Josiah Bronson House Explained

Josiah Bronson House
Location:Breakneck Hill Rd., Middlebury, Connecticut
Coordinates:41.5475°N -73.1247°W
Built:c.
Architecture:Georgian
Added:February 25, 1982
Area:3acres
Refnum:82004356

The Josiah Bronson House is a historic house on Breakneck Hill Road in Middlebury, Connecticut, built about 1738. It is one of the town's few surviving 18th-century houses, and a good example of residential architecture from that period. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

Description and history

The Josiah Bronson House is located northeast of the village center of Middlebury in a rural-suburban setting on the north side of Breakneck Hill Road. It is a -story wood-frame structure with a gabled roof, central chimney, and clapboarded exterior. Its main façade is five bays wide with a symmetrical arrangement of windows around its main entrance. The entrance is unusually wide, with flanking sidelight windows; it was at one time sheltered by a wide portico. The house is only one room deep, suggesting that it was originally built with a lean-to section in the rear. Some time in the 19th century, the lean-to was probably removed and replaced by the present two-story kitchen. The interior retains a significant amount of original woodwork, as altered about 1800 to add some Federal details. To the rear of the house there are two barns of 19th-century or earlier construction.[1]

The house was probably built about 1738 by Josiah Bronson, whose family was among the first to settle the Breakneck Hill area.[1] The French Army commanded by the Marquis de Lafayette[2] is known to have camped in the area during the American Revolutionary War in 1781 and 1782.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|82004356}} NRHP nomination for Josiah Bronson House]. National Park Service. 2018-07-08.
  2. Web site: History of ancient Woodbury, Connecticut, from the first Indian deed in 1659 to 1854 ... including the present towns of Washington, Southbury, Bethlem, Roxbury, and a part of Oxford and Middlebury.. quod.lib.umich.edu. 2016-01-15.