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House at 47 Sargent Street

Houses completed in 1879Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Newton, MassachusettsNewton, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubsQueen Anne architecture in Massachusetts
House at 47 Sargent St., Newton, Massachusetts
House at 47 Sargent St., Newton, Massachusetts

The House at 47 Sargent Street in Newton, Massachusetts, is one of the city's finest Stick style houses. The 2+1⁄2-story wood-frame house was built in 1879. It has irregular, asymmetrical massing, with a gables with a variety of shapes and decorations adding complexity to its roof line. Patterned shingles are used to vary the wall decoration, and Stick style decoration is liberally applied. The main entrance, flanked by leaded sidelight windows, is set under a porch with patterned red and gray slate roof, and a projecting gabled section.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article House at 47 Sargent Street (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

House at 47 Sargent Street
Park Street, Newton Newton Corner

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.347222222222 ° E -71.183611111111 °
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Address

Park Street 289
02172 Newton, Newton Corner
Massachusetts, United States
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House at 47 Sargent St., Newton, Massachusetts
House at 47 Sargent St., Newton, Massachusetts
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Nearby Places

Hyde Avenue Historic District
Hyde Avenue Historic District

The Hyde Avenue Historic District is a residential historic district encompassing the stylistic range of houses being built in the Newton Corner area of Newton, Massachusetts in the 1880s. It includes the five houses at 36, 42, 52, 59, and 62 Hyde Avenue, The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.Hyde Avenue is a residential side street on the south side of Newton Corner, connecting Centre Street and Sargent Street, with a ninety degree turn about one third of the way from Centre Street. At the point of this turn is a slightly enlarged loop around a small grassy area. Four of the five houses are on the east side of Hyde Avenue running south from this turn, while the fifth is at the southwest junction of Hyde Avenue and Garden Road, another minor residential street. The houses at 36 and 52 Hyde Avenue are Queen Anne in their styling, and were built in 1880 and c. 1893, respectively. The houses at 59 and 62 Hyde are Colonial Revival, and were built c. 1885 and c. 1897. The fifth house, 42 Hyde, is a Shingle style house built in 1885. The Hyde Avenue area was originally part of a 43-acre (17 ha) farm, which was subdivided and mostly sold off by George Hyde, a city assessor, selectman, and bank director.The house at 36 Hyde, while somewhat boxy, has a wealth of Queen Anne styling, including an asymmetrically sited entry, decorative wood shingling, and spindled friezes on its porch. 42 Hyde, the only Shingle style house, has an arcaded wraparound porch and conical dormers. The Colonial Revival house at 62 Hyde has a porch entry with clustered columns.