32A-175 01000627NPS Form 10-900
(Rev. 10-90)
OMB NO. 1024-001 8
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Registration Form
This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in How to Complete the National
Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete each item by marking "x" in the appropriate box or by entering
the information requested. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "NIA" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural
classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional entries and narrative
items on continuation sheets (NPS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer, to complete all items.
historic name- FPHFH
other nameslsite numberHTSTnRTr.WfW
street & numbercFT - not for publication
city or town- - vicinity
state-qb- 1 IS codes countyHAMSHlRF c0denl.E; zip code nlnc;n
AS the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1986, as amended, I hereby certify that this dnomination
request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of
Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property
&meets El does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant
El nationally 17 statewide d~ocall~. (0 See continuation sheet for additional comments.) - S' * 2x3, zoo/
Signature of certifying officiaWile Brona Simon, Deputy State Historic Preservation 0fficerU hate
Massachusetts Historical Commission
State or Federal agency and bureau
In my opinion, the property El meets does not meet the National Register criteria. (0 See continuation sheet for additional Commeflts.)
I Signature of certifying officiaVTitIe Date
State or Federal agency and bureau
I, hereby certify that this property is: Signature of the Keeper Date of Action
El entered in the National Register
See continuation sheet.
El determined eligible for the
National Register
El See continuation sheet.
determined not eligible for the
National Register
0 removed from the
National Register
other (explain):
NPS Form 10-900
(Rev. 10-90)
OMB NO. 1024-001 8
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Registration Form
This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in How to Complete the National
Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete each item by marking "x" in the appropriate box or by entering
the information requested. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "NIA for "not applicable." For functions, architectural
classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional entries and narrative
items on continuation sheets (NPS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer, to complete all items.
historic name P~FPHF~bNDFs Hn
other nameslsite number HT-
street & number 54-F STRFFT - not for publication
city or town - vicinity
state-SFTTC code MA countyCldMPSWTRF codenlri zip code
As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1986, as amended, I hereby certify that this dnomination
request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of
Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property
ameets does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant
nationally statewide Fflocally. (13 See continuation sheet for additional comments.)
Signature of certifying officialnitle Brona Simon, Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer Date
Massachusetts Historical Commission
State or Federal agency and bureau
In my opinion, the property meets does not meet the National Register criteria. (0 See continuation sheet for additional Comments.)
Signature of certifying officialnitle Date
State or Federal agency and bureau
Park Service Certlflcatlnn .. .
I, hereby certify that this property is: Signature of the Keeper Date of Action
entered in the National Register
13 See continuation sheet.
determined eligible for the
National Register
See continuation sheet.
determined not eligible for the
National Register
removed from the
National Register
other (explain):
Parsons, Shepherd and Damon Houses HD Name of Property
Hampshire, MA
County and State
5. Classification
Ownership of Property
(Check as many boxes as apply) (Check only one box)
xprivate building(s)
_ public-local xdistrict
public-State site
public-Federal structure
object
Number of Resources within Property
(Do not include previously listed resources in the count.)
Contributing Noncontributing
4 building
sites
1 4 structures
2 objects
5 6 Total
Name of related multiple property listing
(Enter "N/A" if property is not part of a multiple property listing.)
n/a
Number of contributing resources previously listed
in the National Register
0
6. Function or Use
Historic Functions
(Enter categories from instructions)
DOMESTIC/single dwelling
Current Functions
(Enter categories from instructions)
RECREATION AND CULTURE/museum
7. Description
Architectural Classification
(Enter categories from instructions)
Other: First Period
Federal
Materials
(Enter categories from instructions)
foundation stone
walls weatherboard
roof asphalt shingle
other
Narrative Description
(Describe the historic and current condition of the property on one or more continuation sheets.)
Parsons, Shepherd, Damon Houses HD
Name of Property
Hampshire, MA
County and State
8. Statement of Significance
Applicable National Register Criteria
(Mark "x" in one or more boxes for the criteria qualifying the property
for National Register listing.)
X A Property is associated with events that have made
a significant contribution to the broad patterns of
our history.
B Property is associated with the lives of persons
significant in our past.
X C Property embodies the distinctive characteristics
of a type, period, or method of construction or
represents the work of a master, or possesses
high artistic values, or represents a significant and
distinguishable entity whose components lack
individual distinction.
D Property has yielded, or is likely to yield,
information important in prehistory or history.
Criteria Considerations
(Mark "x" in all the boxes that apply.)
Property is:
A owned by religious institution or used for
religious purposes.
B removed from its original location.
C a birthplace or grave.
D a cemetery.
E a reconstructed building, object, or structure.
F a commemorative property.
G less than 50 years of age or achieved significance
within the past 50 years.
Areas of Significance
(Enter categories from instructions)
ARCHITECTURE
SOCIAL HISTORY
Period of Significance
ca. 1730-1951
Significant Dates
n/a
Significant Person
(Complete if Criterion B is marked above)
n/a
Cultural Affiliation
n/a
Architect/Builder
Isaac Damon
Narrative Statement of Significance
(Explain the significance of the property on one or more continuation sheets.)
9. Major Bibliographical References
(Cite the books, articles, and other sources used in preparing this form on one or more continuation sheets.)
Previous documentation on file (NPS):
preliminary determination of individual listing (36
CFR 67) has been requested
previously listed in the National Register
previously determined eligible by the National
Register
designated a National Historic Landmark
recorded by Historic American Buildings Survey
#
recorded by Historic American Engineering
Record #
Primary location of additional data:
State Historic Preservation Office
Other State agency
Federal agency
Local government
University
x Other
Name of repository:
Historic Northampton
Parsons, Shepherd, Damon Houses HD
Name of Property
Hampshire, MA
County and State
10. Geographical Data
Acreage of Property 2.5 acres
UTM References See continuation sheet.
(Place additional UTM references on a continuation sheet)
1. 18 695590 4688070 3. 18 695420 4688000
Zone Easting Northing Zone Easting Northing
2. 18 695460 4687950 4. 18 695050 4688070
Zone Easting Northing Zone Easting Northing
x See continuation sheet
Verbal Boundary Description
(Describe the boundaries of the property on a continuation sheet.)
Boundary Justification
(Explain why the boundaries were selected on a continuation sheet.)
11. Form Prepared By
name/title Kathleen Kelly Broomer, Consultant, with Betsy Friedberg, NR Director, MHC
organization Massachusetts Historical Commission date April 2001
street & number 220 Morrissey Boulevard telephone 617-727-8470
city or town Boston state MA zip code 02125
Additional Documentation Submit the following items with the completed form:
Continuation Sheets
Maps
A USGS map (7.5 or 15 minute series) indicating the property's location.
A sketch map for historic districts and properties having large acreage or numerous resources.
Photographs
Representative black and white photographs of the property.
Additional items (Check with the SHPO or FPO for any additional items)
Property Owner
(Complete this item at the request of the SHPO or FPO.)
name Historic Northampton
street & number 46 Bridge Street telephone 413-584-6011
city or town Northampton state MA zip code 01060-2428
Paperwork Reduction Act Statement: This information is being collected for applications to the National Register of Historic Places to nominate
properties for listing or determine eligibility for listing, to list properties, and to amend existing listings. Response to this request is required to obtain a
benefit in accordance with the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended (16 U.S.C. 470 et seq.).
