[MassHistPres] MassHistPres Digest, Vol 59, Issue 9

Jill Fisher jillfisher47 at hotmail.com
Wed Jan 19 09:55:57 EST 2011


LFA's thoughts too - It looks like it might simply have been a 3-bay house with a modified roof, perhaps set up for eventual expansion to a 5-bay house. (This would make it a 3/5ths house!)  If it was cut in half, would the other section have an entrance?  Our advice: take a look in the attic to see if there is evidence of newer rafters in the hipped end.

Jill Fisher, AICP 
Principal Planner 
Larson Fisher Associates, Inc. 
Historic Preservation & Planning Services 
PO Box 1394 
Woodstock, NY 12498 
845-679-5054 
jillfisher47 at hotmail.com 

www.larsonfisher.com 



 


Date: Wed, 19 Jan 2011 09:14:54 -0500
From: Paul.Bourdon at gtc-bio.com
To: cupfish at msn.com; kholmes at newtonma.gov; masshistpres at cs.umb.edu
Subject: Re: [MassHistPres] MassHistPres Digest, Vol 59, Issue 9


It seems to me that most early houses started out as a half house. We have a very similar example in Southborough on Rt 30 Ca.1757. I’ve come across many examples of half houses that physical and documentary had additions to make the full five bays.

Paul Bourdon
Southborough


On 1/19/11 9:04 AM, "Anne Cody" <cupfish at msn.com> wrote:


At a quick glance this building looks as though it was a product of a disagreement among owners, or fire.  Be careful to find out if the building looks as though it were cut, and the other half "lives" somewhere else (or was destroyed).  Frequently two siblings after the death of a parent couldnt decide who would keep the building and they cut it in half, and moved one half away as a solution.  Go down in the cellar and look to see if the building were cut, and whether the foundation wall under the cut side is different from the other three -- indicating that the cut-end foundation was rebuilt after the other side was removed.  If all four foundation walls match, it is possible that this section was removed from another site on to the present location.  Hint:  does the house show up on early maps, or not until later maps?  That can tell you if this part was original or moved to this site.
 
There is another example of this kind of structure in Princeton, on Rte 62 in the center of town.
 
Lee Tavares
Old House Institute
Oakham
 
From: kholmes at newtonma.gov
To: masshistpres at cs.umb.edu
Date: Tue, 18 Jan 2011 13:00:23 -0500
Subject: Re: [MassHistPres] MassHistPres Digest, Vol 59, Issue 9

Hello MassHistPres Community,
 
I write seeking help with an unusual Georgian house type in Newton's Upper Falls village.  
I've attached a photo.  The house stands on a stone foundation and once had an interior 
brick chimney extending from the rear roof slope, left side.  Any thoughts?  It's generally 
categorized as a 'half-house' for reasons that will become obvious.  Are there similar 
examples in your communities, and if so, do you know when they were built?
 
The City of Newton is working to identify the provenance of this building (and others) as part 
of its effort to update its B Forms.  We appreciate any guidance you may provide.
 
Katy

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