Historic Buildings of Massachusetts

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Trinity Lutheran Church, Worcester (1951)

by Dan/November 25, 2016November 25, 2016/Churches, Gothic, Neoclassical, Worcester

Trinity Lutheran Church, Worcester

Trinity Lutheran Church in Worcester officially formed on January 1, 1948 through the merger of First, Bethany and Calvary parishes. The merged parish erected a new church at 73 Lancaster Street, built in stages between 1948 and 1951. The building is heavily influenced by Scandinavian church architecture.

Commerce Building (1897)

by Dan/November 25, 2016November 25, 2016/Commercial, Neoclassical, Renaissance Revival, Worcester

Commerce Building, Worcester

The building at 340 Main Street in Worcester was built c. 1894-1897 to designs by the prestigious architectural firm of Peabody and Stearns. Known today as the Commerce Building (named for later tenant Commerce Bank), it was originally built for the State Mutual Life Insurance Company. Founded in 1844-1845 as the nation’s fifth life insurance company, it had previously been located in an 1870 building at 240 Main Street.

Day Building (1897)

by Dan/November 25, 2016November 25, 2016/Commercial, Romanesque Revival, Worcester

Day Building, Worcester

The Day Building is an office building located at 300-310 Main Street in Worcester. It was built by John Day (1851-1907). The front section was most likely built c. 1897 to designs by Barker and Nourse, with additional rear sections built in 1898-1899 and 1906.

French Congregational Church – First Spiritualist Church (1887)

by Dan/November 13, 2016January 21, 2020/Churches, Gothic, Springfield

First Spiritualist Church

The picture above was taken in 2012, four years before the recent move of what was once the French Congregational Church and then the First Spiritualist Church. This spring, the building was moved 600 feet from its original address at 33-37 Bliss Street to a new location closer to Union Street to make way for construction of the new MGM Springfield Casino. The High Victorian Gothic-style church was erected in 1887 through the leadership of Springfield industrialist Daniel B. Wesson to benefit French Canadian Huguenots who were employed by the Smith and Wesson Company. In 1909, the French Protestants gave up the church and Wesson sold it to the Congregational Union. In 1918 the church was acquired by the First Spiritualist Society, formed in 1898, which incorporated in 1919 as the First Spiritualist Church of Springfield. The Church sold the building in 2013 and moved to a new location in Chicopee, where it is now known as the Healing Hands of Light Spiritualist Church. UPDATE: The relocated Church, which now faces Union Street, is part of the MGM Springfield Casino complex.
Continue reading “French Congregational Church – First Spiritualist Church (1887)”

South Congregational Church, Pittsfield (1850)

by Dan/November 13, 2016November 13, 2016/Churches, Greek Revival, Italianate, Pittsfield

South Congregational Church, Pittsfield

Pittsfield’s South Congregational Church was formed in 1848 because of the enlarged membership of the First Congregational Church. Work soon began on the new church building at 110 South Street, but in September, 1849 a fire destroyed the partially completed structure. Work started over and the completed church was dedicated on November 13, 1850. The steeple has twice been blown down, in 1859 and in 1882.

Blaisdell, Wood Brothers & Farrell Buildings (1907, 1922, 1913)

by Dan/November 13, 2016November 13, 2016/Commercial, Neoclassical, Pittsfield, Renaissance Revival

Haynes-designed Buildings in Pittsfield

Three buildings on North Street in Pittsfield are depicted in the image above. On the left is the Blaisdell, 413-419 North Street, built in 1907 for the head of the Blaisdell-Kavy Co., and designed by Pittsfield architect George Edward Haynes. In the center is the Wood Brothers Building, 421-429 North Street, also designed by Haynes. It was built in 1922-1923 to house the Wood Brothers music store, founded in 1880 and still in business today at another location. The building’s facade is constructed of 40 tons of cast stone from the Art Stone Co. of Millers Falls. The building on the right, 441-445 North Street, is the Farrell Building. Dating to 1913-1915, it is also the work of Haynes.

Capitol Theatre, Pittsfield (1898)

by Dan/November 13, 2016/Art Deco, Commercial, Pittsfield, Theaters

Capitol Theatre

The building at 328-330 North Street in Pittsfield was built c. 1898 as the New Mills Block. It later became the Capitol Theatre and has a nice c. 1922 Art Deco marquee. The theater closed in the 1980s.

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