Main Street - Unionville

Historic homes walking tour of Main Street in Unionville, CT

Main Street - Unionville

Farmington, Connecticut 06085, United States

Created By: Unionville Historic District and Properties Commission

Tour Information

Originally known as Langdon’s Quarters in the 18th century, Unionville began to thrive with the use of the Farmington River for small manufacturing as early as 1790. Then it boomed after 1830, when the river was dammed to provide stronger and more consistent water power. By 1850, a multitude of factories and businesses operated here, producing items such as cutlery, fine-grade paper, buttons, felts, nuts & bolts, furniture, and hooks and eyes. Imagine a town with architect-designed homes for factory owners and managers; modest rental houses, tenements and rooming houses for workers; public buildings serving the religious, intellectual, entertainment and safety needs of residents – all connected by a web of shallow canals and holding basin, and serviced by the trolley and then the train. North and west of the center were active farms.


Tour Map

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What You'll See on the Tour

The original building that stood on this site was built sometime shortly after 1850 when the land was purchased by Franklin A. Tryon. Tryon and partner Truman Sanford  established Unionville’s earliest general store in the building. The ... Read more
1887-1888 Queen Anne/ Victorian This house has an asymmetrical facade with steep cross gabled roofs and a turret tower. The four different patterns of wood siding help accentuate the asymmetry and the additional amount of trim around each o... Read more
1865 Italianate Victorian Style With a broad hipped roof, generous overhanging eaves, tall windows and a wraparound veranda porch, this home exhibits many classic elements of the Italianate Victorian style.  This structure, in its present ... Read more
1855-1869 Italianate Victorian Style With a broad hipped roof, generous overhanging eaves, tall windows and a wraparound veranda porch, this home exhibits many classic elements of the Italianate Victorian style.  Truman Sanford was born in... Read more
circa 1863 Italianate Victorian Style This present-day office building has had a lot of alterations and renovations since it became a commercial property. There are some remnants of the original Victorian residential building like the decor... Read more
1836 Greek Revival This is a great example of the Greek Revival style of residential architecture with its broad gable roof end entry and portico doorway. The heavy front eaves, cornices and entablature appear to be supported by the exagger... Read more
1885 Queen-Anne/Stick Style A very ornate house with a blend of two Victorian styles of residential architecture. An asymmetrical floor plan and facade with a variety of exterior siding and decorative trim components, and a turret tower. Th... Read more
The original St Mary’s Church was dedicated in 1876 (Alderman, Clifford, Pg.51) The original church  burned down in 1885. The new church seen in the image was demolished in 2005 when the current St Mary’s Church was built across the s... Read more
circa 1835  Federal/Georgian/Greek Revival Style The building is the only brownstone in Unionville.  This unique stone house stands out amongst its wood clad neighborhood houses. Its symmetrical facade is comprised of 12/12 double hung sa... Read more
1871 Italianate Victorian Style This home has a hipped roof with flat entablature beneath the eaves that contain a number of attic windows between pairs of corbel brackets. The tall narrow windows have decorative trim surrounds and there i... Read more
circa 1885 Eastlake-Stick Victorian Style Looking across the street -  A large duplex home with a symmetrical facade, a large projecting front dormer, and front porch entryway. The additional trim accents the different siding material fro... Read more
1912 Queen-Anne Victorian/Colonial Revival Style Having an asymmetrical floor plan and facade with multiple dormers, and a veranda porch with classical columns, this house contains details from the Victorian era of the late nineteenth and t... Read more
1870  Italianate Victorian Style A low pitched hip roof adorns this Victorian house with large overhanging eaves supported by pairs of corbel brackets. The tall narrow 2/2 double hung windows have decorative trim surrounds and there is an ... Read more
1837 Greek Revival Style This clapboard sided house has a long-gabled roof and an exaggerated flat frieze which contains attic vents. Originally, these vents may have had operable windows. There are two large pilasters flanking the facade ... Read more
Unfortunately, the sidewalk ends at 230 Main Street. We are including information for Lawton’s Mill which is across the Farmington River. The mill in many ways mirrors the early history of Unionville.  At your leisure when you are able t... Read more

 

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