Merritt Beach & Son Building

The Merritt Beach & Son Building is a historic commercial building at 30 Bridge Street in New Milford, Connecticut. Built in 1873, it is one of the town's oldest surviving commercial buildings. It was built for Merritt Beach & Son, a lumber and hardware merchant that is one of its oldest continuously operating businesses (although it is no longer at this site). The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.[1]

Merritt Beach & Son Building
Merritt Beach & Son Building is located in Connecticut
Merritt Beach & Son Building
Merritt Beach & Son Building is located in the United States
Merritt Beach & Son Building
Location30 Bridge St., New Milford, Connecticut
Coordinates41°34′35″N 73°24′43″W
Area0.2 acres (0.081 ha)
Built1873 (1873)
Built byBeach, Merritt, & Son
Architectural styleItalianate
NRHP reference No.92000403[1]
Added to NRHPApril 28, 1992

Description and history

The Merritt Beach & Son Building stands just outside New Milford's main downtown business district, on the west side of railroad tracks and the south side of Bridge Street (United States Routes 7 and 202). It is a three-story brick building with Italianate styling. Its front facade is five bays wide, with a gap between the right two bays and those to the left. Windows on the upper floors are topped by bracketed segmented-arch hoods, and a single-story porch flat-roof porch extends across the first floor, supported by square posts with simple balustrades between. An elaborate bracketed and dentillated cornice crowns the building. To the main block's rear area series of additions that are mainly lumber sheds that have been readapted for other uses.[2]

The firm of Canfield and Beach began business in New Milford in 1857 as a lumber concern. After Canfield withdrew from the business in 1866, it was run by a succession of members of the Beach and Barlow families, and was in 1992 the town's oldest continuously operating business. It built this building in 1873 to house its hardware store, a tobacco storage warehouse on the second floor, and a public meeting hall on the third. The firm operated on these premises until 1977. It is the only surviving commercial building from that period to survive in the town.[2]

See also

References

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