List of octagon houses
This is a list of octagon houses. The style became popular in the United States and Canada following the publication of Orson Squire Fowler's 1848 book The Octagon House, A Home for All. In the United States, 68 surviving octagon houses are included on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). The earliest and most notable octagon house in the Americas was Thomas Jefferson's 1806 Poplar Forest.
Orson Squire Fowler's 1848 book The Octagon House, A Home for All and his "monumental" four-story, 60-room house built during 1848–1853, Fowler's Folly in Fishkill, New York, provided inspiration for a nationwide fad.[1] Fifty-nine of the sixty-six pre-Civil War houses on the NRHP were built between 1849 and 1861. It is reported that the owner of the first-built of these, the Rich-Twinn Octagon House in western New York, was impressed by seeing an octagon house in the Hudson River Valley, presumably Fowler's home under construction.[2]
Canada[]
At least 20 historic octagon houses are known to exist in Canada, distributed across four eastern provinces.[3] Extant octagon houses in Canada include the following:
- In New Brunswick[4]
- Pocologan[4][5]
- Sackville: Captain George Anderson House, built in 1855, is a locally designated heritage site
- In Nova Scotia[4]
- Tatamagouche: Fraser Octagon House, built in 1857, provincially designated heritage site
- In Ontario[4]
- Ameliasburg, Prince Edward County
- Bowmanville
- Bracebridge: Woodchester Villa, a provincially designated heritage site
- Brantford
- Burlington: The Thomas Pickett Octagonal House, built 1860, at 6103 Guelph Line, designated under the Ontario Heritage Act
- Calabogie: 15 Octagon Lane
- Clark's Corners, Oxford County
- Kingsville
- Maple: Major MacKenzie Drive
- Milton
- Morton, northeast of Kingston, former octagon schoolhouse, also used as a residence
- Mount Pleasant, Brant County: 646 Mount Pleasant Road, now used as a spa
- Niagara Falls: Bradley Octagon House, built 1861, at 5783 Summer Street
- Otterville: Woodlawn Octagon House, built 1861, moved from Millvale
- Peel Region: 8280 Heritage Road, near Huttonville
- Port Hope, built 1856
- Picton, Prince Edward County, built ca. 1860
- Westport, on Upper Rideau Lake
United States[]
Notable octagon houses in the U.S. include the following, more than 80 in number, in date built order. The octagonal outlines of these houses may be seen in Google maps and other satellite photo services, by zooming in from satellite view above, to their locations. Specifically, almost all of the following listed ones are mapped and may be observed via satellite view in the Google external link here (click on "Map of all coordinates" to the right).[6]
Of these, six are further designated National Historic Landmarks of the United States: Armour-Stiner House in the Hudson River valley in New York, which is perhaps the only domed octagon house in the world; The Octagon House in Washington, D.C. where President Madison lived after the White House was burnt by the British; Thomas Jefferson's retreat Poplar Forest; May's Folly in Georgia; Samuel Sloan-designed Longwood in Natchez, Mississippi, still unfinished after its construction was halted by the American Civil War; and Waverley, also in Mississippi.[7][8]
At least one of the houses were used as "stations" sheltering escaped slaves on the Underground Railroad: the Octagon House in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin.[9][10]
Including post-Civil War constructed houses, there are now at least 84 octagon houses that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[11][12]
Octagon houses were particularly popular in New York State. There were 120 octagon houses in New York State,[1][13] of which 13 are listed on the National Register and listed below.
