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Marion Battelle Three-Decker

Apartment buildings in Worcester, MassachusettsApartment buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in MassachusettsHouses completed in 1896National Register of Historic Places in Worcester, MassachusettsQueen Anne architecture in Massachusetts
Worcester, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubs
WorcesterMA MarionBattelleThreeDecker
WorcesterMA MarionBattelleThreeDecker

The Marion Battelle Three-Decker is a historic triple decker residence in Worcester, Massachusetts. It is a well-preserved and detailed example of a triple decker with Queen Anne styling. It is built with typical side hall plan, with a hip roof punctured by a gable dormer on the front facade. At the time of its listing on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990, it included detailing such as decoratively bracketed eave, and its turret-like front bay window was decorated with alternating bands of patterned shingles. Since then the exterior has been modified by the application of modern siding, and these details have been lost or obscured.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Marion Battelle Three-Decker (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Marion Battelle Three-Decker
Preston Street, Worcester

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.258611111111 ° E -71.811388888889 °
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Address

Preston Street 16
01610 Worcester
Massachusetts, United States
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WorcesterMA MarionBattelleThreeDecker
WorcesterMA MarionBattelleThreeDecker
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Nearby Places

Wellington Street Apartment House District
Wellington Street Apartment House District

The Wellington Street Apartment House District of Worcester, Massachusetts encompasses a collection of stylistically similar apartment houses in the city's Main South area. It includes sixteen properties along Jacques Avenue, and Wellington and Irving Streets, most of which were built between 1887 and 1901. The notable exception is the Harrington House at 62 Wellington Street, a c. 1850s Greek Revival house that was virtually the only house standing in the area before development began in the 1880s.The first other building in the area was also a single family residence, the brick and stone Queen Anne Victorian built in 1855 by Thomas Barrett at 41 Wellington. This was followed in the next few years by six smaller apartment houses that were built with floor plans similar to Worcester's many wood frame triple deckers, but they were built of brick and trimmed in stone. These buildings (23, 25, 37, and 45 Wellington, and 1 and 5 Jacques) were generally owner-occupied.The development that followed these early buildings was done by developers building income properties, which were larger (at least two apartments per floor), and followed a central hall plan that such apartment blocks followed elsewhere in the city. These were built of brick or stone, and generally trimmed in stone. The only non-residential building in the district is the Gothic Revival First Freewill Baptist Church, designed by Lawrence, Massachusetts architect George G. Adams and built in 1888.The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.