Historic Buildings of Massachusetts

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Category: Amherst

Barrett Hall, Amherst College (1860)

by Dan/September 9, 2011/Amherst, Collegiate, Greek Revival, Italianate

Barrett Hall, on the campus of Amherst College, was built as Barrett Gymnasium in 1859-1860. Amherst College had the first department of Physical Education in the country. Constructed of Pelham granite, the gymnasium was designed by Boston architect Charles E. Parkes and was named for Dr. Benjamin Barrett of Northampton, who made the largest financial contribution towards building and fully equipping it. The building served as a gym until Pratt Gymnasium was built in 1883. In 1907, Barrett Hall was converted to become the home of the modern languages department.

Solomon Boltwood House (1745)

by Dan/September 8, 2011/Amherst, Colonial, Houses

Solomon Boltwood built the house at 243 Amity Street in Amherst around 1745. His brother, Samuel, built the Boltwood-Stockbridge House on the UMASS campus. Solomon Boltwood was the grandfather of Elijah Boltwood, proprietor of the famous Boltwood Tavern.

257 Main Street, Amherst (1878)

by Dan/September 7, 2011December 1, 2011/Amherst, Houses, Stick Style

The dating for the house at 257 Main Street in Amherst, across the street from the Dickinson Homestead, is a little confusing based on the sources immediately available to me. The 2005 guidebook to the Dickinson Historic District describes it as the Cyrus Kingman House, built in the 1850s. Cyrus Kingman was a businessman who established himself in Pelham and then moved to Amherst in 1850, when he purchased the general store that stood where the Town Hall is today. Kingman’s daughters, Martha and Ellen Mary, school friends of Emily Dickinson, died within two weeks of each other in 1851. The surviving daughter, Jane Juliette., and Kingman himself died in 1854. His widow was still living in the house in the early 1870s. Zillow.com has a date for the house of 1878. While Zillow dates are not always accurate, the 1870s seems a more likely period for a house built in the Stick style. Today the house is a bed & breakfast called the Amherst Inn.

Morgan Hall, Amherst College (1853)

by Dan/September 6, 2011/Amherst, Collegiate, Italianate

Morgan Hall, on South Pleasant Street in Amherst, was built in 1852-1853 and was Amherst College’s first library building. Designed by Henry Sykes, it was the campus’ first building made of stone. It was expanded in 1882-1883, at which time the building was officially named for New York Banker, Henry T. Morgan. Melvil Dewey served as Acting Librarian from 1874 to 1877, during which time he applied his decimal library classification system to the college’s collection. William Isaac Fletcher, Librarian from 1883 to 1911, was a nationally known bibliographer, educator and author of Public Libraries in America (1894). With the construction of the Converse Memorial Library in 1917, Morgan Hall was converted to classroom nd administrative use (it houses several college departments). In 1960, Astronomy Department’s Bassett Planetarium was installed, the gift of Preston Rogers Bassett. On the lower floor of Morgan Hall is a cannon from the 1862 Civil War Battle of New Bern, North Carolina. It is a memorial to President William A. Stearns‘ son Frazar Stearns, who was killed in the battle.

Snell House (1820)

by Dan/September 5, 2011September 5, 2011/Amherst, Federal, Houses

The Federal-style house at 317 South Pleasant Street in Amherst was built in 1820. On December 7, 1827, when the house was owned by Rev. Stephen S. Nelson, it was here that the first meeting of the Amherst branch of the First Baptist Church in New Salem was held (Rev. Nelson served as moderator of the meeting). After later becoming a branch of the Baptist Church in Northampton, it became the First Baptist Church in Amherst in 1832. From 1831-1931 the house was owned by the Snell family. Ebeneezer Snell was a mathematics professor at Amherst College who kept the earliest continuous weather records in the world. This was continued by his daughter and by the College today. The widow’s walk on the roof of the house was added in 1854.

First Congregational Church of Amherst (1868)

by Dan/August 21, 2011/Amherst, Churches, Gothic

The Congregational Church in Amherst dates back to 1739, when the future town was still a part of Hadley. There have been four successive meeting houses for the church. The original meeting house, built around 1740, stood on the hill where the Amherst College Octagon would later be built. It was replaced, on the same site, by a more elaborate building, completed in 1788. The third meeting house was built across South Pleasant Street in 1829; since remodeled, it is now owned by Amherst College and is known as College Hall. The current First Congregational Church was built of Monson granite in 1867-1868. The architect was George Hathorne of Springfield and the local contractor was C.W. Lessey, who lived nearby; neighbor William Austin Dickinson supervised the construction. The same team would then begin construction of Walker Hall at Amherst College in 1868. Since its construction, the church has been much altered over the years, both inside and out.

Amherst Depot (1853)

by Dan/August 19, 2011/Amherst, Italianate, Stations

Although today hidden down a side street, Amherst’s small brick train station was once surrounded by a hub of activity, including factories, a hotel and a bank. Built in 1853 by Robert Cutler, the Amherst Depot originally served the Amherst & Belchertown Railroad and later the New London Northern Railroad and the Central Vermont Railroad. Restored in 1976, it continues as a passenger station today.

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