In 1958 Carl F. Schmidt published The Octagon Fad which attempted to inventory the Fowler-inspired homes, most of which were built prior to 1915 in North America. However, only a small fraction of the total are notable and extant.[14]
House name | Image | Date built | Location | County or equivalent | State | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Poplar Forest | 1806 | 1548 Bateman Bridge Road, Forest, VA 24551 37°20′54″N 79°15′54″W / 37.34826°N 79.26495°W[15] | Lynchburg | VA | Retreat for, and designed by, Thomas Jefferson, NRHP | |
The Glebe (Arlington, Virginia) | 1815 | 4527 17th St., N., Arlington 38°53′30″N 77°7′4″W / 38.89167°N 77.11778°W |
Arlington | VA | NRHP | |
May's Folly | 1829 | 527 1st Ave., Columbus, Georgia 32°27′21″N 84°59′37″W / 32.45583°N 84.99361°W |
Muscogee | GA | NRHP | |
Waverley (West Point, Mississippi) | 1840 | West Point 33°34′9″N 88°30′13″W / 33.56917°N 88.50361°W |
Clay | MS | NRHP | |
T. R. R. Cobb House | 1842 | 194 Prince Ave., Athens 33°57′40″N 83°22′54″W / 33.96111°N 83.38167°W |
Clarke | GA | NRHP | |
Yale-Cady Octagon House and Yale Lock Factory Site | 1849 | 7550 N. Main St., Newport 43°11′34″N 75°1′6″W / 43.19278°N 75.01833°W |
Herkimer | NY | NRHP | |
Rich-Twinn Octagon House | 1849 | 145 Main Street, Akron 43°1′19″N 78°29′44″W / 43.02194°N 78.49556°W |
Erie | NY | NRHP | |
Capt. Rodney J. Baxter House | 1850 | South and Pearl Sts., Barnstable 41°39′0″N 70°17′6″W / 41.65000°N 70.28500°W |
Barnstable | MA | Only surviving house credited by NRHP to Orson Squire Fowler. Concrete walls. Property includes an octagonal carriage house as well. | |
Edward A. Brackett House | 1850 | 290 Highland Ave., Winchester 42°27′0″N 71°7′45″W / 42.45000°N 71.12917°W |
Middlesex | MA | NRHP | |
1850 | 7271 Main St., Madison |
Madison | NY | Rare example of cobblestone walls | ||
Dubois-Sarles Octagon | 1850 | 16 South St., 41°36′2″N 73°58′27″W / 41.60056°N 73.97417°W |
Ulster | NY | Rare octagon house with sidehall interior plan (NRHP) | |
Octagon Cottage (Rocky Hill, Kentucky) | 1850 | Near Rocky Hill 36°58′10″N 86°2′44″W / 36.96944°N 86.04556°W |
Barren | KY | NRHP | |
Jacob Woodruff House | 1850 | 610 Liberty Street Ripon 43°50′52″N 88°50′49″W / 43.84778°N 88.84694°W |
Fond du Lac | WI | NRHP | |
Enoch Fuller House | 1850 | 72 Pine St., Stoneham 42°28′32″N 71°5′55″W / 42.47556°N 71.09861°W |
Middlesex | MA | NRHP | |
William Bryant Octagon House | 1850 | 2 Spring Street, Stoneham 42°28′54″N 71°5′40″W / 42.48167°N 71.09444°W |
Middlesex | MA | NRHP | |
Elias Crawford House | 1851 | 3 Norwood St., Worcester 42°15′10″N 71°49′9″W / 42.25278°N 71.81917°W |
Worcester | MA | NRHP | |
The Octagon | 1852 | 297 East Perry Street, Tiffin 41°7′0″N 83°10′5″W / 41.11667°N 83.16806°W |
Ohio | OH | NRHP | |
Octagon House (Danbury, Connecticut) | 1852 | 21 Spring Street, Danbury 41°23′42″N 73°27′34″W / 41.39500°N 73.45944°W |
Fairfield | CT | NRHP. Considered best example of style among Connecticut's remaining octagon houses. | |
Octagon House (Watertown, Wisconsin) | 1853 | 919 Charles St., Watertown, Wisconsin 43°11′5.03″N 88°42′27.31″W / 43.1847306°N 88.7075861°W |
Jefferson | WI | NRHP | |
Estabrook Octagon House | 1853 | 8 River St., Hoosick Falls 42°53′47″N 73°21′11″W / 42.89639°N 73.35306°W |
Rensselaer | NY | NRHP. One of the few remaining octagon houses built in strict compliance with Fowler's theories, other than the use of Rosendale cement. | |
Williams and Stancliff Octagon Houses | 1853 | 26 and 28 Marlborough Street, Portland 41°34′21″N 72°38′20″W / 41.57250°N 72.63889°W |