Estimated Burden Statement: Public reporting burden for this form is estimated to average 18.1 hours per response including the time for reviewing
instructions, gathering and maintaining data, and completing and reviewing the form. Direct comments regarding this burden estimate or any aspect of
this form to the Chief, Administrative Services Division, National Park Service, P.0. Box 37127, Washington, DC 20013-7127; and the Office of
Management and Budget, Paperwork Reductions Project (1024-0018), Washington, DC 20503.NPS Form 10-900 OMB No.
1024-0018
(Rev. 10-90)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 7 Page 1
7. Narrative Description
The Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District, Northampton, encompasses three properties owned
by Historic Northampton, the city’s local history museum and education center. Located on a principal artery
through Northampton’s commercial and institutional core, the historic district occupies 2½ acres in a historic
residential setting at the eastern edge of the business district. The three contiguous building lots constitute part of
an original Northampton home lot, laid out in 1654. All three historic houses occupy their original sites.
Consistent in scale, materials, and setback from the street, the three houses reflect Northampton’s residential
development principally from ca. 1730 through ca. 1830. Their rear yards provide a continuous, coherent
landscape across the three lots, with plantings that enhance the ambience of the historic environment. Resources
in the historic district, most of them recently rehabilitated, are in excellent condition. Noncontributing
resources—monuments, a gazebo, and fences—are small in scale and generally complement the district’s historic
character.
Nathaniel Parsons House
The Nathaniel Parsons House, 58 Bridge Street (ca. 1730, MHC #2125, Photo #1), is possibly Northampton’s
oldest residence. In its present form, the 2½-story, wood-frame house has a main block that is five bays across
and two bays deep, with a broad side-gable roof, a center chimney located forward of the roof ridge, a center entry
on the façade, and another entry on the east wall. The main block acquired its present form largely through a ca.
1795-1815 remodeling of the original ca. 1730 house. Three appendages to the main block are believed to have
been constructed ca. 1815-1830. At the north end of the east elevation is a two-story, side-gabled lateral wing,
one bay by one bay, with an interior end-wall chimney. Projecting from the north end of the west elevation is a
one-story, side-gabled, two-bay by one-bay lateral wing, also with an interior end-wall chimney. At the eastern
end of the north elevation is a one-story rear ell, two bays across and four bays deep, with a gable roof, chimney
on the west slope, and a recessed entry on the east wall. Finally, there is a one-story, one-bay by one-bay shed-
roofed addition off the rear wall of the ell. Throughout the house, the foundation is stone, cladding is
weatherboard, the roofs are asphalt shingle, and the chimneys are brick. Windows contain 12/12, 6/6, or 2/2
wood sash.
The First Period core of the Parsons House (ca.. 1730) most closely resembled the existing main block (ca. 1795-
1815) in its façade organization and the two-room over two-room configuration of the front of the house. The
house’s characteristic First Period details included casement windows, probably diamond-paned; chamfered
summer beams and exposed ceiling joists; exterior siding that abuts at the corners; molded horizontal sheathing in
the kitchen; and a single-pile plan to which a full-width lean-to was added in the mid-18th century. Addition of
the lean-to created a second kitchen for the house; the first kitchen, which continued to be used as such until ca.
1800, occupied the front east room. Only one ca. 1730 detail demonstrated knowledge of the emerging Georgian
decoration: plaster walls with a molded chair rail and baseboard in the parlor, or front west room. Two mortises
identified above the front door suggest the existence of an early hood or pentice. [Building Archeology Report,
Nathaniel Parsons House, n.p.]
During the Federal-period remodeling of the house (ca. 1795-1815), a second floor was added to the lean-to,
requiring that the old side-gabled roof be replaced with one of almost twice its girth. A concomitant shift in the
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 7 Page 2
position of the new pegged, hexagonal ridgepole resulted in the present placement of the center chimney in front
of, rather than directly on, the ridge. The remodeling transformed the original house from a single-pile plan to a
double-pile plan. The present weatherboards were installed over the original siding (still intact underneath).
Original siding included flush boards grooved horizontally in imitation of thin weatherboards on the façade; flush
boarding on the rear elevation; and thin, narrow weatherboards on the two side elevations. The lean-to,
subsumed in the Federal-period remodeling, was sided with wide rough boards. On the interior, the front hall
staircase may date from the remodeling. The front east room of the house, originally the kitchen in the First
Period (ca. 1730) dwelling, was converted to use as another parlor. The downstairs rooms and parlor chamber are
known to have been plastered about this time because nearly all of the original window openings were altered and
their surrounds re-used as lath. These rooms also received plaster ceilings, and new doors and woodwork.
[Building Archeology Report, Nathaniel Parsons House, n.p.]
In the years following the remodeling of the main block, two lateral wings and a rear ell were built (ca. 1815-
1830). The ell provided the house with a summer kitchen. The east wing, located at the eastern end of the
former lean-to, created what may have been a dining room, as well as a parlor or chamber upstairs. The ell and
east wing appear to be contemporary in construction. It is unclear whether the west wing is contemporary with
the eastern additions, though this wing was built after the remodeling of the main block. Located at the western
end of the former lean-to, the west wing encloses a single room with Federal-style woodwork, perhaps a parlor or
office. [Building Archeology Report, Nathaniel Parsons House, n.p.]
An 1880s photograph of the house shows 2/2 sash in the windows of the main block and, at both the main and
side entries, one-bay, hip-roofed porches with square posts. The 2/2 sash was replaced in the 1970s and the
1980s with the present 12/12 sash. The front porch had been replaced with a larger entry porch by the 1940s; this
second porch was removed by the 1970s.
In 1941, Anna Catherine Bliss bequeathed the Parsons House to the Northampton Historical Society (now
Historic Northampton). In the interpretation of Historic Northampton’s three house museums, the Parsons House
provides an overview of Colonial domestic architecture with its interior walls exposed to reveal structural and
decorative changes over more than two and one-half centuries. [Historic Northampton web site]
Shepherd House
The Shepherd House, 66 Bridge Street (ca. 1796, MHC #2071, Photo #2), is a fine example of a Federal-style
house with a number of mid- to late 19th-century, revival-style features applied. The 2½-story main block is five
bays by two bays with a side-gabled roof, twin interior chimneys at the roof ridge, a center entrance, and a center
hall plan. The foundation is stone, the siding is thin weatherboards, and the roof is asphalt shingle. The
weatherboarding is very similar to the siding of the Damon House (see below), which dates to the same period.
Spanning the west (side) elevation is a one-story porch with columns, added ca. 1900. This Colonial Revival-
style porch has a hipped roof of standing seam metal. There is a small half-shed addition spanning two bays at
the western end of the north (rear) elevation. Windows contain 6/6 wood sash, probably replacements from later
in the 19th century. A single window containing 12/12 sash on the east wall of the house may be a survival of the
original fenestration.
