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Wood Frame with Brick Veneer
Massey-Hall-Marshall House
1-1/2 Storey English Tudor Revival residence (circa 1928) at northeast corner of North Gregson and Demerius Streets
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2111 Otis St.
8.17.2020, Photo by Beverly Evans The one-and-a-half-story, side-gabled Period Cottage is three bays wide and triple-pile with a projecting front-gabled entrance bay, centered on the façade and flanked by gabled dormers. The house has a brick veneer, flush eaves, vinyl windows, and vinyl siding on the dormers. The replacement front door retains a...
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128 Masondale Avenue
(January 2018, Photo by Heather Slane, hmwPreservation) One of only a few two-story buildings in the district, this Colonial Revival-style house is the most stately house on Masondale Avenue. The house is five bays wide and double-pile with a brick veneer, flush eaves, and a wide, flat fascia board. The house has replacement vinyl windows...
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129 Nelson St.
(03.12.2019, N. Levy) From the National Register Historic District description: This one-story, hip-roofed Ranch house is six bays wide and double-pile with a wide, projecting, hip-roofed wing on the left (northwest) end of the façade. The house has a painted brick veneer, deep eaves, vinyl windows, and an interior brick chimney. A solid wood door...
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1923 Cecil Street
(January 2018, Photo by Cheri Szcodronski, hmwPreservation) With distinctive stone detailing on the front-gabled wing and interior brick chimney, this one- story, side-gabled, Minimal Traditional-style house is five bays wide and double-pile. It has a brick veneer, six-over-six wood-sash windows, generally paired, flush eaves, and triangular...
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1917 Cecil Street
(January 2018, Photo by Cheri Szcodronski, hmwPreservation) This one-story, side-gabled, Minimal Traditional-style house is four bays wide and double-pile with the right (southeast) two bays located under a slightly lower roofline. The house has a brick veneer, six-over-six wood-sash windows, flush eaves, rectangular louvered gable vents, and an...
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1914 Cecil Street
(January 2018, Photo by Cheri Szcodronski, hmwPreservation) This one-story, side-gabled, Minimal Traditional-style house is four bays wide and double-pile with a brick veneer, flush eaves, an interior brick chimney, an exterior brick chimney on the right (northwest) elevation, and vinyl windows. The six-panel panel door, just right of center on the...
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1913 Cecil Street
(January 2018, Photo by Cheri Szcodronski, hmwPreservation) This one-story, hip-roofed Ranch house is three bays wide and triple-pile with a projecting, front-gabled wing on the left (northwest) end of the façade. The house has a brick veneer, deep eaves, an interior brick chimney, and replacement slider windows throughout. The front-gabled wing...
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1904 Cecil Street
(January 2018, Photo by Cheri Szcodronski, hmwPreservation) This one-story, side-gabled Period Cottage was likely built by William Corbett, a bricklayer and the original owner. It is three bays wide and double-pile. It has a brick veneer with soldier-course brick watertable, flush eaves, an interior brick chimney, and an exterior brick chimney on...
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1903 Cecil Street
(January 2018, Photo by Cheri Szcodronski, hmwPreservation) One of only a few split-level houses in the district, this building features a one-story, side-gabled section on the right (south) with a two-story, front-gabled section at the left (north). The one- story section has a brick veneer, stacked metal-frame awning windows, arranged in a group...
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