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National Park Service - Rhode Island Historical Preservation ...

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NPS Form 10-900-i<br />

-<br />

-<br />

0MB Nt 1024-0018<br />

En,- 10-31-U<br />

3-82 - -<br />

United States Department of the Interior<br />

<strong>National</strong> <strong>Park</strong> <strong>Service</strong> - -<br />

<strong>National</strong> Register of Historic Places<br />

Inventory-Nomination Form -<br />

Continuation sheet 44 - Item number 7<br />

Page 45<br />

162 - -<br />

no plat/lot numbers<br />

- -Church Street near Kingstown Road, Church Street-Indian Run<br />

Bridge C. 1883:<br />

A low, stone-arch bridge with picturesque beach-boulder<br />

abutments. This was one of seven stone bridges erected at Peace<br />

Dale from Rowland Hazard II’s designs. C<br />

163 -<br />

49-4/37 - -<br />

-Between indian Run Road, Church Street, Kingstown Road and School<br />

Street: - -<br />

This "mini-park" along Indian Run greatly enhances the<br />

beauty and seclusion of the several company-built Colonial<br />

Revival houses on Indian Run Road. NC<br />

i64 - -<br />

49-1/35 -<br />

1 Thdian Run Road, southwest corner Church Street c. 1900:<br />

Around the turn of the century, the Peace Dale Manufacturing<br />

Company erected a number of Colonial Revival dwellings, all with<br />

gambrel roofs but otherwise varying considerably in design, size,<br />

and elaboration. The first of these houses was erected for Fred<br />

Johnson, the Hazard family’s head gardener, before 1895; it<br />

stands at 113 Church Street #154. Three other modest cottages<br />

stand at 12, 15 and 16 Brown Street #149, 150 and 151. This<br />

house, at the corner of Church Street, is the first in a row of<br />

four dwellings on Indian Run #164, 165, 166, and 167.fàcing out<br />

across the brookside part to Kingstown Road. The largest and<br />

most elaborate of these buildings, no longer stands; it was north<br />

of Indian Run Road, on the opposite side of Church Street, and<br />

was the mill agent’s residence. All of these houses are<br />

attributed to architect Frank AngelI, probably working with<br />

Rowland Hazard II before the latter’s death in 1898. One Indian<br />

Run Road is similar in size and elaboration- to the Johnson<br />

cottage just behind 113 Church Street, #154. It is a flank<br />

gambrel,-1-1/2-story, 3-bay dwelling with a cross-gambrel<br />

entrance pavilion incorporating a recessed entrance porch. C -<br />

165 - - - -<br />

49-4/36 Indian Run Road c. 1900:<br />

This is the finest of the extant company-built Colonial<br />

Revival, gambrel-roofed homes here. It is a big, 1-1/2-story,<br />

clapboard-and-shingle, flank-gambrel dwelling with a Tuscan porch<br />

across the front intersecting a 2-story entrance pavilion, which

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