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 7 Page 3
The house displays remnants of original Federal-period exterior ornament. These include the window trim, thin
cornerboards, and a door on the west elevation opening onto the side porch. Windows on the first floor display
window caps. The caps on the windows of the west elevation were removed ca. 1900 when the Colonial Revival-
style side porch was added at that location. [Building Archeology Report, Russell-Shepherd House, pp. 3-4]
Remodeling of the house during the ca. 1830-1860 period created the Greek Revival-style raised cornice, which
closed the gables on the side elevations, and the present Greek Revival front door and surround. Also dating to
this period is the distinctive Gothic Revival portico, which is one bay by one bay with a low-pitched hipped roof,
overhanging eaves, a decorated saw-tooth cornice, and pierced supports at the corners capped with decorative
tracery. Paired attic windows in the gable ends probably were added in the mid- to late 19th century, when the
attic was divided into finished rooms. An open woodshed attached to the house’s shed addition is another mid-
19th century addition, according to paint analysis. The side cladding is the same tongue and groove boards used
to side the barn/carriage house on the property (see below), which suggests a connection between the two
projects. [Building Archeology Report, Russell-Shepherd House, pp. 3-4] The present shutters on the house are
early 20th-century in design, though late 19th-century photographs of the house show exterior shutters.
The Shepherd House was left to the Northampton Historical Society (now Historic Northampton) upon the death
of Edith Carpenter Shepherd (1875-1969). Historic Northampton took title to the property in 1972. In the
interpretation of Historic Northampton’s three house museums, the Shepherd House illustrates the changing tastes
and values of the Shepherd family, with artifacts and furnishings from many generations, including exotic
souvenirs from the travels of Thomas and Edith Shepherd between their marriage in 1914 and his death in 1923.
[Historic Northampton web site; Historic Northampton research]
Isaac Damon House
The Isaac Damon House, 46 Bridge Street (ca. 1813, MHC #2070, Photo #3), completes the trio of museum
houses on Bridge Street. An excellent example of the Federal style, the main block of the house is two stories
with a low-pitched hip roof, a pair of interior end chimneys, and a five-bay facade. The foundation is stone, the
siding is weatherboard, and the roof is clad with asphalt shingles. The center entry features a one-bay by one-bay
columned porch with a low-pitched hip roof and rooftop balustrade. The balustrade on the roof of the main block
was recreated from the original and installed in 1999. Windows contain 6/6 wood sash. Both the window sash
and the wood shutters are original or at least early (first half of the 19th century).
An unusual feature of the house’s plan and construction is the projection of the rear first floor rooms beyond the
rear wall of the main block. This projection reads on the exterior as a one-story, hip-roofed appendage on the
rear wall. Damon achieved this projection, and consequently the larger rear rooms, by constructing the second
floor rear wall as a truss, a principle with which he would have been familiar from his church and other
institutional construction (see Statement of Significance). The projecting bay on the east elevation contains a
side entry, and the corresponding bay on the west elevation contains a window. [Building Archeology Report,
Isaac Damon House, n.p.]
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 7 Page 4
Behind the house is a series of gable-roofed ells. The rear ell, approximately three bays deep, was originally one
story, and a second story was added between ca. 1850 and 1866. The fenestration pattern of the upper floor does
not correspond with that of the lower floor. This ell may have served originally as an ell or outbuilding for the
house that previously occupied the site. Doubled sills between the main house and ell, which are clearly visible in
the basement, suggest that the ell frame existed at the time the Damon House was built. The present kitchen
added another bay to the ell before ca. 1900, and may have replaced a lean-to woodshed. Probably a pantry
originally, the room was remodeled as a kitchen in the 20th century. [Building Archeology Report, Isaac Damon
House, n.p.]
The ell was extended further in 1984-1986, when an auditorium and exhibit and collections space were added to
the rear. This construction replaced a woodshed or carriage barn that appears in an 1866 photograph. The
addition, four bays by about one bay, is one story, with an exterior end wall chimney at the northern end and an
integral porch on square posts that spans the entire east elevation. At the time of construction, the roof of the
kitchen was made continuous with the roof of the addition. A pedimented portico marks an entrance located
where the original ell adjoins the kitchen-plus-new-ell. [Building Archeology Report, Isaac Damon House, n.p.]
A rooftop balustrade on the main block of the Damon House was present originally and was recreated in 1999
based on documentary evidence. Following the death in 1943 of Jennie Damon Smith, granddaughter of Isaac
Damon, the Northampton Historical Society (now Historic Northampton) purchased the house. The Damon
House contains Historic Northampton’s administrative offices and a Federal-era parlor featuring Damon family
furnishings and period artifacts. The museum and exhibition area at the rear of the house features changing
exhibits and a permanent installation, A Place Called Paradise: The Making of Northampton, Massachusetts,
which chronicles the city’s history. [Historic Northampton web site]
Additional Contributing Resources
The Shepherd Barn/Carriage House, 66 Bridge Street (ca. 1840-1860, Photo #4) is located behind the Shepherd
House. This 1½-story outbuilding has a fieldstone foundation and tongue-and-groove siding. The barn’s side-
gabled main block has a slate roof. Projecting from the façade at a right angle is a one-story shop, two bays
across and one bay deep, with a gable-front roof clad in asphalt shingles. This shop has a multi-pane, glazed entry
with a transom above, adjacent to a multi-pane oversized window. Entries in the main block include a vertical
board double door with a transom on the façade (south elevation), pedestrian entries on the south and west
elevations, and a large vertical board sliding door on the north (rear) elevation. In the interpretation of the
museum buildings, the Shepherd barn, when completed, will house working blacksmiths and artisans, a display of
antique signage, farm implements and tools, and a museum gift shop and visitors’ information center.
The pergola (early 20th century) behind the Parsons House, 58 Bridge Street, is a simple wood structure, a single
bay wide and three to four bays deep. The pergola appears in a 1939 photograph of the grounds in the collection
of Historic Northampton.
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 7 Page 5
Noncontributing Resources
Recent additions to Historic Northampton’s landscape enhance the educational value and historic character of this
small district. Two monuments and the gazebo on the grounds of the Parsons House, 58 Bridge Street, are of
recent vintage. To the right of the front door is the Parsons Monument (1973). This boulder has a brass plaque
that reads “In Memory of Cornet Joseph Parsons c. 1618-1683/A founder of Northampton/and his wife Mary
(Bliss) Parsons c.1628-1711/12.” On the east side of the house is the Bliss Family Monument (1986). The
granite monument has an attached plaque inscribed “To Our Children/The Bliss Family in America/2 August
1986.” At the rear of the property is the gazebo (1999, Photo #5), an eight-sided, wood-frame structure with an
asphalt shingle roof.
Wood fences in front of each of the three museum houses were installed in 1999 (see Photo #s 1-3, see also
Recent Rehabilitation Work below). The designs were based on documentary evidence (historic photographs)
from the late 19th century. The fences are considered noncontributing by virtue of their recent construction date.
Recent Rehabilitation Work
In 1999, Historic Northampton embarked on major restoration work for the Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon
houses and the Shepherd barn. The restoration followed intensive study of the organization’s buildings in 1992
by a preservation consulting team from the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (SPNEA).
SPNEA’s building archeology reports for the three properties included paint analysis. Consequently, the three
houses and the Shepherd barn were painted according to the consulting team’s specifications. Fences were rebuilt
in front of each of the museum houses, with the designs based on historic fencing as documented in late 19th
century photographs of each house. At the Shepherd House, the fencing extends to the barn at the rear of the
property. In addition, the original Federal balustrade on the roof of the Damon House was rebuilt.