Middlesex | CT | Two octagon houses, side-by-side (Northern on pictured). NRHP | |
Denton Octagon House | 1853 | 760 Castle Street, Geneva | Ontario | NY | (Not NRHP) | |
1853 | East side of the road at 416 S. Corey St. on NE corner of Corey
& Washington Sts.Griggsville, IL |
Griggsville | IL | Stucco over brick construction | ||
Currier House (Almont, Michigan) | 1854 | 231 E St. Clair Street, Almont 42°55′14″N 83°3′42″W / 42.92056°N 83.06167°W |
Lapeer | MI | Registered Michigan Historical Site and current offices of Four County Community Foundation | |
Clarence Darrow Octagon House | 1854 | 8405 Main Street, Kinsman 41°26′59″N 80°35′5″W / 41.44972°N 80.58472°W |
Trumbull | OH | Boyhood home of lawyer Clarence Darrow, made of chestnut logs and concrete. NRHP | |
Andrew Gildersleeve Octagonal Building | 1854 | Main Rd. and Love Lane, Mattituck 40°59′28″N 72°31′25″W / 40.99111°N 72.52361°W |
Suffolk | NY | NRHP | |
Pressey House | 1854 | 287 Summer St., Oakland 44°32′28″N 69°43′30″W / 44.54111°N 69.72500°W |
Kennebec | ME | NRHP | |
Henry H. Smith/J.H. Murphy House | 1854 | 512 E. 6th St., Davenport 41°31′34″N 90°34′3″W / 41.52611°N 90.56750°W |
Scott | IA | NRHP | |
Hall-Crull Octagonal House | 1855 | North of Rushville 39°44′39″N 85°23′10″W / 39.74417°N 85.38611°W |
Rush | IN | NRHP | |
Richard Barker Octagon House | 1855 | 312 Plantation Street, Worcester 42°16′11″N 71°46′16″W / 42.26972°N 71.77111°W |
Worcester | MA | NRHP | |
Capt. George Scott House | 1855 | Federal St., Wiscasset 44°0′27″N 69°39′35″W / 44.00750°N 69.65972°W |
Lincoln | ME | NRHP | |
Jenkins Octagon House | 1855 | NY 395, Duanesburg 42°45′31″N 74°11′7″W / 42.75861°N 74.18528°W |
Schenectady | NY | NRHP, designed and built by Alexander Delos "Boss" Jones | |
Inkwell (Lake Landing, North Carolina) | 1855 | E of Lake Landing at 30868 US 264, Lake Landing Township, Engelhard 35°29′5″N 76°3′11″W / 35.48472°N 76.05306°W |
Hyde | NC | NRHP | |
Dr. Buck-Stevens House | 1855 | W. Main St., Brasher Falls 44°48′27″N 74°46′32″W / 44.80750°N 74.77556°W |
St. Lawrence | NY | NRHP | |
Shute Octagon House | 1855 | McGuire School Road, Duanesburg 42°46′28″N 74°13′10″W / 42.77444°N 74.21944°W |
Schenectady | NY | NRHP, designed and built by Alexander Delos "Boss" Jones | |
John S. Moffat House | 1855 | 1004 3rd Street Hudson 44°58′51″N 92°45′19″W / 44.98083°N 92.75528°W |
St. Croix | WI | NRHP | |
Sinnett Octagon House | 1855 | Muscatine 41°27′11″N 91°1′50″W / 41.45306°N 91.03056°W |
Muscatine | IA | NRHP | |
Frazier-Pressly House | 1856 | Abbeville County 34°04′55.7″N 82°18′07.9″W / 34.082139°N 82.302194°W |
Abbeville | SC | NRHP contributing property | |
Palmer-Gullickson Octagon House | 1856 | 358 Leonard St., West Salem 43°54′5″N 91°4′54″W / 43.90139°N 91.08167°W |
La Crosse | WI | NRHP | |
Deacon West Octagon House | 1856 | 370 High St., Pewaukee 43°5′16″N 88°15′54″W / 43.08778°N 88.26500°W |
Waukesha | WI | NRHP | |
Langworthy House | 1856 | 1095 W. 3rd St., Dubuque 42°29′42″N 90°40′45″W / 42.49500°N 90.67917°W |
Dubuque | IA | NRHP | |
Lukens Pierce House | 1856 | NW of Ercildoun on Wilmington Rd., Ercildoun 39°57′9″N 75°51′0″W / 39.95250°N 75.85000°W |
Chester | PA | NRHP | |
Octagon House (Fond du Lac, Wisconsin) | 1856 | 276 Linden St., Fond du Lac 43°46′15.97″N 88°26′54.03″W / 43.7711028°N 88.4483417°W |
Fond du Lac | WI | Has secret passageways and was used as a safe house on the Underground Railway. NRHP | |
George F. Lee Octagon Houses | 1856 | South of Nebraska City 40°34′19″N 95°48′10″W / 40.57194°N 95.80278°W |
