Broad Street Historic District (Middletown, Connecticut)

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Broad Street Historic District
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Postcard view of Broad Street, 1905 postmark
Postcard view of Broad Street, 1905 postmark
Location: Middletown, Connecticut
Architect: Sage,Barzillai; Et al.
Architectural style(s): Colonial, Other, Federal
Added to NRHP: August 25, 1988
NRHP Reference#: 88001319[1]
Governing body: Local

Broad Street Historic District, in Middletown, Connecticut, consists of properties that line Broad Street just west of the Downtown. Located on the eastern border of the Middletown Downtown Village District the Broad Street Historic District is a 19th Century residential neighborhood. US Secretary of State Dean Acheson spent a period of his childhood in the historic district.

[edit] Broad Street Historic District Inventory

  • 59 Broad Street- 1880, Queen Anne Style
  • 85 Broad Street- Queen Anne Style
  • 89 Broad Street- 1840, Greek Revival, Crandall-Cornwell House
  • 93 Broad Street- 1840-1841, Greek Revival, William Hubbard Atkins House
  • 101 Broad Street- 1840, Greek Revival, Enoch C. Ferre House
  • 109 Broad Street- 1845, Greek Revival, Samuel Stearns House
  • 119 Broad Street- 1833, Gothic Revival, Russell Library
  • 130 Broad Street
  • 131 Broad Street
  • 138 Broad Street- 1883-1884, Stick Style, Joseph Elliott House
  • 139 Broad Street- 1850, Italianate, William Cooley, Jr. House
  • 144 Broad Street- 1902-1903, Colonial Revival, Church of the Holy Trinity and Rectory. The rectory is also known as the Bishop Acheson House
  • 145 Broad Street- Italianate
  • 148 Broad Street- 1861, Victorian Italianate, Charles C. Hubbard House
  • 151 Broad Street- 1834-1848, Late Greek Revival, Joseph Tobey House
  • 54 Church Street
  • 60 Church Street
  • 148 College Street- 1822, Federal Style, First Randolph Pease House
  • 151 College Street- 1832, Greek Revival, Second Randolph Pease House
  • 156 College Street

[edit] Pictures

[edit] References

  1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2007-01-23).