Built 1893 (1893) NRHP Reference # 78000237 Area 4 ha | Built by Perkins,Martin Opened 1893 Added to NRHP 2 October 1978 | |
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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
- Wildwood hall ras area meeting video
- Fsu marching chiefs at wildwood hall
- Description and history
- References
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.