Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Wildwood Hall

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Built
  
1893 (1893)

NRHP Reference #
  
78000237

Area
  
4 ha

Built by
  
Perkins,Martin

Opened
  
1893

Added to NRHP
  
2 October 1978

Wildwood Hall

Location
  
Moore's Hill Rd., Newbury, Vermont

Architectural style
  
Shingle style architecture

Similar
  
Goffstown Congregational Church, Beth Eden Baptist Church, Camp Farwell

Wildwood hall ras area meeting video


Wildwood Hall is a historic house on Moore's Hill Road in Newbury, Vermont. Also known locally as The Castle, it is a distinctive example of Shingle style architecture, designed as a country house by William M. Butterfield and completed in 1895. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

Contents

Fsu marching chiefs at wildwood hall


Description and history

Wildwood Hall stands in southeastern Newbury, on a hillside overlooking the Connecticut River valley to the east and south. It is set on the north side of Moore's Hill Road, on an 11-acre (4.5 ha) parcel that is formally landscaped in the immediate vicinity of the house. The house is a 2-1/2 story, its first floor built out of uncoursed fieldstone, and its upper levels framed in wood and clad in wooden shingles. The main block is covered by a gabled roof, while the crossing ell has a gambrel roof. At the crook of the ell, a round tower with conical roof rises above a squared porch supported by fieldstone columns. The interior retains original Queen Anne woodwork, and a mosaic marble floor in its main floor.

The house was built between 1893 and 1895, for George Moore, on a site that was documented as early as 1799 for its magnificent views of the river valley. It was designed by William M. Butterfield of Manchester, New Hampshire, who had a reputation for high-quality Queen Anne and Shingle style designs. Moore lived here until his death in 1905.

References

Wildwood Hall Wikipedia


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