
The George and Edward Thompson House is an Italianate house, built on Farmington Ave in Unionville in 1884. It features a veranda with Eastlake-influenced columns and balustrades. The property also has an original barn.

The George and Edward Thompson House is an Italianate house, built on Farmington Ave in Unionville in 1884. It features a veranda with Eastlake-influenced columns and balustrades. The property also has an original barn.

The Everett Hurlbut House, on Main Street in Glastonbury, was built in 1902 and has a distinctive Queen Anne design. Everett Hurlbut had married into the Williams family and became a manager for the J. B. Williams Soap Company. He was later president of the company and is credited with inventing Aqua Velva.
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.

The Warner Homestead, on Middletown Ave in Wethersfield, was built in the 1740s or 1750s. In 1788, the house was left by William Warner to his son, also named William. Sold to a nephew in 1813, it remained in the Warner family until 1890. It was restored in the 1970s, when a later front porch and asbestos roof shingles were removed.

Most likely built in 1753, the same year he married, the house of Moses Wilcox is located on Main Street in Portland. The construction of the roof is a late example of colonial purlin framing.

Completed in 1887 or 1888, Stonehaven is an impressive Queen Anne style house on Main Street in Portland. It was built for three sisters from the Brainerd family by their brother. The house acquired its name when it was used as a rental property during World War II. Today, Stonehaven is one of the locations of the Rushford Center, a provider of substance abuse and mental health treatment programs.

The Glastonbury Villa, on Main Street in Glastonbury, is an American foursquare house built in 1920 by John Jacoon. The exterior of the house displays rubble masonry on the first floor and stuccoed walls on the second floor. There is also a stone fountain in front of the house. The use of stone masonry is commonly found in Italian vernacular architecture and reveal the influence of Italian immigrants in Glastonbury. The name, “Glastonbury Villa,” can be seen between the two windows and the porch on the second floor, on the side of the house facing Main Street. The home is now leased as a town-owned residential property.