Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Leftwich House

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Area
  
less than one acre

NRHP Reference #
  
75001373

Added to NRHP
  
21 October 1975

Built
  
1875

Opened
  
1875

Leftwich House

Location
  
203 S. Washington St., Greenville, Ohio

Architectural styles
  
Stick style, Italianate architecture

Similar
  
Lambert‑Parent House, Versailles Town Hall and Way, James and Sophia Clemens, Holy Family Catholic, St Louis Catholic Church a

The Leftwich House is a historic house in Greenville, Ohio, United States. Built in 1875, the house features a combination of the Italianate and Stick-Eastlake styles. A frame structure built upon a foundation of stone, it is one of the most well-preserved Stick-Eastlake houses in Greenville and the surrounding area, with a porch that has been described as "outstanding" and a gable that is ornamented by specifically Stick elements.

The house's floor plan is unusual; its four-bay western facade is divided between two components of two bays each; through the northern component, one may enter the house through a Victorian front door. An Eastlake porch shelters the rear door that opens onto the protruding kitchen, and various eaves elsewhere on the exterior form separate cornices, each of which is composed of brackets and a frieze. Covering the house is a hip roof, which consists primarily of shingles.

In 1975, the Leftwich House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places because of its excellent architecture. Although the house's history included no distinctive events or residents, its architecture was rare enough to qualify it for listing.

References

Leftwich House Wikipedia