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This brick double house with slate mansard roof,
yellow sandstone trim, front bay windows and side porches, was severely
damaged by fire in early January.
Elliot Street had been
opened in the 1850s, but most of the development took place after the Civil
War. 25-27 Elliot Street was built in 1872 by local mason and builder,
Benjamin Farrar. Mr. Farrar also built 94-98
Elliot Street as well as 5-11, 41-47, and 50-52 Mattoon Street. Charles
Blackstone, a Main Street, hardware merchant, was the first owner of 25
Elliot Street. Peter Bailey, a treasurer at Hampden Savings Bank, occupied
27 Elliot Street. The current owner is requesting permission from the
Springfield Historical Commission to demolish the property.
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Annual Meeting
The Springfield Preservation Trust held
its annual meeting at the historic Hotel Kimball in downtown Springfield on
Sunday afternoon, March 2. Elected as officers were Michael Marcinkewich,
president; Linda Langevin, first vice president; William Devlin, vice
president for advocacy; Joanne Cardell, secretary; Robert McCarroll,
education; and Benjamin Murphy, treasurer.
Board Members include Fran Gallagher,
Jim Llewellyn, Robert Holbrook, Jeanne LaLancette, Patty Staples, and
Michael Noonan, M.D. Outgoing board member and past president, James Boone,
was recognized for more than 30 years of service on the board and given the
title of President Emeritus.
The Donald E. Campion Award for
Outstanding Achievement in Historic Preservation was given to Gary Lewis of
Springfield. Mr. Lewis was recognized for restoring numerous homes in the
city, primarily in the McKnight Historic District, and for being a tireless
booster of Springfield’s architectural heritage.
Donald Campion was an early Board
Member, served as past president of the Springfield Preservation Trust, and
was one of the original restorers of homes on Mattoon Street, Elliot Street
and Maple Street. He set the standard and led the way for the preservation
movement in Springfield. Donald, as Clerk of the Works for the Springfield
Preservation Trust in the early 1980’s, restored 5 houses in the McKnight
neighborhood. This drew attention to McKnight and helped stimulate the
neighborhood’s resurgence.
It is only natural that Gary Lewis
should be awarded this highest honor for Preservation and Restoration as so
much of his work has also been in the McKnight neighborhood. Gary had a very
special love for McKnight where he lived for more than 20 years.
Gary was one of those people who did
things because they were the right things to do. He tackled the problem of
urban blight by restoring houses all over the City and providing decent
housing for people.
He restored houses on Yale, Harvard,
Thompson, Westminster, and Florida Streets, St. James Avenue, Ingersoll
Grove, Dartmouth Terrace, apartments on Worthington Street and Bowdoin
Street, as well as his own house on Ingersoll Grove. Gary will also receive
an additional award in May for his most recent restoration of 111 Ingersoll
Grove.
Gary has also rehabilitated homes in
many other parts of the city including Worcester Street, Dorne Street, Carew,
Aster, and Newman Streets, as well as apartment blocks on Avon Place and
Belmont Avenue. Gary did not restore the easy ones, only the ones that
desperately needed that special touch and extra love and attention that
saved them from further decay or the wrecker.
The Springfield Preservation Trust
recognizes and thanks Gary for his dedication to Springfield and for his
many efforts to preserve our wonderful built environment.
Forest Park Heights House Tour
The SPT Board is
hard at work putting together a Forest Park Heights House Tour for May 18
from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
The tour will open six homes
south of Sumner Avenue, developed by the Forest Park Heights Company and
headed by Lewis Newman. Colonial Revival and Shingle style homes predominate
in this area. Forest Park Heights is the largest and most elegant late
nineteenth/early twentieth century neighborhood in Western Massachusetts.
Residential development was spurred in the 1890s with expansion of the
electrified trolley system and creation of Forest Park. The following 30
years saw construction of the 600 houses now protected as a local historic
district.
Tickets will be available in early May
at Flowers, Flowers at Sumner Avenue and White Street, The Flowers Box near
the corner of Carew and Armory Streets, and online at
www.springfieldpreservationtrust.org. They will also be available on the
day of the tour at a yet to be determined location. Check the Trust voice
mail at 747-0656 for the specific location. Trust members receive a
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Gary Lewis
It is with great sadness that the Trust
learned of Gary Lewis’s passing the day after he was honored with the
Trust’s highest award.
Gary had been ill for a while and his
close friend Jim Locke accepted the award on his behalf. Jim reported that
he was able to read the tribute to Gary and that Gary was very pleased and
honored by the award.
Per Gary’s request, the
Campion award was prominently displayed at his wake and Bob McCarroll read
the tribute at his funeral.
Gary repeatedly received awards from the
Trust for his individual restorations. The City of Springfield and the
Preservation Trust will miss Gary and we thank him for all of his goodness
and generosity.
SPT
Committees
The Springfield Preservation Trust is in
the process of creating a committee structure to assist the organization so
that it may function more efficiently and effectively. The Board of
Directors is asking you, the members, for help by utilizing your
professional talents and experience. We are looking for members to volunteer
a little time each month who have backgrounds in Marketing/Public Relations,
Fundraising/Development, Program Planning, and Database Administration.
Your time will make a different in the
capacity of the Trust to advocate for the historic structures of Springfield
and educate residence of the significance of our unique built environment.
Please contact Ben Murphy at
bmurphy@springfieldpreservationtrust.org if you would like to volunteer
some time for SPT.
SPT Website
Over the last few months the SPT website
has gone through some big changes with the addition of much more content and
added resources. We encourage you to visit
www.springfieldpreservationtrust.org and look through all the
different pages. Upcoming events will be listed on the homepage with links
to more detailed information on the events page or the house tour page. Read
past newsletters online or print the convenient PDF version. On the
resources page can be found our Contractors List with contact information
for many different types of contractors. And coming soon to the resource
page will be information about the new resource library.
You will be able to search for SPT books
online and see what is available in the library. Another new and exciting
feature is our online sale pages. SPT now sells tickets and can receive
memberships by credit card online through a secure online sales page. Next
time there is an event or you want to renew your membership, consider doing
it through the website.
The website now offers a way to
communicate with the Trust through email. Our email address,
info@springfieldpreservationtrust.org, is posted on the website.
Contractor
List
The very popular
Contractor Recommendation List is in need of updating. If you have recently
used a contractor that you were pleased with, let us know so we can add them
to the list. If you need a contractor, let us know and we can share the list
or you can look it up on the trust website at
www.springfieldpreservationtrust.org
Send contractors name, trade specialty, address, telephone number, and email
to Jim Boone, 97 Florida Street, Springfield 01109, or send an email to Jim
at
jimboone@hotmail.com.
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