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The house was built in 1850 by the Worcester Bros. firm for William Bryant, Jr., a shoecutter, and Lucinda A. (Hook) Bryant, his wife. [3] It is one of three octagon houses built in Stoneham during the 1850s, and is the best preserved. [2] Octagon houses were promoted by Orson Squire Fowler, and were an architectural fad during the 1850s.
Location of Stoneham in Massachusetts. This is a list of properties and historic districts in Stoneham, ... William Bryant Octagon House: April 13, 1984
Bryant House may refer to: William Cullen Bryant Homestead, Cummington, Massachusetts; Bryant–Cushing House, Norwell, Massachusetts; William Bryant Octagon House, Stoneham, Massachusetts; Bryant-Lasater House, Mulberry, Arkansas, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Crawford County, Arkansas
William Bryant Octagon House: 1850 2 Spring Street, Stoneham Middlesex: MA NRHP: Elias Crawford House ... William Waterfield House: 1867 308 3rd St., S., Raymond
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The Central Square Historic District is a historic district encompassing much of the central business district of Stoneham, Massachusetts.It includes the town's largest concentration of 19th and early-20th century commercial architecture, in an area that developed in importance as a commercial center after the construction of the Andover-Medford Turnpike (now Main Street, designated ...
The Enoch Fuller House is an historic octagon house located at 72 Pine Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts. The two story wood-frame house was built c. 1850 for Enoch Fuller, a friend of P. T. Barnum, and is topped by a low pitch roof with a central cupola. There is a single story porch that wraps around the entire building.
The Williams–Linscott House was a historic First Period house at 357 William Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts.The oldest part of the house was said to date to c. 1712, but it is unclear to which part of the house this referred, on account of major alterations the house in the 18th and 19th centuries.