Betts Farm (1790)

Betts Farm, located at 249 Nod Road in Ridgefield, is an estate consisting of several historic structures, including the main house, an ice house and wood shed, a barn, and an adjacent cottage. The original section of the main house dates to circa 1790. It features an Early Classical Revival-style gable-fronted facade with four Ionic columns and a circular window in the gable. In about 1925 the house was acquired by Henry King McHarg (1851-1942), a railroad tycoon from Albany, New York whose family had roots in Ridgefield. Two years later he married his second wife, Elizabeth Clark Pierce (she was 36 and he was 76) and it is possibly around that time that he joined another, originally separate, house to the rear of the 1790 structure.

(more…)

Giles Sisson House (1867)

The property at 121 West Road in Canton was settled in about 1738 by Sgt. Thomas Barber with his widowed mother and three brothers. In 1867, Giles A. Sisson (1832-1900) tore down a house on the property that had been erected by Deacon Hosea Case and replaced it with the current Greek Revival-style farmhouse. In addition to operating the farm, Sisson had a cider mill just south of his house and had a sawmill about a quarter of a mile north on Cherry Brook. From 1874 to 1880 Sisson owned the Canton Center General Store at 180 Cherry Brook Road, during which time he converted that building’s upper floor into a social hall. In about 1920, the farm on West Road was acquired by Otto Freeland, who was born in Sweden. There was once a windmill on that property that was occasionally used to generate electricity for the milling of ax handles. These were then sold to the Collins Company.

Winchester Soldiers’ Monument (1890)

Like the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch in Hartford, another of Connecticut’s most dramatic memorials to the Civil War is the Winchester Soldiers’ Monument, located in the circular Memorial Park at the end of Crown Street in Winsted. Sitting atop a hill, the monument takes the form of a three-story Gothic-style tower built of ashlar granite with a sculpture of a Civil War soldier, designed by George E. Bissell, atop a circular corner tourelle that projects from the third level. After two decades of discussion over the location and design of the memorial, it was finally erected in 1889-1890 and dedicated on September 11, 1890. The completed monument was designed by Robert W. Hill of Waterbury. At the bottom of the hill in front of the monument is a square entrance arch at the start of a path leading up to the tower.

(more…)

House at 233 Millstream Road, Hebron (1845)

At 233 Millstream Road in Hebron is a distinctive Greek Revival-style house that was erected circa 1845. The house features a ground-floor verandah that is inset under part of the second floor and there are matching ells that extend on the north and south sides. The facade has square columns and matching pilasters. A notable feature of the home are three triangular windows that radiate in a sunburst pattern and are surrounded by clapboards applied on a diagonal cap with an elaborate keystone. These are located in the building’s triangular front-facing gable and in the gables of the north and south ells. The house was built on a property that was once the site of a gristmill built in 1735 and operated by Godfrey Tarbox and Son. The property was eventually acquired by the Crouch family and was later owned by the Strong and Rathbone families.

Bedford Building (1923)

From as early as 1799 through the 1920s a hotel stood at the corner of Main Street, Church Lane and State Street/Post Road East in Westport. In 1923 the old Westport Hotel was replaced by a large Tudor Revival-style structure donated by Edward T. Bedford (1849-1931) to serve as the town’s first Y.M.C.A. building. Bedford, who grew up in Westport in modest circumstances and eventually became an executive of Standard Oil, remembered in his youth standing outside the windows of the hotel, watching a game of pool or billiards, but being unable to enter on account of the hotel’s saloon. Years later he wanted to donate a place where local boys and young men could congregate safely. The Bedford Building remained the home of the Y.M.C.A. for ninety years, eventually expanding to occupy space in the adjoining firehouse as well, until it moved to a new facility in 2014. Its original home was then transformed to became part of a substantial new mixed-use development (retail, dining and residential) called Bedford Square. The historic Tudor Revival facade was maintained, but the rear and basements of the property were significantly altered. Later 1977 additions to the Y.M.C.A. were replaced with historically sensitive new construction. Anthropologie & Co. moved in as the anchor tenant for the 40,000-square-foot Bedford Building.

Abington Congregational Church (1751)

The oldest ecclesiastical building in the State of Connecticut that has been continuously used for its original religious purpose is the Abington Congregational Church in the Town of Pomfret. Overcrowding at the Pomfret meetinghouse, as well as the great distance residents from the Abington section of town had to travel to attend services there, led to the creation of a separate ecclesiastical society in Abington 1749. The new congregation erected its own meetinghouse in 1751, a building that is one of the few surviving examples in New England of eighteenth-century peg and beam construction. The building was completely remodeled in the Greek Revival style between 1834 and 1840 by the architect-builder Edwin Fitch of Mansfield. Among various interior and exterior alterations, Fitch created a new facade featuring four Doric pilasters and replaced the church‘s 1802 bell tower with the current three-stage steeple.

(more…)

William Bevin House (1757)

One of the oldest houses in East Hampton is the colonial saltbox at 53 Barton Hill Road. It was erected circa 1748-1757 by William Bevin, who died in 1793 at the age of 83. The property was maintained by William’s son Isaac Bevin, Sr. (1746-1791) and grandson Isaac Bevin, Jr. (1773-1870), who married Anna Avery of Glastonbury in 1800. In 1832, their sons, William, Chauncy and Abner, later joined by a fourth brother Philo, started Bevin Brothers Manufacturing Company, a bell foundry that is still in business today.