Puneet Varma (Editor)

M. A. Benton House

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Built
  
1898

NRHP Reference #
  
78002982

Designated RTHL
  
1971

Area
  
2,000 m²

Architectural style
  
Late Victorian

RTHL #
  
374

Opened
  
1898

Added to NRHP
  
22 May 1978

M. A. Benton House

Location
  
1730 6th Ave., Fort Worth, Texas

Similar
  
Fort Worth Zoo, National Cowgirl Museum, Amon Carter Museum, Benbrook Lake, NRH2O

The M. A. Benton House is an historic landmark in Fort Worth, Texas (USA), located on a four-lot corner at 1730 Sixth Avenue. This Victorian-style house, still owned by Benton descendants, was built in 1898 and is one of the oldest homes in Fort Worth. The descendants have preserved the cottage’s architecture features, including the one-and-a-half-story structure and the fence that has surrounded the cottage since it was first built. As a family home, it is not open to the public. The Benton House is individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural qualities. In 1981, the Benton House was designated a Texas Historic Landmark.

Contents

History

The Benton House was owned by a tobacco seller, Meredith A. Benton, and his wife, Ella Belle. M. A. Benton’s father, a Kansas City builder, erected the house for the couple in 1898. It was built originally with a barn and hayloft and a two-room servants’ house, but the servants’ quarters were redesigned into a garage building in 1937. Ella Belle Benton lived alone for most of the time because her husband was an active civic worker. She helped start the Rose Gardens, now part of the Fort Worth Botanic Garden, as well as a public kindergarten program.

Features

The Benton House is a Victorian gingerbread home. Made of cypress, it contains six rooms, a central hall, and tiled fireplaces. Some special features of this house are an asymmetrical floorplan, fine spindle work, cross gables over a hipped roof, and a cutaway window.

References

M. A. Benton House Wikipedia