Restoration of the buildings was part of a comprehensive buildings and grounds project that is still underway.
Landscaping is intended to preserve the historic integrity of the grounds, nurture the historic plantings in place,
and enhance the setting of the museum complex in a harmonious way. Replication of historic fencing (see
above) was one element of the 1999 master site plan. Another was the construction of the gazebo (see above) to
provide a focal point to the grounds and an outdoor performance space. [The Weathervane, Summer 1999, p. 2]
Archaeological Description
While no prehistoric sites are located in the district, sites may be present. Four prehistoric sites are recorded in the
general area (within one mile). Environmental characteristics of the district indicate several locational criteria (slope, soil
drainage, distance to wetlands) that are favorable indicators for some types of prehistoric sites. The district is located on
a well drained, level to moderately sloping land surface. Wetland resources, however, are not located in close proximity
(within 1000 feet) to the district, a locational factor that reduces the overall prehistoric sensitivity of this location. An
unnamed brook originates approximately 2000 feet north of the district and flows northerly to the Connecticut River.
The Connecticut River floodplain lies about the same distance east of the district. Given the above information, the size
of the district (approximately 2.5 acres) and construction of at least 5 homes in the district, a low potential exists for the
recovery of prehistoric resources.
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 7/8 Page 6/1
A high potential exists for the recovery of historic archaeological resources in the district. Structural evidence of the
Joseph Parsons House, associated outbuildings and occupational related features (trash pits, privies, wells) may survive as
archaeological resources within the district boundaries. The district was part of the original four-acre home lot granted in
1654 to Cornet Joseph Parsons. Structural evidence, builder’s trenches and artifacts may also survive from remodeling
conducted at the three extant homes in the district. West of the Nathaniel Parsons House (ca. 1730) at 58 Bridge Street,
the Isaac Damon House (ca. 1813) at 46 Bridge Street is reported to have replaced an earlier (ca. 1770’s) house on the
same lot. Structural evidence of that house, its outbuildings and occupational related features may survive on the Damon
House lot. Archaeological features may also be present indicating the extent to which an ell from the earlier house or an
outbuilding were incorporated into the present house construction. Architectural details including hand hewn beams used
in construction of the Shepherd House (ca. 1796) at 66 Bridge Street are also believed to belong to an earlier structure.
Additional historical research combined with archaeological survey and testing can test for evidence of a potential earlier
structure at this location
(end)
8. Statement of Significance
The Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District, Bridge Street, Northampton is a fine grouping of
three historic properties that reflects growth at the heart of Northampton in the 18th and early 19th centuries. The
district holds associations with some of Northampton’s earliest and most prominent citizens, among them a
founder of the community, farmers and local businesspersons, and the renowned architect-builder Isaac Damon.
The district’s three houses and barn retain their historic integrity to a remarkable degree, due partly to long-term
ownership by the families with which they were associated, and partly to their acquisition and operation by
Historic Northampton, formerly the Northampton Historical Society. Under the stewardship of Historic
Northampton, the three properties comprise a campus of museum houses, administrative offices, exhibition
space, a meeting and research facility, and outdoor gathering and performance spaces. Recent additions to
Historic Northampton’s landscape, including small-scale monuments, a gazebo, and replication of late 19th-
century fencing, enhance the educational value and historic character of this small district. Retaining integrity of
location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association, the Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon
Houses Historic District meets Criteria A and C of the National Register of Historic Places at the local level.
Northampton is an important civic, educational, and industrial center located on the west bank of the Connecticut
River, New England’s longest river and its principal drainage. Historically, Northampton has been the principal
focus for settlement in the mid-section of the Connecticut River Valley, a broad central valley flanked by the
Worcester Highlands to the east and the Berkshire Hills to the west. Situated twenty miles north of Springfield
and fifty-six miles west of Worcester, Northampton is bordered by Williamsburg on the north, Hatfield on the
north, Hadley and the Connecticut River on the east, Easthampton on the south, and Westhampton on the west.
Mill River, a western tributary of the Connecticut River, cuts through Northampton from the northwest to the
southeast. The Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District is located on Bridge Street, a segment of
the regional artery known as State Route 9, which passes through the mid-valley from east to west and crosses the
Connecticut River between Northampton and Hadley.
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8 Page 2
Northampton experienced steady growth for much of its history, from its establishment as a town in the mid-17th
century, to its incorporation as a city in 1883, and well into the 1920s. Nineteenth-century Northampton attracted
visitors like Timothy Dwight, the Marquis de Lafayette, Henry James, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Swedish
soprano Jenny Lind (1820-1887), who proclaimed the town the “paradise of America.” Landscape painters such
as Thomas Cole (1801-1848) of the Hudson River School thought the Northampton environs were the epitome of
the picturesque, and the ideal middle landscape between the city and nature. [Historic Northampton web site]
Permanent European settlement of the Connecticut River Valley in Massachusetts began during the Plantation
period (1630-1675), initially at Springfield in 1636 and, by the 1650s, spreading north through the valley’s mid-
section. In May 1653, twenty-four persons petitioned the General Court for permission to “plant, possess and
inhabit” Nonotuck, later the town of Northampton. Aside from the Springfield vicinity, the Northampton area,
including the neighboring towns of Hadley (1661) and Hatfield (1670), was the region’s most important
economic and political center. Extensive agricultural land of the mid-valley quickly enabled the area to become a
major agricultural producer in Massachusetts. Locally produced grain, flour, malt, and pork were sent by cart
and/or boat to Springfield, Boston, and Hartford, Connecticut, in exchange for goods or payment of taxes and
debts. The importance of Northampton was underscored by its designation as a joint shire town, with
Springfield, after 1661. [Regional Report, pp. 61, 65]
The Northampton area saw the most extensive Colonial-period (1675-1775) development in the Connecticut
Valley. Much of the last quarter of the 17th century was devoted to rebuilding and re-fortifying after King
Philip’s War (1675-1676). By the mid-18th century, Northampton rivaled Springfield as the center of wealth and
influence in the region. Like Springfield, Northampton was located at the junction of several major regional
transportation routes, and included a vital ferry crossing over the Connecticut River. As new towns were
established farther north and west, Northampton’s importance as a distribution center grew. In addition,
Northampton and its smaller neighbors, Hadley and Hatfield, controlled some of the best agricultural land in the
colony and were major exporters of livestock, salted beef, and other agricultural products to Boston and many
other markets. While Northampton grew as a trade and marketing center in the 18th century, religious fervor
locally was quickened by the ministry of Jonathan Edwards, whose preaching sparked the religious revivals of
the Great Awakening in the 1740s. [Regional Report, p. 80; Historic Northampton web site]
The Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District preserves a portion of Northampton’s original town
plan, which included a grid of home lots along the axis of Main Street and Bridge Street, as well as the Bridge
Street burying ground (1663) to the northeast. The district encompasses part of the original four-acre home lot
granted in 1654 to Cornet Joseph Parsons. The lot fronted the present Market Street, now the nearest side street
west of the historic district. The present Bridge Street formed the southeast side boundary of the home lot.
