Discover Concord - Spring 2022 Issue

Page 60

Trinitarian Congregational Church

HARRY B. LITTLE

C

All photos courtesy of the author

Colonial Revival Architecture in Concord BY HENRY MOSS

Concord Center is a remarkable setting where our lives are comforted by continuity to a past of early patriotism, radical thinking, and stories of remarkable local residents. That continuity was intentionally reinforced by one local architect whose vision and talent placed unusually welldesigned buildings in locations where Colonial Revival architecture informs the image of Concord as a place built on its mythic past. Evolution of the streetscape that we now take for granted as the image and surround of Concord Center was far from serene. The Milldam Company was formed in 1828 to drain the existing mill pond and create a continuous commercial zone that provided spaces for gunsmiths, harness repairmen, shoe stores, and other vital services of that day. A century later, the young architect, Harry Britton Little, watched physical changes unfold along the Milldam and Main Street that included telephone

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Discover CONCORD

| Spring 2022

poles lining both sides of the street, overhead wires and rails set in granite cobblestones for street railways, and the conversion of stables to car sales shops with garage workspaces. On Walden Street, he witnessed the Trinitarian Congregational Church burning to the ground. The resulting vacant sites on the Milldam were eyesores on the town he so admired. Helen’s

In 1914, Harry B. Little founded his own architecture firm. He married Miriam Barrett of Concord, and they moved into a house he designed on Simon Willard Road. This would be the start of a thirty-yearlong series of local buildings he completed while working as a partner in the firm that designed the National Cathedral in Washington and Trinity College Chapel in Hartford- both powerful examples of Gothic Revival ecclesiastical design. His vision for Concord was one of calmer grandeur. The Colonial Revival provided an architectural language that could be scaled for public spaces and fit well with street frontages and the civic landscape of Concord’s churches, library, banks, office buildings, and the comparative intimacy of shop windows. In sharp contrast, nationally recognized Concord architects Thomas Shaw and Andrew Hepburn (of the Boston firm that designed Colonial Williamsburg) sought to impose a far more aggressive renewal at the Milldam. They envisioned


Articles inside

A Fresh New Spring

2min
pages 76-77

Arts Around Town

5min
pages 74-75

Barrow Bookstore Presents: Concord Trivia

7min
pages 70-71

Explorations of Black Past, Present, and Future

3min
page 66

Opening the Library’s Next Chapter

6min
pages 64-65

Artist Spotlight

4min
page 62

HARRY B. LITTLE: Colonial Revival Architecture in Concord

6min
pages 60-61

The French Countryside Arrives in Concord

3min
pages 58-59

Stories From Special Collections: The Art Collection

3min
page 56

Concord's Conantum: A Satisfying Place to Live

5min
pages 54-55

Flipping the Script: The Women of the Old Manse

3min
page 52

Relocated: Displaced Civilians and the Siege of Boston

4min
pages 50-51

The Wright Tavern Reveals its Historic Roots

6min
pages 48-49

EMERSON: Bridging Concord’s Past and Future

6min
pages 40-41

Finding the Balance: The Attias Group Works to Restore historic Homes While Innovating for the Future

6min
pages 38-39

Alive with Birds: William Brewster in Concord

6min
pages 36-37

Friend of the Poor and Needy: The Life of Reverend Daniel Foster

7min
pages 32-33

H.W. Brands Uncovers America’s Long History of Civil Conflict

5min
pages 28-29

The Deadly Hand of "The Irish Lafayette"

7min
pages 26-27

The Muskets of the Battles of Lexington and Concord

6min
pages 22-23

AN ILLUSTRATED TIMELINE OF April 19, 1775

5min
pages 20-21

PATRIOTS' DAY 2022

5min
pages 16-17

16 Things to See & Do in Concord this Spring

5min
pages 14-15
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