Otoe | NE | NRHP | |
Wilcox Octagon House | 1856 | 5420 W. Genesee St., Camillus 43°2′28″N 76°16′42″W / 43.04111°N 76.27833°W |
Onondaga | NY | Camillus Historical Society occupies it today. NRHP | |
Stephen Harnsberger House | 1856 | Holly Ave., Grottoes 38°16′30″N 78°49′49″W / 38.27500°N 78.83028°W |
Rockingham | VA | NRHP | |
Abijah Thomas House | 1856 | SW of Marion on VA 657, Marion 36°46′27″N 81°34′13″W / 36.77417°N 81.57028°W |
Smyth County | VA | NRHP | |
Hiram Smith House | 1856 | 336 Main Street or 343 Smith Street, Neenah 44°11′10″N 88°28′7″W / 44.18611°N 88.46861°W |
Winnebago | WI | NRHP | |
Edward Elderkin House | 1856 | 127 S. Lincoln St., Elkhorn 42°40′5″N 88°33′9″W / 42.66806°N 88.55250°W |
Walworth | WI | NRHP | |
James L. Lawther House | 1857 | 927 W. 3rd St., Red Wing 44°33′43″N 92°32′27″W / 44.56194°N 92.54083°W |
Goodhue | MN | NRHP | |
Feusier Octagon House | 1857 | 1067 Green Street, San Francisco 37°47′55″N 122°25′00″W / 37.798543°N 122.416679°W |
San Francisco | CA | NRHP | |
Albert S. Potter Octagon House | 1857 | 4 Carolina Main Street, Richmond | Washington County | RI | NRHP contributing property (Carolina Village Historic District) | |
Wallingford Octagon House | ca. 1857 | 37 New Place Street, Wallingford | New Haven County | CT | Historic Buildings of CT | |
Norrish House | 1858 | West 2nd Street and Spring Street Hastings 44°44′38.5″N 92°51′20″W / 44.744028°N 92.85556°W |
Dakota County | MN | NRHP contributing property | |
Hiram Ramsdell House | 1858 | High and Perham Sts., Farmington 44°40′17″N 70°8′59″W / 44.67139°N 70.14972°W |
Franklin | ME | NRHP | |
Capt. Josiah E. Chase Octagon House | 1858 | Chase Mill Road, East Limington 43°43′39″N 70°39′40″W / 43.72750°N 70.66111°W |
York | ME | NRHP | |
Prime-Octagon House | 1859 | 41 Prime Ave., Huntington 40°52′28″N 73°25′23″W / 40.87444°N 73.42306°W |
Suffolk | NY | NRHP | |
Timothy M. Younglove Octagon House | 1859 | 8329 Pleasant Valley Road, Urbana 42°24′17″N 77°14′37″W / 42.40472°N 77.24361°W |
Steuben | NY | NRHP | |
Zelotes Holmes House | 1859 | 619 East Main Street, Laurens, South Carolina 34°29′57″N 82°0′5″W / 34.49917°N 82.00139°W |
Laurens | SC | Believed to be the first concrete house erected in South Carolina; NRHP | |
Armour-Stiner House | 1860 | 45 W. Clinton Ave., Irvington 41°01′51″N 73°52′13″W / 41.030803°N 73.870415°W |
Westchester | NY | Also known as the Carmer Octagon House for 20th Century owner, noted writer Carl Carmer. It may be the only domed octagon house in the world. NRHP | |
David Van Gelder Octagon House | 1860 | 47 Division St., Catskill 42°13′4″N 73°52′26″W / 42.21778°N 73.87389°W |
Greene | NY | NRHP | |
Gen. Francis H. West House | 1860 | 1410 17th Avenue Monroe 42°35′53″N 89°38′15″W / 42.59806°N 89.63750°W |
Green | WI | NRHP | |
Octagon House (Barrington, Illinois) | 1860 | 223 W. Main St., Barrington 42°9′15.17″N 88°8′25.65″W / 42.1542139°N 88.1404583°W |
Cook | IL | NRHP | |
Octagon House (Reading, Massachusetts) | 1860 | 97 Pleasant St., Reading 42°31′26″N 71°6′3″W / 42.52389°N 71.10083°W |
Middlesex | MA | A Carpenter Gothic house that is also octagonal. NRHP | |
Wallace-Jagdfeld Octagon House | 1860 | 171 Forest Ave., Fond du Lac 43°46′44″N 88°27′13″W / 43.77889°N 88.45361°W |
Fond du Lac | WI | NRHP | |
Newton Homestead | 1860 | Ridge Rd., South Otselic 42°39′4″N 75°47′8″W / 42.65111°N 75.78556°W |
Chenango | NY | NRHP | |
Charles Butler House (Franklin, Ohio) | 1860 | 13 E. Jackson St., Franklin 39°33′52″N 84°18′0″W / 39.56444°N 84.30000°W |
