Felton Street School | |
Location | 20 Felton Street, Hudson, Massachusetts |
---|---|
Coordinates | 42°23′34″N71°34′10″W / 42.3929°N 71.5695°W |
Built | 1882 |
Architect | Fuller & Delano |
Architectural style | Gothic, Queen Anne |
NRHP reference No. | 86000275 [1] |
Added to NRHP | February 27, 1986 |
The Felton Street School is a historic school building built in 1882 located at 20 Felton Street in Hudson, Massachusetts, United States. The 2+1⁄2-story brick-and-stone structure served as the town's high school until 1957. Today it is a residential apartment building. The building's design and ornamentation is typical of Queen Anne and Stick style architecture. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Architects Fuller & Delano designed the Felton Street School. [2] Construction costs totaled $15,000. [2] It opened in 1882 as the new Hudson High School and served in that capacity until 1957. [2] In 1901 the originally four-room school was expanded to eight rooms. [2] Local merchants published and sold postcards depicting the Felton Street School during the early 1900s. [3] [4]
When the Hudson and Massachusetts Historical Commissions inventoried the building as a historic property in 1978, they described its use as both "mental health facility" and "vacant," noting recent vandalism. [2] Since then the building has been renovated into 12 loft-style apartments. [5]
The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 27, 1986. [1]
The Felton Street School's plan is T-shaped. [2] The building's foundation is granite. [2] Its front façade has a projecting three-story gabled pavilion with large brackets at the roof corners and applied Stick style decoration—including a rising sun motif—in the gable. [2] A portico supported by similar large brackets shelters the main entrance set in this pavilion. [2] Six-over-six triple-paned rectangular windows punctuate the structural brick exterior walls on the front and side façades, while the rear façade has arched windows. [2] The window sills and lintels are made of brownstone. [2] The detailed brick cornice is corbelled and the building's chimneys have Queen Anne style ornamentation. [2] The school's original hipped slate roof contains hipped dormers also sheathed with slate. [2]
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