in the district to replenish the supply by pumping from the nearest hydrants, which were located on Sheridan St. The residents were assessed for the use of the engine, and were much exercised because the day after the engine replenished their supply a very heavy rain occurred and overflowed their already filled cisterns.
The house is really three hexagons built together. One section consists from cellar to roof of basement kitchen, living room and rear chamber; another section, dining room, parlor and front chamber, while the third contains the cellar, stairs and halls, two small alcove rooms and bathroom.
The interior of the first section is circular in shape, with winding stairs and innumerable small closets in every conceivable space. The walls, being from 12 to 20 inches thick and of wood, afford good opportunity for closets, which are not to be found in any of the rooms.
There are two chimneys running through this section that are peculiar to build inasmuch as they are separated entirely from the walls, thereby allowing space for bathroom and two alcove rooms, also large clothes closets. One of these small rooms is used for a sewing room and the other as a nursery.
The front door is also in this part of the house. It is in two parts, swinging inwardly when opened and when closed completes the angle and hexagonal design of the exterior of the house. Winding stairs connect front hall and rooms, both above and below. Even the doors leading from the hall are curved, to complete the circular effect inside. The cellar is in this section, but is rather small and the fuel supply is about all it will hold.
In the other two sections are to be found the six large rooms. These rooms are hexagonal, and all of them measure exactly the same. Each of their six sides is 109 inches in width, and the design of the rooms of the upper story is carried out in the ceilings, narrowing and rising toward the center and ending in a circle about a foot and a half in diameter.
The absence of closets in the rooms seems to have been intentional in order that the symmetrically arranged plans could be thoroughly carried out. The doors connecting the rooms are placed so that they come within a single side, but are of odd design, being pointed at the top, making two sides of a hexagon.
Single doors connect the rooms and hallways, and are all of the same design. There is but one ordinary door in the house, and that was cut through between the two sleeping rooms within a few years. The large door connecting the living room and parlor is in three parts and opens by swinging one-third on one side, the remaining two-thirds doubling upon the other side of the doorway. These doors are massive in construction and are composed of hard pine, which is painted white, with beautiful selected quartered oak panels in the natural wood.
The windows are peculiarly arranged, there being one on each projecting point of the structure with the exception of the point in which is the front door. They form a three-cornered design in each section, the windows of the second floor being on the outermost points, and those on the ground floor on the other two points. The windows throughout the house are in two parts and swing inwardly upon hinges, the same as a door, and when closed carry out the same general design, making at the top the two hexagonal sides. In the uppermost part of each window is a small six-sided design in colored glass.
The ceilings of the dining room and kitchen are unfinished and the effect is that of being below deck aboard a ship with the stanch beams plainly in view. Upon the top of the house is a cupola placed directly in the center. It is six-sided both interior and exterior. Winding stairs connect the cupola and front hall, while the standing room on the top is reached by a ladder.
The panoramic view of the surrounding country from the top of the house is, indeed, beautiful. It includes Jamaica Pond, the park system, Forest Hills, and Blue Hills. The outside wall of the structure looks like slate, but a close inspection shows it to be of wood, neatly matched and finished with extreme nicety. There is a fleur de lis in wood on the top of each section. That the Scotsmen were not allowed to thoroughly complete their work is indeed unfortunate, as they would undoubtedly have left a structure even more curious than they did.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
May 12, 1941 by Frank O. Branzetti. |
||
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Razed, January, 2024 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1870 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1898 |
STEPHEN RAWSON WHITE father of Edward Rawson White and grandfather of Stephen E. and Merton G. White was a versatile character. His parents Freeborn (Freeburn) White and Abigail Rawson White were married at Upton in 1810 but they soon removed to West Boyleston and then to Waterville, Vt. and then to Eden Vt. both in the northern part of the state where they located. Stephen R. was their first child and he married Nancy Mowry Fowler at Northbridge and setled at Farnumsville in the town of Grafton. For many years he was overseer of the poor for the town of Grafton. He also served in the state legislature. One of his enterprises was buying in Vermont horses cattle cheese and butter which he sold in Massachusetts. For a time he was Station Agent for the Providence & Worcester R.R. at Farnumsville. That was before there were any Automobiles, trucks or busses and the railroad was the only public carrier. Of interest is the way they did business in that era. At night he took the days receipts to his house for safe keeping and once a month a collector came from Providence to gather the money. About 1855 he build a house at Farnumsville up the hill from the RR station following the design of the firm of Fowler & Wells. The