Main Street Historic District (Easthampton, Massachusetts) Explained

Main Street Historic District
Nrhp Type:hd
Nocat:yes
Location:Main St., Easthampton, Massachusetts
Coordinates:42.2697°N -72.6728°W
Area:45acres
Architect:Multiple
Architecture:Greek Revival, Mixed (more Than 2 Styles From Different Periods), Queen Anne
Added:March 17, 1986
Refnum:86000451

The Main Street Historic District of Easthampton, Massachusetts encompasses the historic heart of the town, running along Main Street between Northampton and Center Streets. The area has been the civic and economic heart of the town since incorporation in 1785. Most of the commercial buildings date from the 1840s to the 1880s, and are built in an Italianate style. The housing stock of the district also includes Italianate styling, but there are also a number of Greek Revival structures. The major civic structures of the town are in the district, including the town hall (brick, Italianate, built in 1869 by Boston architect Charles E. Parker[1]), public library (designed in 1881 by Peabody & Stearns in the Old English style), and the First Congregational Church, which is the second for the congregation, a brick Romanesque Revival building dating to 1851.[2] The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Easthampton was settled in the early 18th century, and was separately incorporated out of parts of Northampton and Southampton in 1786. At first economically an agricultural community, its town center developed around its first meeting house, located about 1/4-mile south of the Manhan River, where an early gristmill and settlement were located. Substantial growth in the town center began in the 1840s, when a boys' seminary was founded, and a button factory was founded on a tributary of the Manhan River southeast of the center, which was dammed to form what is now called Nashawannuck Pond https://massachusettspaddler.com/nashawannuck-pond-hampshire. This was the seed of a corridor of industrial development just east of the center, which grew in the mid-19th century along with this economic growth.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Historic American Buildings Survey . Library of Congress - Town Hall . 29 February 2024.
  2. Web site: MACRIS inventory record for Main Street Historic District. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. December 16, 2013.
  3. Web site: NRHP nomination for Main Street Historic District. National Archive. April 14, 2018.