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of Houses &
About the Information
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E-mail kliss@muddyriver.us
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Year
Built:
Permit Date: |
1932
11/10/1932 |
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Architect: |
Royal
Barry Wills |
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Builder: |
Maurice
Dunlavy |
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Cost
to Build: |
$8,000 |
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Owner
(On Permit Date): |
Maurice
Dunlavy |
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First
Residents: |
Oscar
B. & Anne D. Hawes |
25 Weybridge
Lane, like all four of the houses on this small and still private
street (and 21 others in Blake Park), was designed by Royal Barry
Wills and built by Maurice A. Dunlavy.
The first
owners of this house were Oscar and Anne Hawes. They were listed
at this address in the Street List from 1934 to 1938 and again beginning
in 1943. (They apparently rented the house to other tenants in the
intervening years.)
The Rev.
Oscar Brown Hawes (c1872-1963) was a Unitarian minister. He graduated
from Harvard University in 1893 and later attended the Harvard Divinity
School. He was ordained in 1897. He served as a minister in Colorado
and Toronto and then, for 17 years, in the Germantown section of
Philadelphia. After additional stints in New Jersey, Newton, MA,
and New Hampshire, he came to Brookline as minister of the Second
Unitarian Society -- their meeting house at the corner of Sewall
Avenue and Charles Street is now Temple Sinai -- in the mid-1930s
and served there until his retirement in 1938.
The house
was rented to various tenants for the next four years, including:
Blanche E. Sinclair, a nurse (listed in 1939); James F. Dawson,
a salesman, and his wife Hazel (1940); Dorothy Roberts, a housewife
who had been in China (1941); and Betsy Webster, a housewife (1942.)
Oscar Hawes
and his wife Anne (c1880-1957), who had retired to Maine, returned
to the Weybridge Lane house and were listed there again from 1943
until the early 1950s.
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