
The full impact of this farm complex, which has become a country seat, becomes apparent only from the adjacent field to the south, which it faces in a right-angled orientation to South of Commons Road. Isaac Richmond was a builder who settled in Little Compton after apprenticing with John Holden Greene in Providence. Eventually he built the original house as a retirement farm. His son, Joshua B. Richmond, who lived in Boston, converted it in the 1890s to a summer residence, giving it the same sort of lighthearted grandeur as the Manchester family achieved at the same time in altering their mid-nineteenth-century house on Sakonnet Point Road. The junior Richmond enlarged his father's house by adding a columned porch across the front and the superstructure of the elongated dormer with flanking pedimented windows, all topped by a pedimented cupola tucked between paired chimneys. He also made a water tower double as a view tower