Warren | OH | NRHP | |
John Hosford House | 1860 | 64 Sandusky St., Monroeville 41°14′44″N 82°41′46″W / 41.24556°N 82.69611°W |
Huron | OH | NRHP | |
David Cummins Octagon House | 1860 | 301 Liberty Street, Conneaut 41°56′28″N 80°33′26″W / 41.94111°N 80.55722°W |
Ashtabula | OH | NRHP | |
Longwood (Natchez, Mississippi) | 1860 | Natchez 31°32′12″N 91°24′17″W / 31.53667°N 91.40472°W |
Adams | MS | Antebellum mansion, interior unfinished as construction was suspended at outbreak of American Civil War. NRHP | |
Loren Andrus Octagon House | 1860 | 57500 Van Dyke Street, Washington 42°43′6″N 83°2′6″W / 42.71833°N 83.03500°W |
Macomb | MI | NRHP | |
Borden Farm Stable House | 1860 | 621 May Road, Thompson 41°48′48″N 75°29′3″W / 41.81333°N 75.48417°W |
Susquehanna | PA | Built as a stable, converted to a house.[16] | |
Octagon House (Westfield, Massachusetts) | 1861 | 28 King Street, Westfield 42°7′17″N 72°45′19″W / 42.12139°N 72.75528°W |
Hampden | MA | NRHP | |
Petty-Roberts-Beatty House | 1859–61 | 103 N. Midway, Clayton 31°52′43″N 85°26′58″W / 31.87861°N 85.44944°W |
Barbour | AL | NRHP. One of only two known to have been built in Alabama. The other, the Lane House, has been destroyed. | |
McElroy Octagon House | 1861 | 2645 Gough Street, San Francisco 37°47′52″N 122°25′38″W / 37.797842°N 122.427328°W |
San Francisco | CA | NRHP; Structural concrete construction | |
Octagon Hall | 1862 | Franklin, Kentucky vic. 36°48′25″N 86°33′25″W / 36.80694°N 86.55694°W |
Simpson | KY | NRHP-listed | |
Nathan B. Devereaux Octagon House | 1864 | 66425 Eight Mile Road, Northfield Township 42°25′46″N 83°41′56″W / 42.42944°N 83.69889°W |
Washtenaw | MI | NRHP | |
The Pratt and Buckingham Octagon House | 1865 | 99 Chestnut Street, Fredonia 42°26′18″N 79°20′17″W / 42.43833°N 79.33806°W |
Chautauqua | NY | House and carriage house of concrete construction; house closely followed Fowler floor plans. | |
William Waterfield House | 1867 | 308 3rd St., S., Raymond 42°27′54″N 92°13′11″W / 42.46500°N 92.21972°W |
Black Hawk | IA | NRHP | |
Randall House | 1870 | 5927 Treasurer Rd., Mayville 43°20′22″N 83°19′20″W / 43.33944°N 83.32222°W |
Tuscola | MI | NRHP | |
Chickasaw Octagon House | 1871 | Court Street, Chickasaw Township 43°2′11″N 92°29′58″W / 43.03639°N 92.49944°W |
Chickasaw | IA | NRHP | |
Nathanial Brittan Party House | 1872 | 125 Dale Avenue | San Carlos | CA | NRHP, Victorian-style, two-and-a-half story redwood framed structure with an octagonal folly. | |
Jane Ross Reeves Octagon House | 1879 | 400 Railroad Street, Shirley 39°53′26″N 85°34′37″W / 39.89056°N 85.57694°W |
Hancock | IN | NRHP | |
Clapp Octagon House | 1880 | St. Augustine 29°53′14″N 81°17′20″W / 29.887346°N 81.288877°W |
St. Johns | FL | (not NRHP) | |
Ezekiel B. Zimmerman Octagon House | 1883 | Near Marshallville 40°55′22″N 81°45′47″W / 40.92278°N 81.76306°W |
Wayne | OH | NRHP | |
Dr. Nathan and Lula Cass House | 1885 | 502 N. Travis Ave., Cameron 30°50′44″N 96°58′38″W / 30.84556°N 96.97722°W |
Milam | TX | NRHP | |
Robert Waugh House | 1886 | 202 School St., Sparland 41°01.759′N 89°26.43′W / 41.029317°N 89.44050°W |
Marshall | IL | NRHP | |
Judge Henry L. Benson House | 1892 | 137 High St., Klamath Falls 42°13′25″N 121°47′7″W / 42.22361°N 121.78528°W |
Klamath | OR | NRHP | |
Longfellow-Hastings House | 1893 | Heritage Square 3800 Homer St., Los Angeles 34°05′17.5″N 118°12′30.7″W / 34.088194°N 118.208528°W |
Los Angeles | CA | NRHP Located at 85 S. Allen Ave., Pasadena at time of placement on NRHP | |
