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Walter J. Squire House

Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Somerville, MassachusettsSomerville, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubs
SomervilleMA HouseAt10ArlingtonStreet
SomervilleMA HouseAt10ArlingtonStreet

The Walter J. Squire House in Somerville, Massachusetts is a well-preserved transitional Italianate/Queen Anne house. The basic 2.5-story, front gable, three bay side entrance layout was fairly typical for Italianate houses in the city, as are the paired cornice brackets and hoods over the windows. The porch, however, has Queen Anne elements, including turned posts and the rising sun motif on its gable.In 1989 the house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the House at 10 Arlington Street.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Walter J. Squire House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Walter J. Squire House
Hathorn Street, Somerville

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.386111111111 ° E -71.082222222222 °
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Address

Hathorn Street 24
02145 Somerville
Massachusetts, United States
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SomervilleMA HouseAt10ArlingtonStreet
SomervilleMA HouseAt10ArlingtonStreet
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Mount Vernon Street Historic District
Mount Vernon Street Historic District

The Mount Vernon Street Historic District is a historic district consisting of the even-numbered houses at 8–24 Mount Vernon Street in Somerville, Massachusetts. The district includes four modest Greek Revival houses built c. 1850, an earlier Federal period house, and a late 19th century Second Empire house, representing a progression of housing styles through the 19th century. The houses at 8, 12, 16, and 20 Mount Vernon are all well conserved Greek Revival 1+1⁄2-story buildings with side hall layout, although #12 has had synthetic siding applied. The house at #16 has preserved more of its exterior detailing than the others, while #20 is distinctive for its use of flushboard siding, giving the house the appearance of ashlar masonry work. Behind the house at #12 is a second house that is some external Greek Revival styling, but has a five bay center entrance layout more typical of the Federal period; it is known to predate the house in front of it. The duplex at 22-24 Mount Vernon has a mansard roof characteristic of the Second Empire style; its construction date is estimated to be c. 1880.Mount Vernon Street was platted out in 1845, and was located near the railroad line which had been laid across the Charlestown Neck in 1835. The area, which had previously been largely rural, developed as a comparatively suburban area with ready access to Boston, and was one of the earliest parts of what became Somerville to be developed in this way. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.