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Charles Q. Clapp House

Charles Q. Clapp House
Charles Q. Clapp House.jpg
Front of the Charles Q. Clapp House, HABS photo, 1965
Charles Q. Clapp House is located in Maine
Charles Q. Clapp House
Charles Q. Clapp House is located in the US
Charles Q. Clapp House
Location 97 Spring Street, Portland, Maine
Coordinates 43°39′13″N 70°15′42″W / 43.65361°N 70.26167°W / 43.65361; -70.26167Coordinates: 43°39′13″N 70°15′42″W / 43.65361°N 70.26167°W / 43.65361; -70.26167
Area 0.3 acres (0.12 ha)
Built 1832 (1832)
Architect Clapp, Charles Q.
Architectural style Greek Revival
Part of Spring Street Historic District (#70000043)
NRHP Reference # 72000072
Significant dates
Added to NRHP February 23, 1972
Designated CP April 3, 1970

The Charles Q. Clapp House is a historic house at 97 Spring Street in central Portland, Maine. Built in 1832, it is one of Maine's important early examples of high style Greek Revival architecture. Probably designed by its first owner, Charles Q. Clapp, it served for much of the 20th century as the home of the Portland School of Fine and Applied Art, now the Maine College of Art. It is now owned by the adjacent Portland Museum of Art. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.

The Clapp House is located on the north side of Spring Street in Downtown Portland, behind the main bulk of the Portland Museum of Art, and immediately adjacent to the McLellan-Sweat Mansion, a National Historic Landmark that is also part of the museum complex. The house is two stories tall, with brick walls set on a raised granite foundation, and capped by a wood-frame gabled roof. Its front facade faces south, and is divided into three bays, with fluted Ionic columns at the outside and fluted Ionic pilasters framing the center bay. The center bay has a large sash window on the first floor, set in a recessed rectangular panel, with a smaller three-part window on the second floor characterized by its flanking oval windows with elaborately carved surrounds. The side elevations each have a recessed porch supported by three Ionic columns, with colored tile floors laid in geometric patterns. Each porch is accessed via a separate granite stair leading to it on the main facade.

The house was built in 1832, and was probably designed by Charles Q. Clapp, its first owner. Clapp was the son of one of Portland's wealthiest businessmen, and was engaged in real estate development in the city. Some of the designs on the inside and outside of the house are traceable to popular works describing Greek Revival style, including Asher Benjamin's The Practical House Carpenter and Edward Shaw's Civil Architecture. In addition to this house, Clapp is credited with making Greek Revival alterations to the McLellan-Sweat Mansion (which he lived in during the 1820s), and for construction of the Charles Q. Clapp Block, one of Portland's oldest surviving commercial buildings.


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