Hattie O. and Henry Drake Octagon House | 1893 | 605 3rd Street, SW, Huron 44°21′49″N 98°13′26″W / 44.36361°N 98.22389°W |
Beadle | SD | NRHP | |
William H. McCreery House | 1900 | 746 N. Washington Ave., Loveland 40°23′57″N 105°4′10″W / 40.39917°N 105.06944°W |
Larimer | CO | NRHP | |
Arthur W. and Chloe B. Cole House | 1901 | 5803 Rocky Branch Rd., Houston, Missouri 37°15′42″N 92°1′58″W / 37.26167°N 92.03278°W |
Texas | MO | NRHP | |
George H. Gallup House | 1901 | 703 S. Chestnut Street, Jefferson, Iowa | Greene | IA | NRHP, boyhood home of George Gallup | |
1907 | 821 Lincoln Pl., Boulder, Colorado 40°00′08.5″N 105°16′53.3″W / 40.002361°N 105.281472°W |
Boulder | CO | Built by brick mason Benjamin Franklin Gregg for Oliver and Mary DeMotte. Duplex with independent basement and main unit, 6 bedroom/4 bathroom underwent major remodel in 2019-20 after lengthy permitting process with the city of Boulder, preserving original stone foundation and footprint, exterior lines and features. Only octagon house in Boulder and one of six in the state of Colorado. House was named by the 1st group of CU Boulder students to live there after the remodel, due to unusual semi-circle door and windows and inordinate number of stairs with low headers leading to basement.[17] | ||
Other C. Wamsley House | 1909 | 200 N. 5th St., Hamilton 46°14′54″N 114°9′37″W / 46.24833°N 114.16028°W |
Ravalli | MT | NRHP | |
Gallaher House | 1914 | 600 12th St., Mansfield 48°0′28″N 119°40′31″W / 48.00778°N 119.67528°W |
Douglas | WA | NRHP | |
Wildfell | 1854 | NW of Darlington on U.S. 1 39°39′4″N 76°13′11″W / 39.65111°N 76.21972°W |
Harford | MD | NRHP | |
Chemosphere | 1960 | Los Angeles | Los Angeles | CA | ||
Gutherie Octagon House | 1850s | Westland | Wayne | Michigan | Now part of The Westland Historic Village Park, the central portion of the house was built in the 1850s. The two wings were added in the 1930s. The Gutherie family was, and still is, in the lumber industry, which explains the use of Chinese Hemlock on the inside of the house. | |
The Ocho | 1963 | 21 Cascade Walk | San Francisco | CA | As briefly seen in Dirty Harry | |
MILES B. LAWSON
HOUSE |
1855 | 669 Public St | Providence | RI | ||
Armory Revival Octagon House | 1988 | 68-76 Harrison St
41° 48' 53.1" N 71° 25' 45.1" W |
Providence | RI | 4 Condominium duplex apartments with separate entrances. | |
Notable former octagon houses[]
House name | Image | Date built | Location | County or equivalent | State | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fowler's Folly | 1853 | Fishkill | Dutchess | NY | Octagonal home of Orson Squire Fowler, built 1848–1853, condemned as a public health hazard and dynamited in 1897.[18] | |
Russell Octagon House | 1859 | Bloomfield | Davis | IA | NRHP; removed from NRHP in 1998 due to deterioration and lack of maintenance.[19] | |
1864 | Quincy | Adams | IL | Built by the town's founder, John Wood, later the governor of Illinois, at a cost said of $200,000. Demolished in the 1950s or 1960s | ||
Octagonal House | 1875 | Ames | Story | IA | Constructed in the 1870s, demolished in 1982. Namesake and original location of The Octagon Center for the Arts.[20] | |
Octagon House (Stamford, Connecticut) | N.A. | 120 Strawberry Hill Avenue, Stamford 41°3′50.29″N 73°32′7.49″W / 41.0639694°N 73.5354139°W |
Fairfield | CT | NRHP; destroyed by fire in 1985. |
