Zachariah Curtiss House

Zachariah Curtiss House
General information
Type post-and-beam
Architectural style Colonial
Location Trumbull, Connecticut
Construction started ca. 1686 and ca. 1721
Governing body Private
Dimensions
Other dimensions 22' by 18' and 35' by 26'
Design and construction
Architect Zachariah Curtiss

The Zachariah Curtiss Houses are located at 2950 Nichols Avenue on the Farm Highway or Route 108 on the south side of Mischa Hill, and are among the oldest houses in the village of Nichols in Trumbull, Connecticut in New England. They are both Colonial American wooden post-and-beam timber frame farm houses.

The older and smaller house of the two was built by Zachariah I around 1686 and the second house was built by his son Zachariah II around 1721 in the Georgian architectural style.[1][2]

The houses were built on separate sides of the Farm highway. The smaller house was moved alongside and attached to the larger house as an ell around 1800. As the population of the village increased, the traffic, which traveled directly through the Curtiss farm, increased as well and the house was moved to improve safety and privacy. Building dwellings or farm buildings on opposite sides of the highway, or within the grassy median between the travel lanes, was very common in Stratford.

The houses also have the distinction of being located in four different townships in their history, but have never been moved more than 50 feet; Stratford (1686–1725), Unity (1725–1744), North Stratford (1744–1797) and Trumbull (1797-present). And, they have been owned by only three families surnames in their history; Curtiss, Cooper and the present owner.

Zachariah Curtiss

Zachariah Curtiss, the son of William, was born in Stratford on November 14, 1659.[3] Zachariah received division land as a part of the three mile or wood's division on November 17, 1693, that was described as lying in ye woods as you go to Captain's Farm.[4]

Farm Highway

On December 7 1696 the Farm Highway, present-day Nichols Avenue Connecticut Route 108, was laid out by the Stratford selectmen to the south side of Mischa Hill.[5] The highway was 12 rods wide, or 198 feet, where Broadbridge Brook runs off the south side of Mischa Hill, at Zachariah Curtiss, his land, and at Captain's Farm. Broadbridge Brook runs off Mischa Hill west of the present-day intersection of Route 108 and the Merritt Parkway and flows southwesterly to Broadbridge Avenue in Stratford.

The Captain the town recorder was referring to may have been Captain William Curtiss who was Captain of the first Train Band and owned a farm at Turkey Hill at this time. This hill was located two miles from the meeting house along the Farm Highway on the way north to Mischa Hill. The hill was also commonly called Second Hill, Good Hill and Grassy Hill.[6]

The Captain could have also been Joseph, Joseph Jr. or John Hawley who owned the farm, called Ephraim Hawley House, which bordered Zachariah Curtiss to the south. John Hawley was Captain of the Second or North Train Band and was Justice of the Peace for Fairfield County. In October 1725, when the Assembly of the Connecticut Colony approved the Parish of Unity, they referred to the Farm Highway as Nickol's Farm's Road.[7] The Nichols Avenue portion of Route 108 in Trumbull is considered to be the third-oldest documented highway in Connecticut after the Mohegan Road, Connecticut Route 32 in Norwich (1670) and the King's Highway, or Boston Post Road Route 1 (1673).[8]

Zachariah Curtiss II

On February 27 1721, Zachariah I transferred his entire farm with 52 acres (0.21 km2) of land to his son Zachariah II. The farm was described as containing two separate parcels. One parcel contained 20 acres (0.081 km2) with a dwelling house and was on the west side of the Farm highway and was bounded west on Daniel Hawley (Ephraim Hawley's son), south on Joseph Curtiss, north on Fairchild land and east on the Farm highway. The other parcel was on the east side of the Farm highway and contained 32 acres (0.13 km2) of land and a barn and was bounded west with the Farm highway and part west on Benjamin Beach, Ephraim and Joseph Curtiss, part south on Captain John Hawley (Ephraim Hawley's brother), east with Benjamin Beach and north on Joseph Curtiss,[9]

Mitchell Curtiss

In 1746, Zachariah II left his new house, the old barn and whole homestead to his only son Mitchell when he died. Curtiss and his wife, who predeceased him, are buried in the Unity Burial Ground. The Fairfield Probate Court appraised the farm, which contained only 50 acres (0.20 km2), at 1,050 pounds. The older house with 2 acres (0.0081 km2), built by Zachariah I, was still inhabited by the elder Curtiss until 1748 and was not included in Zachariah II's inventory of his estate in 1746. Mitchell married Phoebe Peet, the daughter of Deacon Thomas Peet, in 1753 and subsequently gifted the larger Georgian house and fourteen acres to his son Zachariah III in 1776 when he married.

The house today

Over the last 325 years, the appearance of the houses have evolved very little as there have been only three families to own the Curtiss farm. Many original architectural details remain preserved including; dirt cellars, field stone foundations, oak post and beam frames, oak roof sheathing, pine flooring, clam shell plaster walls and ceilings over oak lath, original windows and frames.

Images

See also

Notes

  1. Geoffrey Rossano PhD, Historic and Architectural Resource Survey of Trumbull, Connecticut, produced for the Connecticut Historical Commission, Hartford, CT, 2002
  2. Heather Jones and Bruce Harvey, Historic and Architectural Survey of the Town of Trumbull, Fairfield County, Connecticut, Produced for the Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism, Hartford, CT, 2010
  3. Stratford Land Records Vol. 1, page 27
  4. Stratford Land Records Vol. 2, page 315
  5. Orcutt, Vol. 2 p. 1049
  6. Genealogy of the Bostwick family in America: The descendants of Arthur Bostwick of Stratford, CT, p. 56, Bryan Printing Co., 1901
  7. Colonial Connecticut Records 1636–1776, Vol. 6 p. 568
  8. Kurumi Connecticut Roads retrieved on 2008-04-11
  9. Stratford land records Vol. 3 p. 229

Coordinates: 41°14′05″N 73°09′34″W / 41.2348°N 73.1594°W / 41.2348; -73.1594

References

  • Reverend Samuel Orcutt, A History of the Old Town of Stratford and the City of Bridgeport, Connecticut, Volume 1, Fairfield Historical Society, 1886
  • Reverend Samuel Orcutt, A History of the Old Town of Stratford and the City of Bridgeport, Connecticut, Volume 2, Fairfield Historical Society, 1886
  • History of Trumbull Dodrasquicentennial 1797–1972 Commemorative Book, Trumbull Historical Society, 1972
  • Connecticut General Assembly, The Public records of the Connecticut Colony 1636–1776, Press of the Case, Lockwood & Brainard, 1885
  • William Cothren, History of Ancient Woodbury Connecticut, Bronson Brothers, Waterbury, 1854
  • Frederick Haines Curtiss, A Genealogy of the Curtiss Family, Rockwell and Churchill Press, Boston, 1903
  • William Richard Cutter, New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial, Lewis Historical Publishing, NY, 1914
  • Franklin Bowditch Dexter, Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College, Henry Holt & Co., New York, 1896
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