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CT, Connecticut Historical Homes, Historical Houses, Historic Houses, Historic Homes in Fairfield County, New Haven County, Hartford County, Middlesex County, Litchfield County, Tolland County, Windham County, New London County, Connecticut.


 
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Bewilderingly beautiful would be a perfectly decent way to describe the sweep of architectural styles that have graced America’s growth from year to year and generation to generation.  And of course since Connecticut was here from the start, we can experience all those styles right in our own backyard.  In certain towns you can hop through house history within the distance of a few city blocks. There they are: Garrison and Gothic, “Straight” Colonial and Colonial, Saltbox, Federal, Greek Revival, and Victorian (Second Empire, Queen Anne, and “Folk.”)  Then head out into the country and take a look at that real apple pie classic, the good old American farmhouse, built for use and comfort, not for show, but looking just fine anyway.  

 All those terms do mean something and those styles were the purist reflection of what was happening in the times.  Then when the times (social and techno) changed, so did the houses. The Garrison Colonials of the 1600s were built as a stronghold against attack. An overhang on the second floor was provided with little holes so that the colonists could shoot right down at assailants. The small diamond paned windows were a holdover from medieval England.  Then in the 1700s, the “straight” colonial (We still build them in great numbers today) was expanded with a lean-to at the rear creating a long sloping roofline and mimicking the shape of colonial-era salt containers. These were of course called Saltboxes.  Down south they called that slope a “catslide.”

 After the Revolution, the newly minted U.S. of A. looked to the ancient Greeks as the originators of democracy and that led to the Geek Revival style.  In New England, wooden houses rather than stone and marble buildings paid homage to our Mediterranean political forbearers.  Just take a colonial, make the side (gable) end the front, add some columns and a wide band of trim framing the gable and you’ve got a compact and comfortable Greek temple.   

 But all these classic houses had one thing in common.  They were all square built post and beam buildings.  Not much room for romance and imagination. 

 By 1840, the new freedom of romance had transformed European music, poetry, and art in imaginative directions beyond the dreams of the classical.  In America the new freedom was economic.  New industries fueled a budding middle class often living in our first suburbs.  And now American writers and painters were expressing the romantic love of nature.  All of this spilled into and exuberant new type of house design called Carpenter’s Gothic or Gothic Revival.  By the early 19th century, the tyranny of the post and beam had been superseded by a lighter “balloon” house framing that could push structure beyond a simple, symmetrical, rectangular mold.  Then the scroll, band, and jigsaws enabled those carpenters to create elaborate “gingerbread” ornamentation that swirled up, down, and around the contours of the house.  American architecture was off to the races.

The house race went on in the Victorian age (1860 – 1900) with the Victorian style.  Victorian houses were not fueled by just bucks; they were fueled by major bucks, the wealth of the post civil war industrialist barons and industrialist robber barons.  Nothing exceeded like (decorative) excess!  When it came to house design the motto was “Anything Goes,” and so it went.  Balloon framing was carried out to the point of explosion with multiple gables, and dormers, sharply slanted, jaggedly shaped roofs, bay windows, porches, towers, turrets (square and round), shingles in all patterns and colors, and multicolored ornamentation beyond belief. Or for a little balance there was the classic flat mansard roof. “That being said,” we will have to say that our tasteful little state, although certainly not lax in the building of Victorian homes, didn’t even have a Newport, R.I., and therefore mostly escaped the greatest extremities of Victoriana.  After being seen as ugly eyesores for years, we now appreciate the not quite so underlying beauty of these “painted ladies.”  However, not described so far are the lovely and modest “Folk” Victorian homes still giving quiet shelter to families across the state.

 By 1900, the muses of architecture heaved a sigh of relief and turned to the vast eclecticism of the 20th century.

Currently available for CT Hotels & Motels!

 

 

Bush-Holley Historic Site 39 Strickland Rd. Cos Cob,  CT 06807 203-869-6899
Bates-Scofield House 45 Old Kings Hwy Darien, CT 06820 203-655-9233
Lockwood Matthews Mansion Museum 295 West Ave. Norwalk, CT 06850 203-838-9799
Mark-Brownson House - 1823 70 Ripton Rd. Shelton History Center Shelton, CT 06484 203-925-1803
Wheeler House - 1795 25 Avery Place Westport, CT 06880 203-222-1424
J. Alden Weir House - 1852 735 Nod Hill Rd. Wilton, CT 06897 203-834-1896
Terrywile Park & Mansion 70 Southern Blvd. Danbury, CT 06810 203-744-3130
Keeler Tavern Museum - 1713 132 Main St. Ridgefield, CT 06877 203-438-5485

