Another mill owner's house, again by Hall, this originally belonged to a partner in the Greene and Daniels Thread Company. It had operated on the site which Greene sold, a few years earlier, to the Pawtucket Hair Cloth Company ( CF2), after relocating his own much enlarged plant in Pawtucket directly across the river from its old site. The house is among the finest examples of preserved Victorian Second Empire in the state, and it is something of a miracle that such an elaborate panoply of ornamentation has survived in an area where most architecture of its vintage has been badly treated. The curvature of a bonnet gable in the flared mansard is reinforced, first by its arched and balconied window, then below in a tripleted variation (like the Fales House cupola [ CF4]) by way of aggrandizing the arching entrance and its ornamental porch. Tripled post-like Corinthian columns support the corners of the porch, which is further embellished with a mix of bracketing, paneling, leafage, and crosses of Lorraine. Heavily framed windows on either side have segmental-arched hoods on the first story, and flat hoods above. Two first-story window bays project toward what used to be a lawn to the corner of Dexter Avenue and extending most of a block along it. From the east, a recessed service wing has its own porch in the manner of the other.
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Benjamin F. Greene House
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