Bazaleel Taft, Jr., House and Law Office

Bazaleel Taft, Jr., also "Bezaleel"

House and Law Office
( Elmshade )

Uxbridge, Massachusetts
"Powerful political family - Taft family reunions, Georgian architecture"
Location:

147 South Main Street

Uxbridge, Massachusetts
Built: 1807
Governing body: Private
NRHP Reference#: 83004135 [1]
Added to NRHP: November 7, 1983

The Bazaleel Taft, Jr., House and Law Office is an historic structure in Uxbridge, Massachusetts. On November 7, 1983, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[2] The House and Law office reflect the Georgian Architecture Style.

Contents

History

Elmshade, built in 1807 at 195 South Main Street, was built in the Georgian architecture style, and was a gift for Bezaleel Taft, Jr from Bezaleel Taft, Sr., on his graduation from Harvard Law School.[3] Bezaleel, Jr. was the grandson of Lydia Taft, America's first woman voter. Bazaleel Jr. was practicing law next door in a brick building. Like his Father, Taft Jr. also became a State Senator and a representative to the General Court.[3] He also served on the State Executive Council. He served as President of the Blackstone National Bank, of which he was a founder, for nearly 20 years.[3]

Gathering place for the Taft family

Five generations of the Taft family descendants lived at "Elmshade".[3] A number of them had powerful political and legal careers, including George S. Taft, Bezaleel Jr's son.[3] George was a lawyer, District Attorney and private secretary, chief of staff, to U.S. Senator George Hoar in the 1880s.[3] His influence probably led to the Lincoln Square, Worcester Court House being erected.,[3] The "Life of Alphonso Taft by Lewis Alexander Leonard", on Google Books, is a particularly rich source of the history of the Taft family in Massachusetts.[4] Elmshade was the site of Taft family reunions such as in 1874.[3] Young William Howard Taft visited this home with his father Alphonso Taft, U.S. Secretary of War and founder of Skull and Bones at Yale. Alphonso Taft, who also served as United States Attorney General under President Ulysses S. Grant, delivered a powerful oratory on the Taft family and its roots in this area at this historic home during the reunion in 1874.[4] Young William Howard Taft, and his brother Charles Phelps Taft, who founded the Chicago Cubs, both likely heard the speech. President William Howard Taft again visited this area, and this home, as a youth when he spent summers and even a term of school in Millbury. He would return here many years later as the American President to visit his kinfolk. The New York Times recorded President Taft's visits to his ancestral homes in Mendon and Uxbridge during his Presidency.[5]

Colonial style Georgian house and office

In the colonial period of America, the Georgian Architecture style was also built with wood and clapboard, though much of the construction was of brick. Wood clapboard is the style used for the Bezaleel Taft, Jr house. The office was a brick style building. The link for Georgian architecture notes these distinctions.

See also

References

External links