place

Ruth and Robert Hatch Jr. House

Barnstable County, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubsHouses completed in 1961Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Barnstable County, MassachusettsModernist architecture in MassachusettsNational Register of Historic Places in Cape Cod National Seashore
Wellfleet, Massachusetts
Hatch House, Wellfleet, Massachusetts
Hatch House, Wellfleet, Massachusetts

The Ruth and Robert Hatch Jr. House is a historic house at 309 Bound Brook Way in Wellfleet, Massachusetts. It is one of a modest number of surviving houses in Wellfleet that combine elements of Modern architecture with traditional Cape Cod architecture. This single story wood-frame house was built in 1961 on Bound Brook Island to a design by local architect Jack Hall. Extremely rustic in appearance, its exterior is sheathed in vertical boards and its windows have working shutters but no glass, resulting in a sharply vertical appearance. The structure consists of three rectangular sections of different sizes that are based on modular 7' by 7' squares; the main public living space is 35' by 49', the master bedroom is 7' by 21', and the guest bedrooms are in a block that is 7' by 14' (enlarged from the original 7' by 7' in 1978). The house, which is within the bounds of the Cape Cod National Seashore, was sold by the Hatches to the National Park Service, but they retain occupancy rights.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ruth and Robert Hatch Jr. House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ruth and Robert Hatch Jr. House
Bound Brook Way,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Ruth and Robert Hatch Jr. HouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.955833333333 ° E -70.074722222222 °
placeShow on map

Address

Hatch House

Bound Brook Way 309

Massachusetts, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Hatch House, Wellfleet, Massachusetts
Hatch House, Wellfleet, Massachusetts
Share experience

Nearby Places

Pamet River
Pamet River

The Pamet River is a 4.2-mile-long (6.8 km) river in Truro, Massachusetts on Cape Cod. It is named for the Paomet tribe. The river is primarily salt marsh, flows west nearly all the way across Cape Cod from its eastern beaches, and empties into Cape Cod Bay. It lies a few miles south of the Little Pamet River. The upper Pamet River is made up of a freshwater marsh. The marsh occupies the broad floor of the upper Pamet River valley. Originally, 12,000–13,000 years ago, this was the glacial outwash channel that drained water away from the glacier westward, northward and finally eastward into the Atlantic some distance from where Provincetown now lies. Sea level was then 300 to 400 feet (91 to 122 m) lower than it is today. There was no Cape Cod Bay, and Stellwagen Bank and the Grand Banks were hills well above the ocean. The subsequent rise of the Atlantic Ocean, which continues to this day, nearly drowned the outer Cape, including the Pamet, which is now only four miles long, compared to 30 miles (48 km) long thousands of years ago. This upper freshwater marsh dates from the middle 19th century, when, to promote agriculture, the saltwater tides were prevented from entering by means of a dike that traverses the valley where Truro Center Road (a former routing of US Route 6) now passes. A one-way clapper valve permitted fresh water to leave at low tide. The result is the meandering, slow-flowing stream that flows from the Atlantic dunes at Ballston Beach west to the bay, with low, flat banks that lie just above the water table. The entire valley, fresh and salt, is underlain by a thick mat of peat derived from the original salt marshes. All plant species growing in this upper portion were brought in as seeds, mostly by birds and mammals. All are indigenous, and virtually none is tolerant of seawater.MassWildlife has stocked the river with trout.