The house at 77 Lexington Road in Concord, around 1908. Image courtesy of the Library of Congress, Detroit Publishing Company Collection.
The house in 2023:
As explained in more detail in the previous post, this house was built sometime around the 1720s. It was originally much smaller, but it was expanded sometime around the 1780s by Reuben Brown, a saddler who lived here with his wife Polly and their eight children. Brown had his shop in the building next door at 69 Lexington Road, which was later converted into a house. He lived here until his death in 1832, and the house was later owned by his son Reuben Brown Jr. and then by George and Julia Clark. Julia ultimately sold the house to the Concord Antiquarian Society in 1886, and it was converted into a museum.
The top photo was taken around 1908, when the house was still owned by the Concord Antiquarian Society. However, the organization, which was later renamed the Concord Museum, moved to its current facility just a little to the east of here in 1930, and this house subsequently became a restaurant and an inn, before being converted back to a single-family residence in 1955. It is still standing here today, with only minor changes, including alterations to the ell on the right side, triple windows beneath the gables on the third floor, and the removal of the historically-inaccurate shutters that were on the house in the top photo.