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Patrick McGuinness Three-Decker

Coordinates: 42°14′59″N 71°47′50″W / 42.24972°N 71.79722°W / 42.24972; -71.79722
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Patrick McGuinness Three-Decker
Patrick McGuinness Three-Decker is located in Massachusetts
Patrick McGuinness Three-Decker
Patrick McGuinness Three-Decker is located in the United States
Patrick McGuinness Three-Decker
Location25 Suffield St.,
Worcester, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°14′59″N 71°47′50″W / 42.24972°N 71.79722°W / 42.24972; -71.79722
Arealess than one acre
Builtc. 1908 (1908)
Architectural styleColonial Revival
MPSWorcester Three-Deckers TR
NRHP reference No.89002439[1]
Added to NRHPFebruary 9, 1990

The Patrick McGuinness Three-Decker is a historic triple decker in Worcester, Massachusetts. It was built c. 1908, and is a rare well-preserved example of a double triple-decker (housing six units) with Colonial Revival styling. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.[1]

Description and history

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The Patrick McGuiness Three-Decker is located in Worcester's southeastern Vernon Hill neighborhood, on the south side of Suffield Street east of Perry Avenue. It is a three-story wood-frame structure, basically built as a pair of adjacent mirror-image triple deckers. The building has a central recessed porch area where each level has a slightly different treatment: the first level has full-length turned columns, the second level has half-height columns above a shingled balustrade, and the third level has arch-forming brackets resting on short piers. The bays flanking the porch area are rounded, with two sash windows. There were originally jigsawn brackets in the main roof eave,[2] but these have been apparently been lost (see photo).

The house was built about 1908, when the lower western portion of Vernon Hill was being densely developed with triple deckers as a working-class residential area. Patrick McGuiness, its first owner, was an absentee landlord, who rented the units to Irish and Scandinavian immigrants. By the 1920s, the area had become more mixed, with tenants of Polish and Lithuanian extraction.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. ^ a b "NRHP nomination for Patrick McGuinness Three-Decker". Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved 2014-04-19.