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Bonafide, John A. (July 1997). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination:David Van Gelder Octagon House". Archived from the original on February 19, 2012. Retrieved June 8, 2008. and Accompanying 10 photos, exterior and interior Archived February 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Todd, Nancy. L. (December 1994). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination:Rich-Twinn Octagon House". Retrieved June 18, 2008. and Accompanying four photos, exterior and interior, from 1994
- ^ In Canada, the octagon house craze also engendered an octagonal deadhouse phenomenon. This included octagonal deadhouses, pre-burial edifices, built in the mid-to-late 19th century along Yonge Street in south-central Ontario, from just north of Toronto to Aurora. At least 3 octagon houses are classified as heritage sites, one in Richmond Hill and the other in King.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Kline, Robert V. "Inventory of Older Octagon, Hexagon, and Round Houses: Canada". rvkline. Retrieved June 23, 2008.
- ^ "The Sackville Octagon House - Octagon Buildings on Waymarking.com". www.waymarking.com.
- ^ The Google external link provides a U.S. map showing the locations of 85 of the houses listed below. Not included are any houses for which latitude and longitude coordinates are not available. Zooming in, and switching to "Satellite View", you may observe the octagonal outline of the houses, exactly at, or very near to the flagged locations. For a few sites, however, Google does not provide satellite view coverage in sufficient detail.
- ^ National Park Service. "National Historic Landmark Program: NHL Database". Archived from the original on June 6, 2004. Retrieved on various dates.
- ^ National Park Service (November 2007). "National Historic Landmarks Survey: List of National Historic Landmarks by State" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on June 9, 2007. Retrieved June 18, 2008.
- ^ Donna Remer (February 8, 2005). "Octagon House and the Underground Railroad". The Voice. Archived from the original on March 26, 2005. Retrieved June 18, 2008.
- ^ "1856 Octagon House". Marlenesheirlooms.Com. Archived from the original on March 13, 2008. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
- ^ That there are 84 NRHP octagon houses is documented by National Register reports identifying the below-listed properties as having "Octagon mode" architecture, or other indications of octagon house nature for these listed properties. Also, eight historic districts are noted to contain octagon houses as contributing properties, which may include others not listed here.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
- ^ Per Bonafide, citing Cramer, Sec 8-page 2 in Bonafide
- ^ Kline, Robert V. "Inventory of Older Octagon, Hexagon, and Round Houses". rvkline. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
- ^ "Thomas Jefferson's Poplar Forest". Poplar Forest.
- ^ "1860 Stable – Thompson, PA – $79,000". Old House Dreams. March 6, 2017. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
- ^ https://www.octagon.bobanna.com/CO.html
- ^ The Octagon House, Orson S Fowler: Introduction to the Dover Publications, Inc. 1973 reprint of 1848 original publication.
- ^ "NRHP weekly update 6/12/98".
- ^ http://www.amespubliclibrary.org/farwell/publication/Pub9221.htm
External links[]
- "Inventory of Older Octagon, Hexagon, and Round Houses": directory of historic U.S. and Canadian houses with many photos, compiled by Robert Kline.
- Octagonal Houses in Canada
- Octagon houses
- Lists of buildings and structures