Form 10-300 July 1969 II UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE ¶ STATE: Rhode Island . . COUNTY: NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY - NOMINATION FORM Type all entries - complete applicable sections Providence FOR NPS USE ONLY ENTRY NUMBER DATE t . . .. ...::H. COMMON Arnold-Palmer House AND/OR HISTORI C: Arnold Daniel House LOCAT tO N STREET AND NUMBER: 33 Chestnut Street CITY OR TOWN: Providence STATE Rhode Island CODE COUNTY: Providence lii CL ASSI FI CAT ION ___________________________________ ______________ ____________ CODE UL C F- U DC I "I z LU LU ‘In CATEGORY chock One OWNERSHIP STATUS ACCESSIBLE . TO THE PUBLIC E District Building C Site C *tructure C Object . C Public Public Acquisition: X Private C In Process C Both C Being Considered Occupied C Unoccupied c Proservalion work n progress Yes: Restrictod C Unrestricted C No PRESENT USE check One or More as Appropriate fl Agricultural C Government C Pork Transportation C Comments C Commercial C Industriol Private Residence - Other Specify Educotionol C Military Religious C Entertainment P Museum C Scientific V/NE R OF PROP E PT? -1 OWNERS N ÂME: Beneficent Congregational Church . . . CODE I STREET AND NUMBER: 300 Weybosset Street , CITY OR TOWN: Providence GE 5F AR PTION STATE: . Rhode. Island . c5LIñrROUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS. ETc: City Hall STREET AND NUMBER: Dorrance and Washington Streets CITY OR TOWN: Providence STATE Rhode Island CODE 144* V REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS - - - TI n.E OF SURVEY: DATE OF SURVEY: C Fedorol State C County fl Local DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS; - STREET AND NUMBER; J - CITY OR TOWN: STATE: CODE n 0 C z -1 It. -i I z c IC S It S 0 -t - It
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Form 10-300July 1969
II
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIORNATIONAL PARK SERVICE
¶ STATE:
Rhode Island. .
COUNTY:
NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACESINVENTORY - NOMINATION FORM
fl Agricultural C Government C Pork Transportation C Comments
C Commercial C Industriol Private Residence - Other Specify
Educotionol C Military Religious
C Entertainment P Museum C Scientific
V/NE R OF PROP E PT?
-1
OWNERS N ÂME:
Beneficent Congregational Church.
. .
CODE
I
STREET AND NUMBER:
300 WeybossetStreet ,
CITY OR TOWN:
ProvidenceGE 5F AR PTION
STATE:
.Rhode. Island
.
c5LIñrROUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS. ETc:
City HallSTREET AND NUMBER:
Dorrance and Washington StreetsCITY OR TOWN:
ProvidenceSTATE
Rhode IslandCODE
144*
V REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS - -
- TI n.E OF SURVEY:
DATE OF SURVEY: C Fedorol State C County fl LocalDEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS; -
STREET AND NUMBER; J -
CITY OR TOWN: STATE: CODE
n0Cz-1
It.
-iI
zcICSItS
0
-t- It
N.N’
91RmSrJ$llJ&JLL.S TTL.Chock Ono
CONDITIONExcellent El Good flJ Fo!r El Dotorioratod El Ruins El Linoxposod
Check One Chock One
Altered El Unalterod Moved Origir-ol Site
DESCRIBE THE PRESENT AND ORIGINAL ifknown PHYSICAL APPEARANCE
The Arnold-Palmer house,a handsomebrick single residence of theFederal period, was built about 1826 by Daniel Arnold, a wealthy Providence merchant. The house has been stylistically attributed to JohnHolden Greene, Providence architcct, who designed St. John’s Cathedral,tho First Unitarian Church, the important Sullivan Dorr house and anumber of other dwellings. On its original location at 577 WestminsterStreet, the Arnold-Palmer house completeda series of four similarhouses, all of which Norman N. Isham attributed’to Greene. This is the
only house of that group still extant.
The brick house, with its cubical mass, its five-hay tàdth, its hiproof with monitor, and its four tall exterior chimneys symmetricallyplaced, is very close in appearanceto the Truman Becktgith house whichGreene is known to have designed in th&’Cb1lee Hill Historic Districtabout 1825. The walls are of pressedbrick with thin bands of darkenedmortar and rest on a rebuilt granite foundation. They are pierced bysix-over-six douh1e-hun sashwindows withplain brownstone lintels andsills; the original exterior shutters are missing. Like the Beckwith -
house and other local residencesby Greene, the structure is capped bya hip of with monitor. The wide, elegant main cornice is embellishedby a series df balls strung on a straight rod, and it is visually joinedto the wall by carved v oden guttae directly applied to the brick sur-face. Such a design for the main cornice shas an innovative use ofAsher Benjamin’s publications by the architect. The original balustrades ccrowning thc, roof and monitor, which are now missing, were -composedofsimple wooden oanels inserted above plain surfaces between rows qfturned halusters above wail openings. - .. -
The primary decorative feature of the exterior is the central 0
front entrance, treated as a unit with the central window on the secondfloor. The heavy, six-panel door, with a semi-elliptical fanlight andsidelights, is encasedby a handed, Gothic-colonnette jamb mouldingwhich is carried over the fanlight, another characteristic of Greene’s‘work of the neriod. The entrance is sheltered by a one-story shallowportico supported on slender, unfluted double columns with Ionic capitals;it is capped by a low., balustrade. A wrought iron railing runs aroundthe granite base and down stairs at either side. The central second-sty window above had been extensively remodelled and was replaced in1968 by a window salvaged from Greene’s Easton house in. Pawtucket, RhodeIsland, a house very similar in date, scale, and style. It is tripartite and generally of Palladian inspiration, but a semi-elliptical, leadedfanlight spans the entire width. As in the Beclc4th house, the designof this window virtually repeats that of the entrance below.
