Neha Patil (Editor)

Chamberlin House (Concord, New Hampshire)

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Built
  
1886

Opened
  
1886

Added to NRHP
  
16 August 1982

NRHP Reference #
  
82001688

Area
  
1,200 m²

Chamberlin House (Concord, New Hampshire)

Location
  
44 Pleasant St., Concord, New Hampshire

Architectural styles
  
Queen Anne style architecture, Shingle style architecture

Similar
  
Ragged Mountain Resort, Bretton Woods Mountain, McAuliffe‑Shepard Discovery Center, Everett Arena, Old North Cemetery

The Chamberlin House is a historic house at 44 Pleasant Street in Concord, New Hampshire. The 2.5 story wood frame Queen Anne Victorian was built in 1886 by Horace Chamberlin, superintendent of the local division of the Boston and Maine Railroad. Although the house was probably built from mail-order plans (a popular way to acquire building plans at the time), it exhibits a wealth of Queen Anne and Shingle Style decoration, both inside and out. The house has a hip roof, but there are numerous projections, including a turret with conical roof on the right side of the front facade. The left side has a single story porch, decorated with Stick style balustrades both below and above the roof. Above the porch is a projecting bay window which is topped by a large gable that extends over the splayed corners of the bay, where there are curved brackets. The gable front is sheathed in decoratively cut shingles, with a small square window in the center.

The house remained in the Chamberlin family until Horace's wife died in 1918. Since the family had no children, she donated the property to the Concord Women's Club, of which she had been a longtime member. The club uses the building as its clubhouse; its interior, which is rich in detailed woodwork and styling, has been only modestly altered to accommodate the club's needs.

The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

References

Chamberlin House (Concord, New Hampshire) Wikipedia