Designated November 13, 2001
Built in three sections, the Lefferts-Laidlaw house is a rare surviving example of a freestanding, temple-fronted Greek Revival style structure in Brooklyn. In form and decoration, this residence is typical of the designs popularized by the builders’ guides of the period, exhibiting such distinctive characteristics as a temple front with a pedimented gable roof, columns, and comer pilasters. In the early 1840s this house was occupied by engineer Marshall Lefferts, who later achieved prominence as an inventor and as the commander of the Seventh Regiment during the Civil War.
*Excerpt from the Landmarks Preservation Commission designation report
STATUS Designated Individual Landmarks
The Neighborhood
Clinton Hill
Clinton Hill has a variety of building types including row houses, mansions, stables, apartment houses, and institutional buildings. They were constructed during the 1840s into the 1920s and display the many styles popular over the course of nearly a century.
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