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Townsend-McIndoe House

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1847. 5 Court St., Windsor village
  • (Photograph by Curtis B. Johnson, C. B. Johnson Photography)
  • (Photograph by Matthew Aungst)
  • (Photograph by Matthew Aungst)

This is perhaps Vermont's most elaborate extant Carpenter Gothic cottage. It was built for widow Sarah Hubbard Townsend on a portion of the family property just east of the house she had shared with her husband, Isaac. The cottage has a steep front gable overlooking Court Square, flanked by pairs of fashionable diagonally set chimneys. On the first floor, twin French doors originally opened onto an unroofed piazza, while in the gable, above a blind central bay, paired lancet windows beneath an attic trefoil opened on a bracket-supported balcony. There is a similar window and balcony centered on the Court Street side, which originally may have marked the gable-end entrance. The house was animated by scroll-sawn bargeboards with drop motifs and pendants that wrapped eaves as well as gables, drip moldings that framed diamond-glazed windows, union jack balcony railings matched by a similar fence around the yard, and a finial atop the gable toward the square. By the 1870s, a more severe polygonal bay window usurped the area beneath the Court Street balcony, perhaps added by newspaper publisher Lyman McIndoe. By the 1890s Lyman's daughter and son-in-law made further changes in a sympathetic Shingle Style. They replaced the gable clapboards with a zone of imbricated and butt-staggered wood shingles that terminate with a flare at the heads of the first-floor windows, centered shed-roofed porches on both main fronts, and created new trefoil-motif railings for balconies and piazzas.

Writing Credits

Author: 
Glenn M. Andres and Curtis B. Johnson
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Citation

Glenn M. Andres and Curtis B. Johnson, "Townsend-McIndoe House", [Windsor, Vermont], SAH Archipedia, eds. Gabrielle Esperdy and Karen Kingsley, Charlottesville: UVaP, 2012—, http://sah-archipedia.org/buildings/VT-01-WS41.

Print Source

Cover: Buildings of Vermont

Buildings of Vermont, Glenn M. Andres and Curtis B. Johnson. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2013, 378-379.

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