- Source: Ridgefield Center Historic District
The Ridgefield Center Historic District is part of the town of Ridgefield, Connecticut. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
The district is an irregularly shaped area that is roughly bounded by Pound St., Fairview Ave., Prospect, Ridge, and Whipstick Rds. In 1984 it included 241 contributing buildings and one other contributing structure, over a 395 acres (160 ha) area.
Two properties, the Phineas Chapman Lounsbury House (now a community center) and the Keeler Tavern (purchased and renovated by architect Cass Gilbert and now a museum), were already separately listed in the National Register.: 60
Other significant properties include:
the Reverend Thomas Hawley House, c.1715
the Nathan Scott House, at 5 Catoonah Street, which was moved there in 1922
the former Episcopal Rectory, from 1790, which was moved to 23 Catoonah Street
the Benedict House, c. 1790
E. P. Dutton House
Elizabeth W. Morris Memorial Building, which at the time of NRHP listing was home of the Ridgefield Library and Historical Association
Maynard House, at 2 Peaceable Street, a c.1900 Neo-Georgian building locally believed to be designed by McKim, Meade & White
14 Barry Avenue, c. 1740, a Colonial house with early 20th-century Colonial Revival additions: 13
See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Fairfield County, Connecticut
References
External links
Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. CT-46, "Reverend Thomas Hawley House, Main Street & Branchville Road, Ridgefield, Fairfield County, CT", 2 photos, 10 measured drawings, supplemental material
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ridgefield Center Historic District
- Ridgefield, Connecticut
- Keeler Tavern
- Wilton Center Historic District
- Phineas Chapman Lounsbury House
- Ridgefield, New Jersey
- Ridgefield Park, New Jersey
- West Mountain Historic District
- Wilton Center, Connecticut
- List of cemeteries in Connecticut