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E-mail kliss@muddyriver.us
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Year
Built:
Permit Date: |
1926
1/20/1926 |
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Architect: |
Strickland,
Blodgett, & Law |
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Builder: |
Horn
Brothers |
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Cost
to Build: |
$12,000 |
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Owner
(On Permit Date): |
Anna
M. Horn, Roslindale |
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First
Residents: |
George
H. & Anna M. Horn |
This house,
along with its neighbors at 33 and 39 Somerset, was in the first
group built on this street. In fact, the building permits for these
three were issued under the earlier street name of Blake Road East.
(See A Few Words About Street Names.)
Carpenter
and builder George Horn (1873-1965??), who founded the Horn Brothers
construction company in 1900, built this house for his family. He
and his wife Anna (born c1878) were both born in Denmark. Anna came
to the U.S. in 1880 and George in 1893. They were married c1904.
The Horns
had two sons, both of whom followed in their father's footsteps.
The older son, Frank W. Horn, became an architectural engineer.
He lived at this house with his parents until 1939 or 1940. He and
wife Emily returned to become the owners, or at least residents,
of the house, at the end of World War II.
The second
son, G. Arthur Horn (1911-2001), was associated with his father's
company for many years. He also founded Horn Packaging Corp., a
manufacturer of corrugated cartons in Ayer; and Horn International
Packaging and Forwarding, an export crating company in Billerica.
Described in his Boston Globe obituary as "a versatile
engineer and inveterate tinkerer," he built submarine lookout
towers during World War II and later constructed landscapes for
the lunar module and Tyrannosaurus Rex exhibits at Boston's Museum
of Science.
Members
of the Horn family lived in this house until shortly after World
War II. The 1930 U.S. Census listed the residents as: George H.
Horn, 57, builder (contractor), born Denmark; Anna W. Horn, 52,
born Denmark; Frank W. Horn, 23, engineer (architectural); and G.
Arthur Horn, 19. The house was valued at $17,300.
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