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Civic Institutions Historic District

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Civic Institutions Historic District
Location156-158, 171, 173-175 Garfield Ave., 179 Colman St., 32 Walden Ave., New London, Connecticut
Coordinates41°21′15″N 72°6′42″W / 41.35417°N 72.11167°W / 41.35417; -72.11167
Area7 acres (2.8 ha)
Built1867 (1867)
ArchitectDonald Grant Mitchell Jr. (1912-14); James Sweeney (1916-17)
Architectural styleColonial Revival, Queen Anne, Georgian Revival
NRHP reference No.90000602[1]
Added to NRHPApril 16, 1990

The Civic Institutions Historic District in New London, Connecticut is a historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. It includes six contributing buildings over a 7 acres (2.8 ha) area.[1] The district includes properties that were historically developed between 1867 and 1917 to provide for the city's indigent population and to provide medical services to the community at large. Two of the buildings are almshouses, built in 1867 and 1917, and the others were historically associated with the delivery of medical services, and date to the turn of the 20th century. The district properties are 179 Colman Street, 32 Walden Avenue, and 156, 158, 171, and 173-5 Garfield Avenue.[2]

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Transcription

Description and history

The Civic Institutions Historic District is located on the western fringe of the developed core of New London. It is roughly bisected by Garfield Avenue, near its western end at Colman Avenue. The district contains the buildings of three city-owned institutions. These include the New London Almshouse, later Hillside Home, Memorial Hospital and the Mitchell Isolation Hospital.

On the south side of Garfield Avenue stands the former almshouse, a brick building with two wings joined by a central hyphen. The earlier section was built circa 1867. This is a masonry building in the Italianate style. Construction was in part funded with a donation from businessman and former mayor Jonathan Newton Harris. Fifty years later the building was doubled in size, when a new main building, designed by New London architect James Sweeney, was built in front of the older building.[3][2] This was a much more elaborate building, designed in the Colonial Revival style. This construction was funded by a bequest from Sebastian Duffy Lawrence, who had died in 1909. The institution was closed in the early 1970s and sold in 1974. It is now a condominium building known as Briarwood Court.[2]

On the north side of Garfield Avenue, closer to Colman, is the original Memorial Hospital building, built in 1892, with a wing added the following year. Behind the hospital, facing Walden Street, is a detached hospital building that was built as a dormitory for nurses in 1901. Like the almshouse, construction was funded by Harris. The main buildings are in the Queen Anne style, while the later dormitory for nurses is Colonial Revival. Memorial Hospital operated at this location until 1918, when it was merged with Lawrence Hospital, now Lawrence + Memorial Hospital. The original hospital buildings were later converted for residential use.[2]

Facing Colman Street is the Mitchell Isolation Hospital, a single-story Colonial Revival structure completed in 1914 as a facility for segregating patients with highly infectious diseases, including smallpox and tuberculosis.[2] Like the other buildings in the district, its construction was funded through a philanthropic bequest, this time from Annie Olivia Mitchell, a daughter of Charles Lewis Tiffany who had married into a wealthy local family. Donald Grant Mitchell Jr., her nephew, supervised construction. Built as part of Memorial Hospital, it became a separate institution in 1920 after Memorial and Lawrence Hospitals were merged, and ultimately closed in 1953. The design was based on the isolation building of the former Providence City Hospital, designed by Providence architects Martin & Hall and completed in 1911.[2] This building is now Hunt-Cavanaugh Hall of Providence College.

These buildings represent the city's response to the need to provide for its indigent and sick populations in the late 19th century. Architecturally, they are well-preserved specimens of institutional versions of the Queen Anne and Colonial Revival styles popular at the time.[2]

The exteriors of the buildings have mostly been little changed since the district was created. The significant alterations were to the almshouse buildings, where wooden brackets were removed from the 1867 building, and the removal of a two-story Ionic portico from the 1917 building.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "NRHP nomination for Civic Institutions Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
  3. ^ "New London, Conn.," American Contractor 37, no. 36 (September 2, 1916): 76.

External links

This page was last edited on 6 August 2023, at 04:17
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