Middletown South Green Historic District - South Green Historic District Inventory

South Green Historic District Inventory

Based on the NRHP nomination inventory except as explicitly noted:

  • 14 Church Street (now 14 Old Church Street), Doolittle's Funeral Home, Queen Anne with hexagonal turret, 1890s, critical contributing property
  • (unnumbered) Church Street (now 24 Old Church Street), Methodist Parish House, Second Empire, 1880s (or 1868-1869), critical contributing property
  • First United Methodist Church (no address, on Church Street, now Old Church Street), 1936 (or 1930-1931), critical contributing property
  • (unnumbered) Church Street (now 8 Broad Street, corner of Church ), Synagogue (Congregation Adath Israel), brick blocklike structure with low dome, non-essential contributing property
  • 38 South Main Street (now 11 South Main Street), 1811-1813, Federal style with Greek Revival embellishments, Mather-Douglas House (or Mather-Douglas-Santangelo House), critical contributing property
  • 29 South Main Street, 1880-1890, Italianate, critical contributing property
  • 27 South Main Street, 1880-1890, Italianate with belvedere, contributing property
  • 65 South Main Street, 1880-1890, Italianate, critical contributing property
  • 63 South Main Street, 1880-1890, Italianate with wrought iron porch, critical contributing property
  • 61 South Main Street, 1880-1890, Italianate, contributing property
  • 40 South Main Street, 1880-1890, plain, multi-gabled rambling house, contributing property
  • 36 South Main Street, 1790-1800, Michael's Beauty Salon, 3-bay, 5 course brick band, box cornice, gable roof, contributing property
  • 34 & 32 South Main Street, 1880-1890, double bay projections, pediment dormers, large porch, contributing property
  • 22 South Main Street, D'Angelo's Funeral Home, early 1900s (1902), 5-bay, gambrel roof house with Georgian symmetry, contributing property
  • 33 Pleasant Street, White-Stoddard House, 1870-1880 (1870), Second Empire, brick, critical contributing property. Now Masonic Temple Building.
  • 27 Pleasant Street, Hayes-Chaffe House, 1870-1880 (1872-1873 or Rockwell-Sumner House, 1750, 5-bay, double overhang, Colonial Georgian, critical contributing property
  • 19 & 17 Pleasant Street (now 15 Pleasant Street), Smith-Stiles House, 1870-1880 (1870-1871), Second Empire, double house, critical contributing property
  • (no number) Pleasant Street (or 9 Pleasant Street), South Congregational Church, 1868, Gothic Revival with spire, critical contributing property
  • 57-83 Main Street Extension, 1870-1880, Second Empire Apartment House, critical contributing property
  • 55 Crescent Street, Wilcox-Meech House, 1880-1890 (1871), Italianate, 3-story brick with belvedere, critical contributing property
  • 49 Crescent Street, George R. Finley House, 1880-1890 (1872-1873), Italianate with mansard roof, critical contributing property
  • 43 Crescent Street, 1890-1900, 2 story, 3-bay with gable front, side bay projection, contributing property
  • 41 Crescent Street, 1880-1890, gingerbread, stick style Victorian, critical contributing property
  • 33 Crescent Street, 1890-1900, very plain Gothic, contributing property
  • 31 & 29 Crescent Street, 1870-1880, large scale, Second Empire, contributing property
  • 15 Crescent Street, 1870-1880 (1877), Queen Anne, stick style with barge board and turret, contributing property
  • 11 Crescent Street, 1900, large rambling multi-gable house, contributing property
  • 4 Crescent Street, 1880-1890, Queen Anne, critical contributing property
  • 8 Crescent Street, 1880-1890, Victorian stick style, critical contributing property

The map in the NRHP nomination also clearly shows the property at 49 Main Street (corner of Old Church Street) where the Caleb Fuller house now stands as being inside the district. That house was moved to its current location in the 1970s.

Read more about this topic:  Middletown South Green Historic District

Famous quotes containing the words south, green, historic and/or district:

    Up from the South at break of day,
    Bringing to Winchester fresh dismay,
    The affrighted air with a shudder bore,
    Like a herald in haste, to the chieftain’s door,
    The terrible grumble, and rumble, and roar,
    Telling the battle was on once more,
    And Sheridan twenty miles away.
    Thomas Buchanan Read (1822–1872)

    Like the water, the Walden ice, seen near at hand, has a green tint, but at a distance is beautifully blue, and you can easily tell it from the white ice of the river, or the merely greenish ice of some ponds, a quarter of a mile off.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    If there is any period one would desire to be born in, is it not the age of Revolution; when the old and the new stand side by side, and admit of being compared; when the energies of all men are searched by fear and by hope; when the historic glories of the old can be compensated by the rich possibilities of the new era?
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    Most works of art, like most wines, ought to be consumed in the district of their fabrication.
    Rebecca West (1892–1983)