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Hartford County

Mark Twain House photo from CT Dept. of Tourism

Martha A. Parsons House - 1782 1387 Enfield St. Enfield, CT 06082 860-745-6064
Hill-Stead Museum - 1901 35 Mountain Rd. Farmington, CT 06032 860-677-4787
Stanley-Whitman House - 1720 37 High St. Farmington, CT 06032 860-677-9222
Kellogg-Eddy House - 1808 679 Willard Ave. Newington, CT 06111 860-666-7118
Salmon Brook Settlement - 1732 208 Salmon Brook St. Granby, CT 06035 860-653-9713
* All part of Salmon Brook Settlement      
* Abijah Rowe House - 1790 208 Salmon Brook St. Granby, CT 06035 860-653-9713
* Weed-Enders House - 1790 208 Salmon Brook St. Granby, CT 06035 860-653-9713
* Cooley School - 1870 208 Salmon Brook St. Granby, CT 06035 860-653-9713
* Tobacco Barn - 1914 208 Salmon Brook St. Granby, CT 06035 860-653-9713
Governor's Residence - 1909 990 Prospect Ave. Hartford, CT 06105 860-566-4840
Harriet Beecher Stowe - 1871 Farmington Ave. Hartford, CT 06105 860-522-9258
Butler-McCook House & Garden - 19th C 396 Main St. Hartford, CT 06103 860-522-1806
Isham-Terrry House - 1854 211 High St. Hartford, CT 06105 860-522-1984
The Mark Twain House - 1874 351 Farmington Ave. Hartford, CT 06105 860-247-0998
Old State House - 1820 800 Main St. Hartford, CT 06103 860-522-6766
Cheney Homestead - 1785 106 Hartford Rd. Manchester, CT 06040 860-643-5588
Welles Shipman Ward House - 1755 972 Main St. S. Glastonbury, CT 06073 860-633-6890
Barnes Museum - 1836 85 North Main St. Southington, CT 06489 860-623-5426
Phelps-Hatheway House - 1761 55 South Main St. Suffield, CT 06078 860-668-0055
Noah Webster House 227 South Main St. West Hartford, CT 06107 860-521-5362
Sarah Whitman Hooker Homestead -1720 1237 New Britain Ave. West Hartford, CT 06107 860-475-1233
Buttolph-Williams House - 1710 249 Broad St. Wethersfield, CT 06109 860-247-8996
Webb-Deane-Stevens Museum - 18th C 211 Main St. Wethersfield, CT 06109 860-529-0612
Huntington House Museum 289 Broad St. Windsor, CT 06095 860-688-2004
The Oliver Ellsworth Homestead  - 1780 778 Palisado Ave. Windsor, CT 06095 860-688-8717
Norden-Reed Park Museum  - 1840 58 West St. Windsor Locks, CT 06096 860-627-9212

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Edith M. Chase Mansion Buell Rd. Topstone Forest Litchfield, CT 06759 860-567-5694
Bellamy-Ferriday  - 1740 H&G 9 Main Street Bethlehem, CT 06751 203-266-7596
Holley-Williams House - 19th C 15 Millerton Rd. Lakeville, CT 06039 860-435-0566
Knapp House - 1810 6 Aspetuck Ave. New Milford, CT 06776 860-354-3069
Tapping Reeve House & Law School 82 South St. Litchfield, CT 06759 860-567-4501
Gay-Hoyt House Museum - 1775 18 Main St. Sharon, CT 06069 860-364-5688
Hotchkiss-Fyler House - 1900 192 Main St. Torrington, CT 06790 860-482-8260
Glebe House & Gertrude Jekyll Garden - 1750 Hollow Rd. Woodbury, CT 06798 203-263-2855

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Pratt House - 1732 19 West Ave. Essex, CT 06426 860-767-1249
Thankful Arnold House - 1830 Hayden Hill & Walkley Hill Rds. Haddam, CT 06438 860-345-2400
Amasa Day House - 1816 On the Green Moodus, CT 06469 860-873-8144
Stanton House - 1789 63 East Main St. Clinton, CT 06413 860-669-2132

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General David Humphrey's House - 1698 37 Elm St. Ansonia, CT 06401  203-736-1053
Osborne Homestead Museum - 1850 500 Hawthorne Ave. Derby, CT 06418 203-734-2513
Solomon Goffe - 1711 677 North Colony St. Meriden, CT 06451 203-634-9088
General Mansfield House - 1810 151 Main St. Middletown, CT 06457 860-346-0746
Harrison House - 1724 124 Main St. Branford, CT 06405 203-488-4828
Henry Whitfield Museum - 1639 CT's Oldest House 248 Old Whitfield St Guilford, CT 06437 203-453-2457
Hyland House - 1690 84 Boston St. Guilford, CT 06437 203-453-9477
Thomas Griswold House - 1774 171 Boston St. Guilford, CT 06437 203-453-3176
Allis-Bushnell House & Museum - 17851 853 Boston Post Rd. Madison, CT 06443 203-245-4567
Deacon John Grave House - 1685 581 Boston Post Rd. Madison, CT 06443 203-245-4798
       

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The Smith-Harris House - 1845 33 Society Rd. East Lyme, CT 06357 860-739-0761
Thomas Lee House - 1660 Route 156 East Lyme, CT 06357 860-739-6070
Ebenezer Avery House - 1750 Fort St. Groton, CT 06340 860-446-9257
Dr. William Beaumont House - 1750 169 West Town St. Lebanon, CT 06249 860-642-6579
Governor Jonathan Trumbull House - 1735 On the Green Lebanon, CT 06249 860-642-7558
Jonathan Trumbull Jr. House - 1769 780 Trumbull Hwy. Lebanon, CT 06249 860-642-6100
Dennison Homestead Museum - 1717 120 Pequotsepots Rd. Mystic, CT 06355 860-536-9248
Custom House Maritime Museum 150 Bank St. New London, CT 06320 860-447-2501
Hempstead House - 1678 11 Hempstead St. New London, CT 06320 860-247-8996
Christopher Leffing House - 1675 348 Washington St. Norwich, CT 06360 860-889-9440
Captain Nathaniel B. Palmer House North Water & Palmer St. Stonington, CT 06378 860-535-8845

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Daniel Benton Homestead - 1720 Metcalf Rd. Tolland, CT 06084 860-872-8673
Nathan Hale Homestead - 1776 2299 South St. Coventry, CT 06238 860-742-6917
Strong-Porter House Museum -1730 2382 South St. Coventry, CT 06238 860-742-1419

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Roseland Cottage-Bowen House - 1846 556 Rt. 169 Woodstock, CT 06281 860-928-4074

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