Community House (Hamilton, Massachusetts)

The Community House at 284 Bay Road in Hamilton, Massachusetts is a historic social and civic community building serving the towns of Hamilton and Wenham. The Colonial Revival brick building was built in 1921 to a design by noted Boston architect Guy Lowell,[2] and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2011.[1]

Community House
Community House (Hamilton, Massachusetts) is located in Massachusetts
Community House (Hamilton, Massachusetts)
Community House (Hamilton, Massachusetts) is located in the United States
Community House (Hamilton, Massachusetts)
LocationHamilton, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°36′47″N 70°52′21″W
Built1921
ArchitectGuy Lowell
Architectural styleColonial Revival
NRHP reference No.11000265[1]
Added to NRHPMay 11, 2011

Construction of the building was made possible through the efforts and generosity of George Snell Mandell and Emily Mandell, Hamilton residents and publishers of the Boston Transcript. The Mandells and a group of Hamilton residents worked with Community Service, Inc., a national non-profit that worked to improve recreational facilities. The Mandells purchased the land, in what was then a residential area outside the Hamilton-Wenham business district, and gave it to Hamilton House, Inc., founded to hold title to the property in perpetuity.[2]

The two story building houses an auditorium, sitting room, library, and kitchen on its first floor, and meeting rooms on the second. The basement originally held bowling lanes, a game room, and a men's lounge. Community Service of Wenham and Hamilton, Inc., which manages the building, has over the years offered a wide variety of social, recreational, and educational programs in the facility, and made it available to other community groups as meeting and function space.[2]

The most significant changes to the building have affected the lower level. As bowling rose in popularity, additional lanes were added in a 1934 addition, and also in an adjoining building; the original lanes were converted to a shooting range for law enforcement. With the waning of bowling's popularity, the adjoining building was leased out and eventually sold after being converted to medical offices, and the 1934 addition was converted to meeting space.[2]

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