Newton Colton House, Longmeadow, Massachusetts

The house at 817 Longmeadow Street, at the corner of Colton Place in Longmeadow, on May 13, 1915. Image courtesy of the Longmeadow Historical Society, Paesiello Emerson Collection.

The scene in 2024:

The house in the top photo was built in 1823 as the home of Newton Colton (1795–1858) and his newlywed wife Naomi Robinson (1799–1879). It stood on the east side of the Longmeadow Green, and it was owned by the Colton family throughout the 19th century. They had three children: Francis Parmalee Colton (1824–1852), Naomi Robinson Colton (1828–1920), and John Newton Colton (1837–1899). The oldest, Francis, became a physician, but died young from a disease that he contracted while working at a hospital in New York.

The youngest son, John Newton Colton, ended up inheriting this property, and he lived here until his death in 1899. A year later, the property was sold to Charles S. Allen (1847–1909), and at some point after his death the property was subdivided, and a new street—Colton Place—was laid out just to the south of the house, as shown in the foreground of the 1915 photo.

By about 1920, the property was chosen as the site of a new junior high school building, which required the removal of this house and the neighboring house to the north. However, rather than demolishing the historic houses, both were moved to new sites on or near the Green. This house was purchased by Charles (1881–1957) and Esther Bump (1878–1970), and in July 1921 they moved it across the Green to 870 Longmeadow Street, where it still stands today.

In the meantime, the junior high school was subsequently built here on this site, as shown in the modern-day photo. The building is now Center Elementary School, and it was completely reconstructed on the interior in the mid-1990s, leaving only the original exterior of the building.

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