Joseph Parsons was the chief agent in Northampton of John Pynchon, who largely orchestrated Northampton’s
settlement and whose father, William Pynchon, had established Springfield in 1636. Trade franchises and land
ownership made Parsons a powerful figure in the region in the mid-17th century, and his estate was the highest
probated in 17th-century Hampshire County behind Pynchon’s. Joseph Parsons and his wife, Mary Bliss Parsons,
resided in Northampton for over twenty years. Their house does not survive. Allegations made in 1675 by a
Parsons neighbor led to the indictment, imprisonment, grand jury investigation, and subsequent acquittal of Mary
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8 Page 3
Parsons for witchcraft. Joseph and Mary Parsons returned to Springfield in 1679 or 1680, and Joseph Parsons
died in 1683. At that time, their son, Jonathan Parsons (d. 1694), inherited two acres of his parents’ Northampton
home lot. [Historic Northampton web site]
In 1709, Nathaniel Parsons (d.1738), a son of Jonathan Parsons, inherited the “housing and homelot” on Bridge
Street upon the final settlement of his father’s estate. The present Nathaniel Parsons House, 58 Bridge Street (ca.
1730, MHC #2125), is not believed to be the house occupied by Nathaniel’s grandparents, but rather a house
Nathaniel built about the time of his second marriage, to Abigail Bunce, in 1728. His brother, Jonathan Parsons,
was a housewright by trade, and may have been involved in the construction of the later house. In its current
form, the house retains fragments of Nathaniel’s ca. 1730 First Period house within the main block, which is
largely of later Federal-period construction. A 1992 investigation of the present house found no physical
evidence that the older (pre-1709) house is incorporated in the present frame. [Building Archeology, Nathaniel
Parsons House]
Encased within the existing main block of the Nathaniel Parsons House is a mid-18th century lean-to addition,
which spanned the rear (north) elevation of the house. Construction of the lean-to provided the house with a
second kitchen, in addition to the earlier kitchen that occupied the east room of the First Period house (and was
used as such until ca. 1800). From the 1750s until 1785, two Parsons heirs owned the house jointly. The need for
two kitchens has been explained as reflecting either a division of the house between two Parsons families, or the
house’s occupation by the Parsons family plus tenants or boarders. [Building Archeology, Nathaniel Parsons
House]
During the Federal period (1775-1830), the Connecticut River Valley was the fastest growing region in
Massachusetts. River towns such as Northampton were the dominant regional cores, their growth augmented by
increased commercial and industrial development. There was considerable economic upheaval in the mid-valley
during the last quarter of the 18th century. Following the post-Revolutionary War depression that led to Shay’s
Rebellion (1786) at Springfield to the south, both a revival of agricultural prosperity by the late 1790s and the
beginning of successful manufacturing after 1800 provided a basis for renewed growth. Northampton grew
rapidly during the rest of the period, at twice the rate of Hampshire County as a whole. The town retained its
traditional role as the Hampshire County seat, after the 1812 realignment of the county’s boundaries, due to the
creation of Hampden County in the Springfield area to the south, and Franklin County to the north. [Regional
Report, p. 93]
Like Springfield, Northampton began to acquire a more urban character during the Federal period, with defined
civic, commercial, and residential areas. County and town institutional buildings were clustered at Meetinghouse
Hill on the commercial Main Street. Northampton’s commercial architecture grew in scale and density, with
three-story granite buildings constructed by 1826. The town also gained a reputation as a center for architectural
innovation, especially after construction on Meetinghouse Hill of the First Church of Christ, also known as the
fourth Northampton meetinghouse (1810-1812, burned 1876, Asher Benjamin, architect, and Isaac Damon,
master builder). [Regional Report, pp. 91, 93, 96]
The historic district acquired much of its present form during the Federal period. The Nathaniel Parsons House,
58 Bridge Street (ca. 1730, MHC #2125), was substantially remodeled with the addition of a second floor and
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8 Page 4
construction of the rear ell, east wing, and west wing, all undertaken from ca. 1795 to ca. 1830. In 1807-1808,
members of the Wright family acquired the property, after more than one hundred-fifty years of ownership by the
Parsons family. One half of the undivided homestead changed hands three times in early 1807 before its
purchase by Chloe Wright, wife of Daniel Wright. In September 1808, Ferdinand Hunt Wright, stepson of Chloe
Wright, acquired the other half of the homestead. During his career, Hunt Wright was a cashier at the
Northampton National Bank and served as postmaster. Wright descendants conveyed title to the property in 1941
to the Northampton Historical Society (now Historic Northampton). [Building Archeology Report, Nathaniel
Parsons House; Historic Northampton research]
Also during the Federal period, the other two houses in the historic district were built on portions of the original
Joseph Parsons home lot of 1654. About 1796, Seth Russell, a cordwainer, built a house on land he purchased
from Nathaniel Parsons, a farmer and son of the Nathaniel Parsons referenced above. This Federal-style house,
now known as the Shepherd House, 66 Bridge Street (ca. 1796, MHC #2071), was built to the east of the Parsons
residence. In 1799, Russell sold the property, which he described in the deed as a house lot containing buildings.
He continued to occupy the house, however, until at least 1802, after which a series of owners held title until
1856, when the Shepherd family acquired the property (see Early Industrial period below). To the west of the
Parsons House, the Federal-style Isaac Damon House, 46 Bridge Street (ca. 1813, MHC #2070) apparently
replaced an earlier house on the same lot. [Building Archeology reports] Built by the regionally important
architect-builder Isaac Damon (1781-1862) as his own residence, the house is one of very few known examples
of Damon’s residential work. The property remained in the Damon family until 1943, when it was purchased by
the Northampton Historical Society.
One of the most significant factors affecting the Federal architecture of not only Northampton but the larger
Connecticut River Valley region was the rise of a group of important local architect-builders, led by Asher
Benjamin (1771-1845) and Damon. Benjamin, a Greenfield, Massachusetts native who established an office in
Boston as early as 1803, was active in the Massachusetts portion of the Connecticut Valley for only a few years.
His most lasting impact on vernacular building, both locally and nationally, was achieved indirectly through the
publication of his seven pattern books from 1797 to 1843. By contrast, Damon’s impact on architecture in the
valley was both direct and long-lived, since he practiced in the region for forty years. [Regional Report, p. 162;
Isaac Damon Exhibit; Withey, pp. 51, 161]
A native of Weymouth, Massachusetts, Isaac Damon arrived in Northampton in 1811 to take over the job of
master builder of the new Federal-style First Church (see above). Little is known of Damon’s youth or education.
He is believed to have started his career as a housewright in Weymouth. In 1810, he was involved in the
reconstruction of Charles Bulfinch’s Hollis Street Church. The church had been dismantled in Boston and
shipped to Weymouth, where it was reassembled to house the Union Church of Weymouth and Braintree.