Considering,the multiple uses through which the house has been putas its neighborhood becamecommercialized and :dberiorated, the interioris in a remarkably fine state of preservation. As in other John HoldenGreene houses, this interior is characterized by a broad simplicity of
See Continuation Sheet.
1Form 1O-300o UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR STATE
July 1969 NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Rhode Island
NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES COUNTY
- ProvidenceINVFNTOPY . NOMINATION FORM- .
‘ FOR NPSUSE ONLY
ENTRY NUMBER DATEContrnuatzonSheet
Number all entries
7. Description.
detail, the chief architectural feature a beautiful, delicately ornamented,curving staircase. The staircase rises along one aide of the central hail-iay, shaly curving at the top into the second-storyhall. The attcratedsquare halustor sticks support aslender moulded handrail which winds intothe newel at the base of the stairs. The riser end of the stairs are decorated with intricate Adam fan details, similar to those in Greene’sSullivan Don’ house on Benefit Street.
The four principal rooms on the first story retain their originaldimensions. While the exterior fireplaces in the rear rooms remain closed,those in the front rooms were openedin 1968 and decoratedwith mantelsfrom the Easton house. The rather high mantel shelves are supported on
- simple Doric columns; block panels decorate the frieze. They are correctin style and scale for this house and must closely resemble the originals.Other interior detailing is sparse, except for the floor-length panellingof the splayed window reveals which still contain the original interiorshutters. The fine plaster cornices of these rooms are still intact.
Original detail remains on the second story, although these roomshave been partitioned and somewhatremodelled to accommodateoffices. Athird fireplace from the Easton house has been installed on this floorand is similar in design to those of the first story; this one is exe-’cuted in beautiful white and dark gray marble. Several magnificent Vic- ‘
torian gilt chandeliers nàw hang.in these rooms. The third story hasbeen remodelledas an anartmont, and tho new, foundation allows for rest- -
rooms and a la±ge ‘finished hall in the basement.’
GPO 90t.U82
1
ftIGNiF:l’CANCE
______________
PERIOO Check One or More as Appropriate
El Pre-Columbian El 16th Contury El 18th Century El 20th Century
El 15th Century El 17th Century 19th Century
‘SPECIFIC DATEISI If Applicable and Known 12ôAREAS OF SIGNIFICANCE Chock One or More as Approprfald
Abor gino1 El Education El Political El Urban Planning
0 Prehistoric El Engineering Roligion/P}i El Other Specify
El Historic El Industry losophy
________________________
El Agriculture [3- Invention [3 Science
________________________
Architecture El Landscape El Sculpture
________________________
[3 Art - Architecture El Social/Humon_
________________________
[3 Commerce [3 Literature tarian
________________________
O Communications o Military 0 Theater
________________________
0 Conservation El Music El Transportation
________________________
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFIcANcE
The Arnold-Palmer house is an excellent example of late Federalarchitecture cC the highestquality; it has been well preserved andpartially restored. The.fanlighted entrance, with portico, and thecurving interior staircase are superb features. Details--such as theelaborate,exterior cornice, the carved riser ends of the main stair-
o case, and the’ fine mantels that were salvaged from another of John- Holden Greene’sworks--are of hish quality and display that architect’sI- , skill. The structure ismarked by outstanding builders’ worlcnanshipo ‘throughout.
This househas, today, great significance in the WeybossetHillarea of downtown Providence. In the early 19th century WeybossetHill
F- was the most important commercial and residential section of Provi- dence, and the Arnold-Palmer house was typical of the fine homes being
erected there. Gradual commercialization and near-slum conditions,- and more recent urban renewalhave,destroyed this historic area.
Slated for demolition, the house was urchasedby Beneficent Congre-LU gational Church and moved down the hill onto church property in 1967,w with the aid of a U. S. Housing and Urban Develonthnt grant. The
Arnold-Palmer house thus remains a solo example of tho Weybossetarea’sresidential architecture in its finest period. In its present locationit helps to maintain the integrity of Beneficent Congregational:‘Ohurch,an historically and architecturally significant structure in its ownright, and its immediate surroundings--which, fortunately, that churchoursalso.
[9. MAJOR BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES
______________
LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE COORDINATES LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE COORDINATES
DEFINING A RECTANGLE LOCATING THE PROPERTY DEFINING THE CENTER’POINT OF A PROPERTYOF LESS THAN TEN ACRES