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  1. The First Harrison Gray Otis House is a historic house museum and National Historic Landmark at 141 Cambridge Street in the West End of Boston, Massachusetts. The house, built in 1795–96, was the first of three houses designed by Charles Bulfinch and built for Massachusetts politician Harrison Gray Otis .

  2. The first Otis house, built in 1796, is located at 141 Cambridge Street, next to the Old West Church in Boston's West End. It is now a National Historic Landmark, and a historic house museum owned and operated by Historic New England, which also uses part of it as its administrative headquarters. Second Harrison Gray Otis House.

  3. Charles Bulfinch designed the house for Harrison Gray Otis, a lawyer who was instrumental in developing nearby Beacon Hill, served in Congress, and was a mayor of Boston. It is the first of three houses Bulfinch designed for Otis and his wife, Sally Foster Otis.

    • First Harrison Gray Otis House1
    • First Harrison Gray Otis House2
    • First Harrison Gray Otis House3
    • First Harrison Gray Otis House4
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  4. The first Harrison Gray Otis House, built in 1796 and sitting at 141 Cambridge Street in Bowdoin Square, is one of the few surviving remnants of the old West End. Boston architect Charles Bulfinch designed the mansion in the Federal style, with fanlight and palladian windows and an emphasis on symmetry.

  5. Harrison Gray Otis House, 1795, Boston, Massachusetts, headquarters of the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, 1962. Study of a bell tower, New Old South Church, Boylston Street, Boston, Mass., ca. 1930. Nahum Capen (1801-1886).

  6. The first of three houses that Charles Bulfinch designed within ten years for Harrison Gray Otis, a prominent lawyer and member of Congress, the house has served as the headquarters of Historic New England, Inc. (originally the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities) since 1916.

  7. Mar 19, 2016 · At the end of the 1700s, Cambridge Street was lined with the homes of wealthy Bostonians, including lawyer and politician Harrison Gray Otis. His house was designed by Charles Bulfinch and completed in 1796 while Otis was serving as the U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts.