Harman Patil (Editor)

Jerome Marble House

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Built
  
1867

NRHP Reference #
  
80000567

Architectural style
  
Italianate architecture

Architect
  
Elbridge Boyden

MPS
  
Worcester MRA

Opened
  
1867

Added to NRHP
  
5 March 1980

Jerome Marble House

Location
  
23 Harvard St., Worcester, Massachusetts

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

The Jerome Marble House is an historic house at 23 Harvard Street in Worcester, Massachusetts. Built in 1867 to a design by Elbridge Boyden, it is one of the city's fine examples of Second Empire architecture, and one of the few for which an architect is known. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. It now houses professional offices.

Description and history

The Marble House is located on the west side of Harvard Street, a north-south road paralleling downtown Worcester's Main Street on a rise to the west. It is a 2-1/2 story brick structure, with a slate mansard roof providing a full third floor. The building's corners have brick quoining, and the main facade is symmetrical, with polygonal bays (rising to the roof level) flanking a center entrance. The entrance is sheltered by an open porch that spans the inner front corners of the flanking bays, and is topped on the second level by two narrow round-arch windows set in a single segmented-arch opening. The windows of the flanking bays are set in rectangular openings, with stone beltcourses serving as sills, and stone lintels above. The roof is studded with dormers, some with round-arch openings and windows, others with center-gable caps and pointed-arch windows.

The house was built in 1867 to a design by E. Boyden & Son, and is a little-altered example of the Second Empire style in the city. It was built for Jerome Marble, a dealer in pharmaceuticals and chemicals. Marble was also a director of the Quinsigamond Bank, and made an unsuccessful foray into establishing an excursion railroad.

References

Jerome Marble House Wikipedia