Alpheus Gay House

The Alpheus Gay House is a historic house at 184 Myrtle Street in Manchester, New Hampshire. Built c. 1870 by Alpheus Gay, a local building contractor, it is one of the state's most elaborate Italianate houses. The house was owned for a time by the nearby Currier Gallery of Art, but is now in private hands. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.[1]

Alpheus Gay House
Location184 Myrtle St., Manchester, New Hampshire
Coordinates42°59′53″N 71°27′25″W
Area0.3 acres (0.12 ha)
Built1870 (1870)
Built byGay, Alpheus
Architectural styleItalian Villa
NRHP reference No.82001682[1]
Added to NRHPMarch 9, 1982

Description and history

The Alpheus Gay House is located in a predominantly residential area northeast of downtown Manchester, at the northwest corner of Myrtle and Beach streets. It is a 2½-story wood frame structure, with gabled roof section and a flushboarded exterior. It has complex massing, a roofline studded with paired brackets on the main block and modillions on the servants' wing, and a three-story tower above its main entry. The main entrance is sheltered by a porch with square posts and decorative arches below the cornice. Windows have a variety of surrounding treatments, including rounded arches, peaked lintels, and bracketed flat lintels with projecting cornices. A carriage house is attached to the house's eastern servants' wing, with vertical board siding and simpler but similar styling to that on the house.[2]

The house was built about 1870 by Alpheus Gay, a prominent local contractor, as his personal residence. It appears to have borrowed heavily from design patterns published by Andrew Jackson Downing and Calvert Vaux. It is a late but particularly well-executed example of the Italian villa style promoted by those architects, and has undergone only modest alterations since its construction.[2]

gollark: It's limited to 640x480 without compression but has a hardware JPEG encoder thing which lets it do 1080p, because somehow a JPEG encoder is cheaper than USB 3?
gollark: It appears as a webcam but it takes input from a connected HDMI device.
gollark: I also have a weird Chinese HDMI to USB thing I can use for debugging purposes.
gollark: I mostly use mine over SSH.
gollark: As opposed to not doing that.

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.