Charles B Smith home
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Charles B. Smith purchased this large lot in 1882 for $1200, and soon after that built this Queen Anne style house. The home still retains it classic Victorian shape and textured surface of undulating, horizontal and imbricated siding. Gables are decorated by the sunburst motif. A beveled glass window is on the east façade of the house. Its original Eastlake style pedimented porch with large turned posts and spindles, and porch frieze are gone, as is a turret with conical roof on the southeast corner, that contained a recessed porch. The current porch with its thick Tuscan order columns give it a Greek Revival quality. Charles B. Smith was a salesman. The 1900 census show Smith, his wife Millie, and a live-in servant here. Smith sold the house in 1910 to Lewis Clifford (“Cliff”) and Robin Thirkield Anderson, who owned it until 1939 when it passed to their daughter, Mary Ballentine Craig, who owned it until the 1960s. Cliff Anderson was the grandson of L. G. Anderson, who during his very successful business career, managed the Franklin Electric Company, and Middletown Gas and Electric. Cliff was also a vice president of both the Paul Sorg Paper Company and American Trust and Savings Bank of Middletown. The 1910 and 1920 censuses show Cliff and Robin living in this house.