Damon’s decision to move to Northampton in 1811, and to remain there, could be attributed in part to personal
connections. His first wife, Jane (Jenney) Pratt of Weymouth, was related to Thomas Pratt, a
carpenter/housewright who left Weymouth for Northampton in 1807. Jane Pratt Damon died in 1812 in
Northampton. Damon married Sophia Strong of Northampton in 1813, and built his own residence at 46 Bridge
Street (ca. 1813, MHC #2070) about that time. [Isaac Damon Exhibit]
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8 Page 5
Isaac Damon played a major role in shaping downtown Northampton during the Federal period, and he was
associated with the construction of many buildings that gave the town its nascent urban character. In addition to
the First Church (completed 1812, burned 1876), Damon built two other buildings on Meetinghouse Hill, the
Hampshire County Courthouse (1813, burned 1822, rebuilt 1823 by Damon et al., demolished 1886) and the
Northampton Town Hall (1814, burned 1818, rebuilt by Damon 1818, discontinued as town hall ca. 1850,
demolished 1872). Damon built the town hall at his own expense on public land. The town used the hall and
lobby while Damon rented out the space in the rest of the building. Other Damon-built municipal construction
included a hay scale, located outside the Town Hall, and one of Northampton’s early water lines, a series of
hollow logs that brought water from a hilltop well to the houses of Main Street subscribers. In the 1820s, Damon
served as fire warden, selectman, and assessor in Northampton. At that time, he also built a pair of granite-front
commercial buildings across from the First Church, at 108 Main Street (1828, MHC #2128, NR) and 110-112
Main Street (1828, MHC #2272, NR). In addition to his house at 46 Bridge Street (see above), Damon reportedly
built only one other residence, the John Hopkins House, 101 King Street (ca. 1830, MHC #642). [Isaac Damon
Exhibit]
Following the completion of his earliest buildings in Northampton, Damon’s fine reputation as an architect-
builder spread quickly. He is perhaps best known for his church construction, and is credited with completing
thirteen churches. Extant examples include: First Church, 50 Elm Street, Springfield (1819, MHC #218, NR);
First Church, Blandford (1823, not inventoried); First Church, 488 College Highway, Southwick (1824, MHC
#50); Johnson Chapel, South Pleasant Street, Amherst (1826-1827, MHC #722) at Amherst College; Second
Church, 243 River Drive, [North] Hadley (1834, MHC #202, NR); Second Congregational Church, 177 Chestnut
Plain Road, Whately (1843, MHC #6), and First Congregational Church, 41 Main Street, Hatfield (1849, MHC
#141, NR). An 1816 Damon church in Westhampton burned in 1829, and it is currently unclear whether Damon
also designed the replacement church building on North Road, Westhampton (1829, MHC #27). He also built
Congregational churches in Greenfield (1819, demolished) and Granby, as well as, in Northampton, the First
Baptist Church, Main Street (1829, damaged in fire 1863, demolished 1903) and the Methodist Episcopal
Church, Center Street (1851, remodeled 1893, demolished 1913). [Isaac Damon Exhibit; Regional Report, p.
186; MHC inventory]
His other institutional commissions included county court houses and town halls. Between 1813 and 1848,
Damon built the courthouses for all four counties in western Massachusetts: Hampshire County at Northampton
(see above, demolished); the second courthouse for Berkshire County at 18 Main Street, Lenox (1815-1816,
MHC #21, now the Lenox Library, NR), Hampden County at Springfield (1820, demolished), and the second
court house for Franklin County at Court Square, Greenfield (1848, remodeled 1873, MHC #83, NR). Almost
thirty years after building his 1814 Northampton Town Hall (see above), Damon built the Whately Town Hall,
196 Chestnut Plain Road (1843, MHC #16), near his Congregational church (see above), which was constructed
the same year. [Isaac Damon Exhibit; Regional Report, p. 186; MHC inventory]
Damon’s professional activity extended to land development, and he purchased and sold many properties in the
Northampton area for the purposes of “improvement.” This activity would lead him to insolvency by the end of
the Federal period. His development efforts in Northampton were concentrated at the upper end of Main Street.
In 1825, Damon completed the brick Masonic Hall, 25 Main Street (MHC #2059, reconstructed 1871 by William
Fenno Pratt, NR) and laid out the road later known as Masonic Street. In 1826, the Farmington (Connecticut)
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8 Page 6
Canal Company proposed a canal from New Haven, Connecticut to Northampton, to enter Northampton from
Easthampton, cross upper Main Street, and continue along the current path of State Street. Drawing on local
optimism about the canal, Damon invested heavily in the project. He renovated a former tavern along the route
into a hotel to accommodate travelers. The sixty-room Mansion House (renovated 1828, demolished 1881)
opened in June 1828. The canal itself did not open until 1835, and closed in 1847, ultimately proving to be a
financial disaster for investors. [Isaac Damon Exhibit]
By November 1828, five months after the opening of the Mansion House, Damon was insolvent. With his money
tied up in canal stock and land, and his property extensively mortgaged, he had amassed debts totaling $48,000.
Just one year before, Damon was Northampton’s fifth largest taxpayer. Lyman Kingsley, Damon’s brother-in-
law, purchased the Damon House at 46 Bridge Street to protect the property from Damon’s creditors, thereby
enabling the family to continue living there. [Isaac Damon Exhibit]
In the years following his financial difficulties, Damon concentrated on bridge-building, which was the focus of
his work during the Early Industrial period (1830-1870). Between 1831 and 1847, Damon built bridges
throughout New England and upstate New York, and went as far south as Lexington, Kentucky to erect the piers
for a bridge across the Ohio River. He is credited with having built twenty-five bridges, including two in
Northampton (neither extant). Damon resumed regular building activity in 1843, constructed five buildings
before his retirement in 1851 at the age of seventy. Isaac Damon died December 4, 1862 and is buried at the
Bridge Street Cemetery, 156 Bridge Street (1661, MHC #803) northeast of this historic district.
For Northampton, industrial activity that had begun along the Mill River during the Federal period accelerated
during the Early Industrial period. By ca. 1870, a series of industrial villages extended from Northampton into
Williamsburg to the north, producing silks, woolens, and cotton as well as machinery and cutlery. Good railroad
connections spurred this industrial growth and enhanced Northampton’s traditional role as the distribution center
for goods in the mid-section of the Connecticut Valley. Construction of the Connecticut River Railroad (1844-
1847) established the railroad bridge over the junction of Bridge Street and Main Street, immediately southwest
of the historic district. [Regional Report, Map 18, p. 108]
Despite its industrial development, Northampton also retained a reputation as the valley’s center for social
awareness and culture. There was strong interest in reform movements such as temperance, public education, and
especially the abolition of slavery. The establishment of institutions in Northampton, including the Round Hill
School (1823), Clarke School for the Deaf (1865), and Smith College (1871) helped reinforce the town’s
progressive image. Author George Washington Cable founded the Home Culture Clubs in 1892, and the Hill
Institute sponsored one of the earliest kindergartens in America. Franklin Pierce, a graduate of the Northampton
Law School, went on to the United States presidency. Northampton also was the home of Calvin Coolidge, who
became Governor of Massachusetts, and subsequently President in 1923. [Regional Report, p. 108; Historic
Northampton web site]
Northampton’s relative affluence during the Early Industrial period is reflected in the volume of building
construction during those years. Immediately southeast of the historic district, an affluent residential
neighborhood expanded from its original Hawley Street axis to Pomeroy Terrace (1847) over the Connecticut
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8 Page 7
River meadows. This neighborhood, developed from ca. 1850 to 1885, is considered one of Northampton’s finest
residential areas. Within the historic district, the Early Industrial period was largely one of remodeling at two of
the houses, the Shepherd House, 66 Bridge Street, and the Damon House, 46 Bridge Street. At the Shepherd
House in particular, the addition of applied ornament associated with the Gothic Revival and Greek Revival styles
suggested a desire on the part of the owners to update the house’s appearance as new residences were being
constructed in the same neighborhood. A barn/carriage house (ca. 1840-1860) was added to the Shepherd
property as well.
