Butterfield Cobblestone House

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LocationClarendon, NY
Nearest cityBatavia
Coordinates43°11′9″N 78°1′2″W / 43.18583°N 78.01722°W / 43.18583; -78.01722
Area26.4 acres (10.7 ha)[1]
Butterfield Cobblestone House
A brown house with little stones in its surface. It has two wings and some areas with square columns
East profile and north elevation, 2010
Butterfield Cobblestone House is located in New York
Butterfield Cobblestone House
Butterfield Cobblestone House is located in the United States
Butterfield Cobblestone House
LocationClarendon, NY
Nearest cityBatavia
Coordinates43°11′9″N 78°1′2″W / 43.18583°N 78.01722°W / 43.18583; -78.01722
Area26.4 acres (10.7 ha)[1]
Built1849
ArchitectJames Thompson; William Steele; Donaldus Reuben Bartlett; Daniel F. St. John[1]
Architectural styleGreek Revival
MPSCobblestone Architecture of New York State MPS
NRHP reference No.10000044[2]
Added to NRHPMarch 1, 2010

The Butterfield Cobblestone House is on Bennett Corners Road in the Town of Clarendon, New York, United States, south of the village of Holley. It is a cobblestone structure from the mid-19th century built in the Greek Revival architectural style by a wealthy local farmer to house his large family. Three generations of his descendants would run the farm over the next 80 years. Later owners would make some renovations to the interior.

One of approximately 90 cobblestone structures in Orleans County,[1] it is the only one in Clarendon.[1] It is also considered the finest Greek Revival building in the county.[1] The house and several outbuildings, part of a working farm, were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010,[2] the easternmost property in the county currently so recognized.

Exterior

The house is located on a 26-acre (11 ha) farm on the west side of Bennett Corners Road in the northern section of the town, three-quarters of a mile (1.21 km) south of the NY 31A state highway. The terrain is generally level, with cleared fields either cultivated, left fallow or used as horse pasture, and woodlots. All nearby properties are also large farms, with a large residential subdivision 0.4 miles (640 m) to the north-northeast.[1]

All the buildings are in the southeast corner of the farm. To their north, along the road, are seven acres (2.8 hectares) of horse pasture, with 13 acres (5.3 ha) of alfalfa and timothy to their rear, in the west. The rest of the property is taken up by a small apple orchard, a mixed vegetable plot, and a woodlot.[1]

The main house, sheltered by a 70-foot-tall (21 m) horse chestnut, has a one-and-a-half-story main block with one-story wings to the north and northwest, its side and rear respectively. It sits on a stone foundation with its sides in mostly lake-washed coursed cobblestones from 1 to 2.5 inches (2.5 to 6.4 cm) in diameter set in mortar. The main block and wings are topped by gabled roofs shingled in asphalt and pierced by a stone chimney where the side and rear wings intersect.[1]

A continuous limestone water table runs around the first story at floor level. Limestone is also used for the windowsills, lintels, quoins and steps to the main entrance. A datestone set in the gable field on the east elevation of the main block gives 1849 as the construction date.[1]

At the rooflines are a molded wooden cornice with wide frieze on the north and south sides of the main block. The basement windows are all screened with vertical bars. On the northeast corner of the north wing is a recessed porch screened by four 12-inch-square (30 cm) wooden columns on limestone slabs, their capitals flaring outward past the beam at the top of the porch. It is floored in Medina sandstone with a limestone border. Its door has a ceramic knob with brown and white swirl.[1]

Another, smaller wooden porch, of recent construction, shelters an entrance on the north of the northwest wing. It has a wooden floor and steps but is otherwise architecturally consistent with the other porch. There is also a tongue and groove wooden door on the north end of the west (rear) facade. At the peak of the gable on the main block on this side is another stone, with the initials "O.B." for Orson Butterfield, the builder and original owner. At the southwest corner is the pedimented double-door entrance to the cellar.[1]

Interior

The main entrance, at the north end of the main block's east face, is a 2½-inch-thick (6.4 cm) recessed panel wooden door with a ceramic knob. It is flanked by sidelights and pilasters, with a transom atop. It opens into a foyer floored in random-width red pine with beveled-edge baseboard topped by a curved molding on the walls. The doors from it have wide wooden trim and an ogee-topped architrave.[1]

On the south is a square parlor with two windows on the south and east walls, all with recessed panels on either side and below. They are bordered by paneled pilasters on plinth blocks with beveled tops. A door on the south opens into a small office with a treatment similar to the foyer. The north parlor, occupying the wing on that side, has similar treatments as well but their size varies with each window and door, reflecting its origins as three separate rooms combined into one. It is floored in chestnut planks. On the west wall is a fieldstone fireplace with "H & JG, '69" carved into the masonry for its owners and construction date.[1]

To its west, in the northwest wing, is the current dining room, originally the kitchen. It is floored in white oak with a brick fireplace, surrounded by a wooden mantel, set in the east wall, which has a drywall covering over its brown brick. A flagstone hearth is in front of the fireplace. The walls have a similar combination of baseboard and molding as the other rooms.[1]

Pocket doors, believed to have come from a nearby older house, lead west into the kitchen. It has a similar interior to the dining room, with Amish-built oak cabinets. A bathroom and office round out the first floor.[1]

Upstairs are three bedrooms, a large closet and another bathroom. It is less decorated than the first floor. The floorboards are random-width pine and the ceilings are lower.[1]

Outbuildings

There are three other buildings on the property: a barn, chicken coop and Morton metal building. The first two are old enough and retain sufficient integrity to be considered contributing resources to the National Register listing. The metal building was added in the late 20th century and is not considered contributing.[1]

The wooden barn, just to the northwest of the house, is a 36-by-100-foot (11 by 30 m) structure with a gambrel roof oriented north–south. It has most of its original fieldstone foundation save for a short section of the north end where it was replaced with cement blocks. The roof has asphalt shingles except for the bottom half of the east side, done in corrugated aluminum.[1]

On its east side, facing the road, are three entrances and three windows. The southernmost is a large single sliding door with a crossbar design that opens to reveal a gate at ground level and a locked door to the hayloft above. Two other sliding doors, one faced in wood shingles, are to the north; a small door cut into the tongue-and-groove siding near the north end has since been nailed shut.[1]

The west side, with battens added to its tongue-and-groove, has a pair of sliding doors near the north end opening into the cellar. At the south end are two smaller single sliding doors. In both ends there is a single round window near the gambrel peak. The south end has a lean-to to shelter firewood extended on it below the door to the hayloft.[1]

Inside, the south end is given over to horse stalls. There are three, all with sliding gates with vertical metal bars. A steep staircase leads up to the hayloft. A fourth stall is located behind one of the two tack rooms. A sliding door opens into the granary, now a woodworking shop. To its north is the threshing floor, with a corner staircase leading to the basement.[1]

Two-thirds of the upper story is taken up by the hayloft, divided into two sections. The stairway from the southwest corner, near the horse stalls, opens via a door in the floor. A truss rests on the floor in the south section, suggesting the area beyond it was once open. Similarly, one of the three stone walls in the section of the basement not open is more fragile, with older mortar, suggesting it may have been part of the foundation of a previous barn on the site.[1]

History

See also

References

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