The building at 5 Ives Street in Danbury was built in 1883-1884 and served as the city’s Fire Department Headquarters until 1969. Designed by architect Joel Foster, it had vehicle storage on the first floor and parlors (later converted into sleeping quarters) for volunteer fire companies on the second floor. Today the building is home to Two Steps Downtown Grill. Next door (pictured on the right in the image above) is the building at 1 Ives Street. Designed by William Webb Sunderland, it was built in 1893 as a meat warehouse and offices.
Old Lyme Historical Society (1910)
The building at 55 Lyme Street in Old Lyme originally stood on Maple Lane, near the Lieutenant River, where it was built for the Old Lyme Gun Club. It was erected sometime before 1910 (according to different sources in 1885 or 1906) when it was purchased by the Old Lyme Grange #162, which had been founded in 1905. Women had organized the Grange Aid Society to raise funds to buy the building, but because it was located on leased property they continued to save money while seeking land to purchase. In 1928, when the lot at 55 Lyme Street became available, the women of the Grange Aid Society bought it (against the advice of the men). The building was then moved by a team of oxen to its current location, where it was enlarged and refurbished. The new hall was dedicated in February 1929. For decades it hosted various events for the Grange and for the community. The Old Lyme Historical Society, formed in 2005, purchased the Grange building in 2014 as its headquarters, providing a space for the town’s archives, artifacts and historical exhibits.
Priest Marsh House (1774)
The Priest Marsh House in Winchester Center is a saltbox house built in 1774. When Rev. Frederick Marsh (1780-1873) was first offered the pastorate in Winchester in 1808, he declined because the salary was not enough to purchase a home. Eventually the matter was settled, perhaps with the house being part of deal, and Marsh served as pastor for forty-two years.
Mystic Post Office (1925)
The Mystic Post Office is located at 23 East Main Street, on the Stonington side of Mystic. It is a colonial revival-style building erected in 1925 and later expanded an additional two bays on the left side of the front façade.
Masonic Temple, Wethersfeld (1922)
When forming a Lodge in 1921, Masons in Wethersfield chose the name Hospitality Lodge in honor of a nickname of the Webb House, located at 211 Main Street. Built in 1752 for Joseph Webb, Sr., the house became known as “Hospitality Hall” in the years before the Revolutionary War for the lavish parties hosted by Joseph Webb, Jr. and his wife Abigail. The house hosted a famous Mason, George Washington, when he met the French General Rochambeau in Wethersfield in 1781. Hospitality Lodge No. 128 AF&AM was chartered March 5, 1921. The Masonic Temple at 245 Main Street was built the following year and remained in use until 1997, when the Lodge merged with Stepney Lodge No. 133 from Rocky Hill to form Silas Deane Lodge No. 147, which later moved from Wethersfield. More recently, Masons in town wanted to form a new Lodge and were granted the old Hospitality No. 128 charter. The Lodge now meets at the Solomon Welles House in Wethersfield. The old Masonic building has remained vacant, although the town planning and zoning commission approved its conversion into a two-family home in 2014.
(more…)Bragg-Holland House (1890)
As featured yesterday, J. Merrick Bragg, a prominent East Hartford builder, and Horatio Hardendorf, a Hartford resident, developed four adjacent lots on Olmstead Street in East Hartford, each quit-claiming two of the four properties to the other in 1890. Hardendorf took the two central houses, while Bragg took the two outer ones, 85 Olmstead Street and 95 Olmstead Street (pictured above). He sold No. 85 immediately and No. 95 a year later in 1891 to Charles T. Holland of Boston, who briefly lived in East Hartford.
Hardendorf-Bragg-Wickham House (1890)
The house at 91 Olmstead Street in East Hartford was on one of four lots developed by J. Merrick Bragg, a prominent builder in town, and Horatio Hardendorf, a Hartford resident. In 1890 Bragg and Hardendorf split the properties, with Hardendorf taking 91 Olmstead Street and its neighbor to the west and Bragg taking the other two (85 and 95 Olmstead Street), flanking Hardendorf’s houses. Bragg quickly sold his houses, but Hardendorf held on to his for a while as properties to rent out. In 1895 he sold 91 Olmstead Street to William H. Wickham, a clerk.
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