By the 1850s, all three houses in the historic district were in the possession of families whose descendants either
bequeathed or sold the properties to the Northampton Historical Society (now Historic Northampton). The
Parsons House, 58 Bridge Street, was owned by widow Olive Ames Wright and her minor children. In 1909,
Arthur, Edgar, and Anna Catherine Bliss inherited their grandmother’s house from their aunt, Anne Wright.
Eventually, title to the property passed to Anna Catherine Bliss alone, and she in turn bequeathed the property to
the Historical Society in 1941.
The house now known as the Shepherd House, 66 Bridge Street changed hands several times in the 1830s and
1840s before being acquired in 1856 by Susan L. B. Shepherd, wife of Henry Shepherd. Henry Shepherd worked
at his father’s store, then became a farmer. Beginning in the 1860s, he was superintendent of construction for the
Western Union Telegraph Company. In 1885, Susan Shepherd conveyed the property to her son, Thomas L.
Shepherd (1856-1923). Thomas Shepherd graduated from high school in 1875, apprenticed for three years at the
Northampton National Bank, and then became an associate of J. G. Mackintosh Company, a Holyoke banking
concern. He later became secretary of the Manufacturers’ Trust Company of Holyoke. On the liquidation of that
institution, after having worked in Holyoke for eighteen years, Shepherd went into business for himself in
Springfield. He also served as co-receiver of the Taber Prang Art Company in Springfield before retiring about
1906-1907. In 1914, Shepherd married Edith Carpenter (1875-1969). Their travels in Asia before his death in
1923 are reflected in the house’s interior decoration, particularly the furnishings and the hall wallpaper, which
illustrates Chinese scenes. Following the death of Edith Carpenter Shepherd, the Shepherd property passed to the
Historical Society, and Historic Northampton took title in 1972. [Building Archeology Report, Russell-Shepherd
House; Historic Northampton research]
Architect-builder Isaac Damon’s house, 46 Bridge Street, remained Damon’s residence until his death in 1862,
after which his wife (d. 1883) and children continued living there. Damon’s granddaughter, Jane Damon Smith
(1853-1943), was the last member of the family to live in the house. She was employed at the Hampshire County
Registry of Deeds, retiring in 1937 after nearly 63 years of service. After her death in 1943, the Northampton
Historical Society purchased the property. [Building Archeology Report, Isaac Damon House; Historic
Northampton research]
The Northampton Historical Society was established in the first decade of the 20th century. Before its acquisition
of the Parsons house in 1941, the Society was headquartered at Memorial Hall, 240 Main Street (1872, MHC
#792) in the downtown commercial district. The name of the Historical Society was changed in 1972 to Historic
Northampton. The Historic Northampton Museum & Education Center is a local history museum and the
repository of Northampton and Connecticut Valley history from the pre-Contact era to the present. The
museum’s wide-ranging collection encompasses approximately 50,000 objects, including documents and
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8 Page 8
manuscripts, fine art, furniture, ceramics, glass, metals, toys, tools and implements, an important collection of
textiles and costumes, and more than 10,000 photographs. [Historic Northampton web site]
Architecture
Each of the three houses in the Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District contributes to a better
understanding of architecture in the Connecticut Valley. The core of the Nathaniel Parsons House, 58 Bridge
Street (ca. 1730, MHC #2125), has been described as First Period construction because the First Period lasted
considerably longer in the Connecticut Valley—perhaps as late as the 1750s—than it did in the Massachusetts
Bay Colony. [Building Archeology, Nathaniel Parsons House, n.p.] The core of the present house was two stories
on a single-pile plan, with a hall and parlor flanking a central chimney, and chambers above. Surviving
components of this early construction include remnants of exterior siding that abuts at the corners; molded
horizontal sheathing in the former hall (front right room); and a rear lean-to that was added in the mid-18th
century. With its symmetrical five-bay façade, center entrance, center chimney, and side-gable roof, the Parsons
House took the standard residential form seen in the Connecticut Valley in general, and Northampton in
particular, up to 1775. [Regional Report, p. 152; MHC Reconnaissance Survey Report] Enlarged and re-sided ca.
1795-1815, and expanded further with the addition of the ell, east wing, and west wing ca. 1815-1830, the
Parsons House is perhaps most significant for preserving a record of change that spans a century. [Building
Archeology, Nathaniel Parsons House, n.p.]
The Parsons House also contributes greatly to an understanding of exterior and interior finishes from the early
18th century through the first quarter of the 19th century. Each of three distinct exterior siding materials survive, at
least in part, beneath the present weatherboard. On the façade were wide flush boards scored horizontally to
imitate thin weatherboards. This finish has been documented on only two other 18th-century houses, both in the
Connecticut Valley. Thin narrow weatherboards survive in the gable ends. Unscored flushboards survive on the
rear elevation. Both of these materials were conventional in this period. Two mortises above the front door
indicate the presence once of an early hood or pentice, of which there are very few documented examples in New
England. Similar hoods that were found on other Connecticut Valley houses seem to have been relatively plain.
[Building Archeology, Nathaniel Parsons House, n.p.]
The Federal-period remodeling of the Parsons House brought a change in not only the building’s roofline and
massing, but also the finishing of most of the interior rooms. Previously, only the parlor (front west room) had
been plastered, with short pieces of grass, rather than animal hair, used as a binder in the early plaster. The same
room was finished with a molded chair rail and baseboard that the Building Archeology report describes as “early
manifestations of what would soon become the standard Georgian room finish.” Upstairs, both chambers were
unfinished until at least the 1790s. According to the Building Archeology report, the lack of finish here adds to
the growing evidence that many 18th-century rooms lacked interior walls until the Federal period, with only a
single layer of weatherboarding, in this instance, protecting the room from the elements. The house also provides
evidence, only now gathering, that water-soluble or distemper paints, rather than oil paints, continued to be used
for interior woodwork into the 18th century. In addition, a number of decorative wall and woodwork finishes from
the first quarter of the 19th century have been identified in recent studies of the house. These include three
wallpaper patterns, each matched to a corresponding woodwork color; two distemper wall paints; and a fragment
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8 Page 9
of a now-destroyed overmantel painting, also executed in distempers. Over a dozen early woodwork colors have
been documented in the house, including a kitchen floor paint. [Building Archeology, Nathaniel Parsons House,
n.p.]
