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Raised above the road on a grass terrace retained by a handsome granite wall, this house is a typical two-and-one-half-story, central-chimney farmhouse. It is plain and boxy, with plenty of clapboarding on its front and perhaps a little too much space between the center elements and the peripheral windows on either side to contain the spread of its windows. It is graced by a typical Federal entrance with side lights and a blind elliptical fan. Beside it are a group of late-nineteenth- or early-twentieth-century farm buildings, including a handsomely shaped shingled barn with a sharply pitched mini-gable at the ridgepole, then long, gentle inclines in either direction. From their elevated site, house and outbuildings overlook a field with a steep decline across the road.