Hunnewell Estates Historic District

Hunnewell Estates Historic District

View of fields and pastures at Hunnewell Farm, Pond Road and Washington Street.
Location Wellesley, Massachusetts
Coordinates 42°16′48″N 71°18′30.5″W / 42.28000°N 71.308472°W / 42.28000; -71.308472Coordinates: 42°16′48″N 71°18′30.5″W / 42.28000°N 71.308472°W / 42.28000; -71.308472
Built 1770 to 1891
Architect Arthur Gilman, John Sturgis, Gridley J.F. Bryant, Ware & Van Brunt, and Shaw & Hunnewell.
Architectural style Colonial, Italianate, Colonial Revival, Late Victorian, 19th & 20th Century Revivals.
NRHP Reference #

88000438

[1]
Added to NRHP April 14, 1988

The Hunnewell Estates Historic District is an historic district between the Charles River and Lake Waban in Wellesley and Natick, Massachusetts, about 17 miles west of Boston. It consists of the large group of 18th to 21st century agricultural and estate properties with farmland, gardens, residences, and landscapes of the Hunnewell and Welles families. The properties in the Historic District are still largely owned and occupied by members of the Hunnewell family. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[2]

History

Topiary 'Italian Garden' on the H.H. Hunnewell estate circa 1909.

The origin of the Hunnewell estates dates to 1763 when Samuel Welles (1725-1799) made his first purchase of Indian lands in Natick and West Needham (later Wellesley). Welles was a descendant of Thomas Welles (1594-1660), 1st Treasurer and then Governor of the Colony of Connecticut. The properties descended to Samuel's granddaughter Isabella Pratt Welles and her husband, successful railroad financier and businessman, landscape designer, and horticulturalist H. Hollis Hunnewell (1810-1902), and continued with their adult children and the following generations.[2][3] Mr. Hunnewell and his family gave much to the town of Wellesley (formerly West Needham), which was named after his wife's family - the Welles, and to Boston, with civic philanthropy in numerous fields.

They also were generous to the New England horticulture community for over 75 years via importing, testing, and distributing many new plant introductions, estate site planning and garden design examples, and supportive leadership in the Massachusetts Horticultural Society.[3] Horatio Hollis Hunnewell was especially interested in coniferous and broad-leaved evergreens, and Asian rhododendrons.[3]

At their peak during the early 20th century 'American Country Place' era, there were twenty contiguous Hunnewell estates along Washington Street and Pond Road in southwest Wellesley.[2] The estates have now been in the Welles-Hunnewell family for eight generations.

Conservation

The family has placed hundreds of acres in the district under perpetual conservation restrictions, primarily with The Trustees of Reservations, protecting Lake Waban and the Charles River, as well as the farmland, gardens, landscapes, vistas, and natural native landscapes from development.[2] These restrictions, starting in 1974, were among the first placed with the Trustees of Reservations.

None of the properties is open to the public. However, while maintaining its property rights in this regard, the family allows members of the neighboring Wellesley College community to enter the properties to walk the path around Lake Waban; bicycles are not permitted.

Historic district

The district includes the original Welles homestead, the Hunnewell Farm, and the eight contiguous country houses and outbuildings H. H. Hunnewell built for himself and seven of his nine children:[2]

1875 Victorian residence of Walter Hunnewell in the historic district. Architect: Ware & Van Brunt.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.