Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Town Marlborough
Historic Name _
Original dwelling
Date of C0l1struction_~c~a~1~8~9~O~'s~ _
Architect/Builder unknown
Exterior Material:
garage
\.1) Major Alterations (with dates) _
gO)
~~
~
a few windows replaced with ] 11 's
0 0 0.
Organization for Marlhoro Hi,t Carom Split-rai] fence across small front yard
One of the best-preserved building on a street that has many altered houses, 133 Essex Street is a
very large 2 1!2-story Queen Anne gable-end with a long hip-roofed, two-story west wing. The main
gable-end facade has a large gable which projects over a wide two-story, skirted polygonal bay
window and, beside the bay, a set of two-story porches. (
This house displays nearly all the elements frequently found on Marlborough's Queen Anne houses.
It is clad primarily in a combination of clapboards and patterned shingles, with part of the wall
surface broken up by vertical stickwork and diagonal-board panels. The gable is embellished with
corner brackets, decorative verge boards and a multiple-square paneled gable screen. The porches
are supported on lathe-turned posts and have spindle- and square-balustered balustrades, as well as
quare-balustered frieze screens. Diagonal spindle braces adorn the posts of the porch on the wing.
The stair window is a multi-paned diamond; most of the other windows are 2-over-2-sash, with flat
surrounds. The main entry, in the side of the first story bay, has a large glass-and-panel door. The
wing facade also retains its original glass-and-panel door.
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HISTORICAL NARRATIVE [] see continuation sheet
Explain history of the building. Explain its associations with local (or state) history. Include uses of the
building, and the roleis) the owners/occupants played within the community.
In the 1890's, when both the nearby shoe factories and the local economy were prospering, and the
recent streetcar line down Maple Street promised accessible transportation nearby, the Church Street
area, which had been developing slowly as a residential neighborhood since the early 1850's,
experienced a period of accelerated growth. New houses such as this one rapidly filled most of the
empty spaces on the established streets, and short side roads were opened across the few remaining
large pieces of land.
Further research will be necessary to determine for whom this house was built, but it appears to
stand at the western end of what was one of the largest remaining parcels of land in the Church
Street area at the end of the nineteenth century. The land belonged to a member of the Greenwood
family in the 1870's.
[ ] Recommended for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. If checked, a completed
National Register Criteria Statement form is attached.