John Killbourne House (1740)

The house at 120 High Street in South Glastonbury is listed as 118 High Street in the 1978 Historical and Architectural Survey of Glastonbury, where it is described as the John Killbourne House, built in 1740. A plaque on the house reads “Spar Mill, Est. 1740.” Feldspar was quarried in the area in the early twentieth century and the nearby house at 9 Tryon Street is believed to have once been the mill’s office.

Miscellaneous Buildings, Part Five

Blinn House, built in 1785 on Ferry Lane in South Glastonbury

24 Broadway, Colchester

On Saybrook Road in Higganum

In Noank

In Litchfield

58 Greenwood Avenue, Bethel, built c. 1845

154 Greenwood Ave. in Bethel, built in 1927

155 Greenwood Ave. in Bethel, built c. 1845

A house in Chester

A house in Noank

A barn in Chaplin

A house on Main Street in Enfield

Darragan Building and Larue Building (1891)

The adjacent buildings at 238 and 240-242 Main Street in Danbury were built simultaneously in 1891-1892. The Darragan Building (on the left in the image above) was designed by local architect Joel Foster in the Romanesque Revival style with terra cotta tile decoration around the arched windows. In 1913 the building was acquired by the Danbury and Bethel Gas and Electric Light Company and sold in 1965. It currently has businesses on the ground floor and apartments above. The Larue Building next door, at 240-242 Main Street, was designed by Leoni W. Robinson of New Haven in a similar style with brownstone window ornamentation.