The house at 200 Beacon Street in Hartford was built around 1875, when the earliest homes in that section of the West End of Hartford were being constructed. Two developers, Burdett Loomis and Joseph Woodruff, opened Beacon Street, between Farmington Ave and Warrenton Ave, in 1872 and the Gothic Revival-style home at no. 200 was built soon after. Bad economic conditions soon followed, so that additional houses were not built in the area until the 1890s and after. Another house, built around the same time, is the Kenyon House on nearby Kenyon Street.
Trinity College Long Walk (1883)
The “Long Walk” at Trinity College in Hartford consists of the two long structures of Seabury Hall and Jarvis Hall (named for the first two Episcopal Bishops of Connecticut), on either side of the central block of Northam Towers, named for Col. Charles H. Northam. In the 1870s, with the new state capitol building being constructed at the location of Trinity’s former campus in downtown Hartford, Trinity moved to its new Gallows Hill campus to the southwest. William Burges, a prominent English architect, created a master plan for the new campus. Burges, based in England, never came to Hartford to view the site. His ambitious plan of interconnected quadrangles, designed in 1873-74, was brought back to Hartford by Francis H. Kimball, who would supervise the actual construction. With available resources being far less than required to realize Burges‘s plan, Kimball adapted elements from it in 1875 for a reduced scheme. That year, construction began on Seabury and Jarvis Halls, completed in 1878. Northam Tower was completed in 1883. These were the only structures from the Burges plan to be built. The Long Walk is a famous example of the High Victorian Collegiate Gothic style, with gothic arches and dormers and polychromatic masonry. Trinity College recently completed a restoration and updating of the Long Walk buildings. A current exhibit, at Trinity’s Watkinson Library, provides a more in-depth look at the original construction and features original plans for the buildings.
210 Beacon Street, Hartford (1900)
The house at 210 Beacon Street in Hartford is one of several in the city’s West End with a similar design in the Shingle Style.
Charles A. Atkins House (1900)
The house of Charles A. Atkins was built in 1900 on Kenyon Street in Hartford’s West End. Atkins was a lumber dealer and at one time a potential Republican candidate for governor. In 1973, Carolyn West purchased the house and in 2006 created a website for her Kenyon Street neighborhood which won a 2007 Hartford Preservation Alliance Award. There is also a PDF document at the site with information about the house.
Care Endodontics (2007)
Care Endodontics PC, , a dental practice specializing in root canals, was founded in 2004 by Dr. Christopher Carrington and Dr. Lester Reid. They purchased an old house on Farmington Avenue in Hartford’s West End for their expanded practice, but eventually decided to raze the original structure and replace it with a retro-Victorian house that would fit in with other structures in the neighborhood. The building features Victorian-influenced siding which disguises the fact that it is made of vinyl. The practice opened its new facility in June of 2007.
The Eugene Kenyon Farmhouse (1870)
The first house to be built north of Farmington Avenue, in Hartford’s West End, was an 1870 farmhouse on Kenyon Street. The house was built by the developer Eugene Kenyon, who was laying out streets and planning to construct homes in what was then an area of farmland. Kenyon’s own home was on nearby Farmington Avenue and the farmhouse was soon purchased by its first owner, Maria K. Stanley. An economic downturn in the later 1870s stalled the development of the neighborhood and Kenyon lost his money, but by the 1880s, the pace of house construction in the West End accelerated. Many classic Victorian homes were constructed on Kenyon Street around 1900 and the older farmhouse was embellished over time, combining elements of the Gothic Revival and Italianate styles.
34 Evergreen Avenue, Hartford (1900)
The house at 34 Evergreen Avenue in Hartford was built around 1900 and is attributed to the architect William H. Scoville, who designed many homes in Hartford’s West End. The house has a Queen-Anne form, with siding in the Shingle Style and Colonial Revival porches. This post is Historic Buildings of Connecticut‘s 100th entry for Hartford!