Puneet Varma (Editor)

Beaver Street Historic District

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Built
  
1916

Address
  
Worcester, MA 01603, USA

Area
  
2,833 m²

NRHP Reference #
  
89002377

Opened
  
1916

Added to NRHP
  
9 February 1990

Beaver Street Historic District

Location
  
31-39 Beaver St., Worcester, Massachusetts

MPS
  
Worcester Three-Deckers TR

Architectural style
  
Colonial Revival architecture

Similar
  
Wachusett Reservoir, DCU Center, Green Hill Park, Salisbury Mansion and Store, Elm Park

The Beaver Street Historic District is a residential historic district in the Main South part of Worcester, Massachusetts. It encompasses a collection of five well preserved Colonial Revival triple-deckers located at 31-39 Beaver Street, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.

The five buildings in this Beaver Street subdivision were built c. 1916, at a time when Worcester more fashionable development was moving from the Woodland Street area to the west side, and when the streetcar made the area more readily accessible to factory workers. The typical early owners and occupants of them were Irish American families where the men were laborers or machinists, and the women who worked outside the home had office jobs.

The five buildings are identical in their basic structure, a rectangular three story wood frame building with a side hall entry, and protruding bay sections on the front and left side. All have front porches that rise to three stories, but the decorative details and number of supporting columns differ among them. 37 Beaver Street is distinctive in the group for having a full width first floor porch and a gable end with full pediment, while numbers 31 and 35 have first floor side porches sheltering the entry. At the time of their listing in 1990 all were clad in wood clapboards and shingles.

References

Beaver Street Historic District Wikipedia