Newton and Asa Colton Houses, Longmeadow, Massachusetts

The houses at 817 and 809 Longmeadow Street in Longmeadow, looking north from the corner of Colton Place, in June 1921. Image courtesy of the Longmeadow Historical Society, Paesiello Emerson Collection.

The same scene in 2024:

As explained in the previous two posts, these houses once stood on the east side of the Longmeadow Green, and both were originally owned by the Colton family. The house in the foreground was built in 1823 as the home of Newton Colton, while the one farther in the distance was built around 1775 for Asa Colton. A third Colton house, at 797 Longmeadow Street, is also partially visible in the distance, and it is said to have been built in 1833 for Justin Colton, although it might be older than this.

The top photo was taken shortly before this scene was drastically changed. By the early 20th century, Longmeadow’s population was growing rapidly due to new suburban developments in the town, and this site was chosen for a new junior high school. To make room for the school, the two houses here in the foreground were both moved in 1921, with the Newton Colton house in the foreground being moved in July, about a month after the photo was taken.

Today, both of these houses are still standing in their new locations. The Newton Colton house was moved across the green to 870 Longmeadow Street, while the Asa Colton house was moved eastward from its original location, where it now stands at 44 Colton Place. The Justin Colton house, which did not need to be moved, is still standing here in its original location, and can be seen in the distance on the left side of the present-day photo.

The junior high school building later became Center Elementary School, and it underwent a major reconstruction in the mid-1990s. This involved completely gutting and rebuilding the interior, while leaving the exterior largely unchanged in its original 1920s Colonial Revival appearance, as shown in the present-day photo.

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