While the Parsons House was substantially remodeled during the Federal period, the Shepherd House, 66 Bridge
Street (ca. 1796, MHC ##2071), is an example of Federal-period design with a number of mid- to late 19th-
century, revival-style features added. These features include the Gothic Revival-style portico (ca. 1830-1860),
the Greek Revival-style cornice (ca. 1830-1860), and the Colonial Revival-style side porch (ca. 1900). Framing
visible from the basement indicates the Shepherd House was built in one episode. However, the presence of
large hewn beams and log joists, rather than sawn structural members, is not typical of houses of this late date
and location. Between the two chimney bases in the basement is a crib of hewn beams, many still bearing Roman
numerals, that are believed to have been reused from an earlier building. The interior provides a record of about
seventy years of occupancy by members of the Shepherd family. Particularly well preserved are the front rooms
and kitchen, which have sustained little change since the 1920s or earlier. [Building Archeology, Russell-
Shepherd House, p.2]
Finally, the Isaac Damon House, 46 Bridge Street (ca. 1813, MHC #2070) is architecturally significant as one of
the master builder’s very few domestic buildings, constructed as his own residence. Damon’s house is known to
have replaced an earlier (ca. 1770s) house on the same lot. Though the roof framing on Damon’s house has been
dated to the early 19th century, many of the timbers have been reused. Doubled sills visible in the basement of the
original one-story ell indicate that the frame of the ell actually pre-dates the main block. This may have been a
survival of the ell or an outbuilding of the earlier house. A particularly interesting feature in the plan and
construction of the Damon House is the projection of the first floor rear rooms beyond the rear wall of the main
block. This projection reads on the exterior as a one-story, hip-roofed appendage on the rear wall. Damon
achieved this projection, and consequently the larger first floor rear rooms, by constructing the second floor rear
wall as a truss, a principle with which he would have been familiar from his church and other institutional
buildings. It is unclear whether this arrangement was seen elsewhere in the Connecticut Valley during the
Federal period or was peculiar to this house. [Building Archeology, Isaac Damon House, n.p.]
Archaeological Significance
Historic archaeological resources described above have the potential to contribute social, cultural and economic
information for a portion of Northampton’s residential settlement from the original settlement through the 20th century.
Additional historical research combined with archaeological survey and testing may contribute significant information on
Northampton’s first period of settlement and the history of land use at the original four-acre home lot granted to Cornet
Joseph Parsons in 1654. The district encompasses a portion of that lot. Detailed analysis of historical and archaeological
data may produce information that documents the location of Joseph and Mary Parsons original home built after 1654 and
date of construction for the Nathaniel Parsons House (c. 1730) at 58 Bridge Street. That house is not believed to be the
house occupied by Nathaniel’s grandparents, but rather a house Nathaniel built about the time of his second marriage to
Abigail Bunce in 1728. Archaeological testing can be used to test currently held beliefs about the date of construction for
the house and the results of a recently conducted architectural study that found no physical evidence that an older house
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 8/9 Page 10/1
was incorporated into the present frame. Detailed analysis of the contents from occupational related features (trash pits,
privies, wells) may also contribute significant information on the lives of the district’s inhabitants reported to include
some of Northampton’s earliest and most prominent citizens. Information may be present that describes the dietary habits
of individuals and families, religion, general health and occupations. Information may also be present that details the
extent to which individuals and families in the district shared and benefited from Northampton’s favorable trade and
marketing relationship with Boston during the 18th and 19th centuries.
(end)
9. Major Bibliographical References
Clancy, Gregory (Architectural Conservator, Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities) and John
Leeke (Preservation Consultant). Report on Building Archeology at the Isaac Damon House,
Northampton, Massachusetts. Prepared for Historic Northampton and The Institute for Museum Services.
1992.
----------. Report on Building Archeology at the Nathaniel Parsons House, Northampton, Massachusetts.
Prepared for Historic Northampton and The Institute for Museum Services. 1992.
----------. Report on Building Archeology at Russell-Shepherd House, Northampton, Massachusetts. Prepared for
Historic Northampton. 1992.
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Secretary of the Commonwealth. Historical Data Relating to Counties, Cities,
and Towns in Massachusetts. Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1997.
“Historic Northampton opens new museum complex.” The Weathervane (A Newsletter from Historic
Northampton). Volume 24, Number 1. Winter 2000.
Historic Northampton research, provided by Marie Panik, Administrative Assistant, June 2000. Information
gleaned from various sources, including the Daily Hampshire Gazette newspaper, Representative
Families of Northampton, and city directories.
Historic Northampton web site (www.historic-northampton.org), including “About us,” “Brief history” of
Northampton, “Virtual tours,”and “Mary Parsons witchcraft trial.” May-June 2000.
Isaac Damon, Master Builder (caption text for exhibit). Historic Northampton, 1999-2000.
“Making history for Northampton: new museum complex to open in October.” The Weathervane (A Newsletter
from Historic Northampton). Volume 23, No. 1. Summer 1999.
(continued)
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 9 Page 2
Massachusetts Historical Commission. Historic and Archaeological Resources of the Connecticut Valley [cited as
Regional Report]. Boston: Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1984 (reprinted 1988).
----------. Inventory of Historic and Archaeological Assets of the Commonwealth.
----------. MACRIS database information on buildings designed by Isaac Damon.
---------. MHC Reconnaissance Survey Report: Northampton. July 1982.
Withey, Henry F. and Elsie Rathburn Withey. Biographical Dictionary of American Architects (Deceased). Los
Angeles: Hennessey & Ingalls, Inc., 1970.
NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval No. 1024-0018
(8-86)
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
National Register of Historic Places
Continuation Sheet Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
Northampton (Hampshire Co.), Massachusetts
Section number 10 Page 1
10. Geographical Data
UTM References
Zone Easting Northing
A 18 695590 4688070
B 18 695460 4687950
C 18 695420 4688000
D 18 695050 4688070
E 18 695070 4688100
F 18 695520 4688140
Verbal Boundary Description
The boundary of the nominated district is shown on the accompanying detail of the City of Northampton
assessor’s map. The district encompasses 2.5 acres and has approximately 316 feet of frontage on Bridge Street.
Boundary Justification
The boundary includes the three parcels that comprise the campus of Historic Northampton.
(end)
Photographs
Historic Name: Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic District
(a/k/a Historic Northampton)
Location: Bridge Street, Northampton, Massachusetts
Photographer: K. K. Broomer
Date: May 2000
Location of Negatives: Historic Northampton, 46 Bridge Street, Northampton, MA 01060
Photograph # View
1 Nathaniel Parsons House, 58 Bridge Street. View NW.
2 Shepherd House, 66 Bridge Street. View NW.
3 Isaac Damon House, 46 Bridge Street. View NW.
4 Shepherd Barn/Carriage House, 66 Bridge Street. View NE.
5 Historic Northampton grounds. View SW from Shepherd Barn/Carriage House toward
Damon House addition.
Parsons, Shepherd, and Damon Houses Historic DistrictNorthampton (Hampshire), MassachusettsDistrict Data SheetAssessor’s MHC# Historic Name Address Date of Style Resource StatusMap/ParcelConstruction Type32A/175 2070 Isaac Damon House 46 Bridge Street ca. 1813 Federal B Cfence 1999 ST NC32A/260 2125 Nathaniel Parsons House 58 Bridge Street ca. 1730 remodeled B Cca. 1795-1815 First Periodfence 1999 ST NCParsons Monument 1973 O NCBliss Family Monument 1986 O NCPergola early 20th c. ST CGazebo 1999 ST NC32A/176 2071 Shepherd House 66 Bridge Street ca. 1796 Federal B Cbarn/carriage house ca. 1840-1860 B Cfence 1999 ST NCKey: B=building, ST=structure, O=object, C=contributing, NC=noncontributingNote: All three fences are noncontributing due to their construction dates. Their designs, however, are based upon documentary evidence.Number of resources within district:Contributing NoncontributingBuildings 4 0Sites 0 0Structures 1 4Objects 0 2Total 5 6