fbpx

Front elevation and wall section drawing of the John McCarthy and William Kallady Houses, Roxbury, Boston, Mass., Jan. 26, 1897

Collection Type

  • Architecture

Date

1897-01-26

Location Note

Vertical File 4A, Drawer 1

GUSN

GUSN-222021

You can find this within

Description

This front elevation and wall section drawing is for two triple-deckers on Calumet Street in the Parker Hill neighborhood of Roxbury in Boston, Massachusetts. The architects, Samuel Rantin & Son, designed the dwellings for John McCarthy (154 Calumet Street) and William Kallady (152 Calumet Street).

Details

Descriptive Terms

three-deckers (dwellings)
tracing cloth
front (positional attribute)
walls
black (color)
red (color)
orange (color)
ink
graphite (mineral)
starch
dwellings
exterior elevations
architectural drawings (visual works)
sections (orthographic projections)

Additional Identification Number

DigitalID 000214
AccessID 347
Other identifier HNEDID-000214

Physical Description

1 exterior elevation and 1 section drawing : black, red, and orange ink and graphite on starch-coated fabric ; 20 7/8 x 11 inches

Collection Code

AR001

Collection Name

General architectural and cartographic collection

Date of Acquisition

1992

Reference Code

AR001.USMA.0250.002.003

Acquisition Type

Museum Purchase

Places

Roxbury (Boston, Suffolk county, Massachusetts) [neighborhood]

Record Details

Originator

Samuel Rantin & Son (architect)
Rantin, Samuel, ca. 1847-1929 (Architect)
Rantin, Samuel J., ca. 1875-1960 (Architect)

Material Type

exterior elevations
architectural drawings (visual works)
sections (orthographic projections)

Subjects

Calumet Street (Roxbury, Boston, Mass.)
Parker Hill (Roxbury, Boston, Mass.)

Accruals Note

Included in the Drawing Toward Home: Designs for Domestic Architecture from Historic New England exhibition.

Variant Title

John McCarthy and William Kallady House, Calumet Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts, 1897

Description Level

Component

Location Note

Vertical File 4A, Drawer 1

Historical/Biographical Note

Sources


Drawing Toward Home exhibition catalogue entry.

Reparative Language in Collections Records

Historic New England is committed to implementing reparative language description for existing collections and creating respectful and inclusive language description for new collections. If you encounter language in Historic England's Collections Access Portal that is harmful or offensive, or you find materials that would benefit from a content warning, please contact [email protected].