idea of the design was that since a circle gave the most area for a given perimeter, but was not practical for building, an octagon shape should be adopted. The idea was not good because this shape allowed four square rooms and three triangular rooms with such acute angles that much of their floor space was not usable. However quite a number such houses were built thruout the country. I saw one at Oswego N.Y. and about 1932 I saw in an Indianapolis Ind paper an item telling of the razing of an octagonal house on South Dearborn St and about the firm of Fowler & Wells who promoted the idea. They were versatile men and had a considerable following for their magazine on phrenology. Concrete was not known then but for the 18" thick walls he used forms just as for pouring concrete now filling the space with stones picked up on the place with lime mortar to fill the interstices. The outside of both house and barn (which latter was square) was marked off to simulate stone blocks and the house was often referred to as the stone house. On account of the thickness of the walls the house as very cool in summer and warm in winter and because of the construction after 60 years the repair on the outside was only $20.00. He made a contract with the railroad (I have no record of the date) wherby they walled up and roofed over a spring on a hill on his woodland and piped the water to a water tank at the station for use in their locomotives. The pipe also carried water to his house and barn and the contract also specifed the amount of and the uses to which the water (over and above the needs of the RR) could be put. Since there was already water piped into the house it was possible for my Aunt Abby about 1890 to install a hot water system of heating and an inside toilet and bath room. There was no other house in the countryside that had these conveniences and probably very few even today.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1898 |
||
1870 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1882 |
||
1977 or before. |
||
1915 |
December 21, 1878 |
|
1909 |
||
1909 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
- A - |
- B - |
|
- C - |
- D - |
|
1870 |
1897 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1880 - on Central Ave. |
1974 or before. |
Aerial views - no larger size available.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Corbels |
Porch |
Window corbels. |
Porch |
1909 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1899 |
1888 |
|
1888 - proximity of Prospect & Dutcher houses. |
1898 |
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
1888 |
1888 - proximity of Prospect & Dutcher houses. |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Long-gone Octagons A big housing fad of the nineteenth century was the octagon house. The peak years for this type of construction were about 1846 to 1865. In 1855, the Woonsocket Patriot sent a reporter to Hopedale to do an article about the Community. One of the things that he noted was that, "Of dwelling-houses there are forty-one, including three concrete octagons." Octagons didn't have a very good survival rate and as we know, none of the three have survived. I knew that one of them had been on Prospect Street, but it took a while to find out where the other two had been located. I found the second on the "picture map" that had been originally printed in 1888. (Copies are for sale at the Bancroft Library.) That one was on Dutcher Street, just south of the apartment house across from the fire station. It was evidently razed a short time after the map was drawn. It's not on an undated map that was made some time before 1898, and the National Register Nomination gives the date for the house that's on the site now (home of Craig and Joanne Travers) as c. 1890. A few weeks ago Elaine and I were asked to go to Memorial School to help identify locations in some of the old Hopedale pictures they have. There, in one of the pictures, was the third octagon house I had been wondering about for some time. The view shows the General Draper house (now the site of the high school) on the right, the original Unitarian Church, (on the site of the present Unitarian Church, built in 1898) in the middle, and the octagon house on the left. The picture was taken from the south and it looks at though the octagon was a bit north of where the Griffin-Dennett Apartments are now. The only surviving octagon house I know of in the area is on Fruit Street in Milford. I remember one on Maple Avenue in South Grafton, but that disappeared about twenty years ago. Hopedale does have a newer octagon building; the Father Riley Center at Sacred Heart Church. |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
2013 |
2013 |
2013 |
2013 |
2013 |
|
James E. Reed |
1870 |
1876 |
1897 |
1910 |
Left click on the image below for a larger version.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1870 |
||
1889 |
1896 |
1906 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1870 |
1889 |
|
1892 |
1896 |
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
3 Norwood St. Built circa 1853
Henry J Howland (thread manufacturer and assessor), originally built this home on a small rise facing Main St. ( at Norwood which was named in the 1860s.)
The address was 199 Main. (see Birdseye map) . Howland was listed as a printer in a 1857 city Directory and residing in the octagon. In 1870 Howland moved to Portland St. and Elias Crawford a cotton manufacturer, moved in. By 1902 it's known that Charles R. Johnson owned/occupied the octagon.
The porch encircles the 3 front sides. An ornate bay window stands to the left of the porch. There are corbels under the eaves and although vinyl sided maintains its porch trim and double front doors. It is on the National Register.
Left click on the images below for larger versions.
1902 |
||
1870 |
1878 |
|
1936 |