Neha Patil (Editor)

Osgood Building

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Built
  
1893

Opened
  
1893

Added to NRHP
  
25 April 1986

NRHP Reference #
  
86002289

Area
  
1,214 m²

Osgood Building

Location
  
129 Lisbon St., Lewiston, Maine

Architect
  
Jefferson Coburn & Sons

MPS
  
Lewiston Commercial District MRA

Similar
  
Lewiston Trust and Safe Dep, Atkinson Building, Savings Bank Block, Odd Fellows Block, Lyceum Hall

The Osgood Building is an historic commercial building at 129 Lisbon Street in Lewiston, Maine. Built in 1893, it is one of only two known surviving commercial works by local architect Jefferson Coburn, and the only known use of imported English white brick in the state. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Description and history

The Osgood Building is located on the west side of Lisbon Street, Lewiston's principal commercial thoroughfare, just north of its junction with Ash Street. It is a four story masonry structure, built principally out of white brick imported from Leeds in the United Kingdom. Its main facade is symmetrical, with groups of three bays flanking a central bay. These groupings are articulated by pilasters that rise the full height of the building, with decorative capitals between the first and second levels (where they form part of a band of decorative stone), and the cornice. The main entrance is recessed in the central bay in an archway built of red glazed brick. The storefronts to either side consist of a central larger window with smaller flanking windows, each set in segmented-arch openings, with cast frame elements that include a keystone above the larger window. This form is repeated, with slightly different styling, on the second and third levels. The fourth level is nine bays across, with smaller round-arch windows.

The block was built in 1893 for H.A. Osgood, a jeweler with a long-established business at this site. It was designed by Jefferson Coburn, a noted local architect whose only other surviving commercial commission is the First McGillicuddy Block, just south of this one. He was particularly noted for his eclectic designs. The builder was E.R. Desjardins, an immigrant from Quebec.

References

Osgood Building Wikipedia