Shelley House (Madison, Connecticut)
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The Shelley House is a historic house at 248 Boston Post Road ( United States Route 1) in Madison, Connecticut. Probably built in the late 17th century and enlarged in the 18th century, this house's architecture clearly exhibits a typical growth pattern of colonial-era houses from a one-room
stone ender The stone-ender is a unique style of Rhode Island architecture that developed in the 17th century where one wall in a house is made up of a large stone chimney. History Rhode Island was first settled in 1636 by Roger Williams and other colonis ...
to a saltbox house. The house was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the United States federal government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures and objects deemed worthy of preservation for their historical significance or "great artistic v ...
in 1989.


Description and history

The Shelley House stands in what is now a mixed residential-commercial area in western Madison, on the south side of Boston Post Road east of Stonewall Lane. It is a -story timber-frame structure, covered with a gabled roof and finished with wooden clapboards. A large stone chimney rises at the center of the building. The second story hangs over the first in a common colonial-era configuration. The main facade is three bays wide, with a center entrance framed by symmetrically placed sash windows. The window above the door is slightly longer than the others. The rear roof face slopes down to the top of the first floor, with a small ell extending further to the rear. With The interior follows a typical center-chimney plan, with the entry vestibule also housing a narrow dogleg staircase to the second floor. There are chambers to either side of the chimney, and the rear
lean-to A lean-to is a type of simple structure originally added to an existing building with the rafters "leaning" against another wall. Free-standing lean-to structures are generally used as shelters. One traditional type of lean-to is known by its Finn ...
houses three rooms: a large central room originally used as a kitchen, and two smaller rooms in the corners. The modern kitchen is housed in the ell. The exact construction date is not known, and nothing is known about its original owners beyond the name Shelley, and fragmentary evidence suggesting they may have been employed as funerary stone cutters. Connecticut architectural historian J. Frederick Kelly ascribed the date of the oldest portion of the house, the east room, to the late 17th century. Architectural evidence suggests that this room and the main chimney were built first, giving the house a classic stone ender design, which was later expanded in the early 18th century with the addition of the rooms to the left of the chimney, and then by the lean-to in the mid-18th century. This architectural evolution, while quite common, is rarely documented as clearly in the architecture as it is in this house.


See also

*
List of the oldest buildings in Connecticut This article lists the oldest buildings in the state of Connecticut, United States of America. The dates of construction are based on land tax and probate records, architectural studies, genealogy, radio carbon dating, and dendrochronology. Buildi ...
* National Register of Historic Places listings in New Haven County, Connecticut


References

{{National Register of Historic Places National Register of Historic Places in New Haven County, Connecticut Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Connecticut Madison, Connecticut