The district includes the original Welles homestead, the Hunnewell Farm, and the eight contiguous country houses and outbuildings
H. H. Hunnewell built for himself and seven of his nine children:. • "Hunnewell Farm" (1887) - 30 acre working farm on the Natick/Wellesley line, purchased by John Welles in 1814, though farmed since colonial times. The current large barn, with a main structure measuring 90' x 40' and a 10,000 bale capacity in the haylofts, was built in 1887. • "The Cedars" (1891) - residence of Henry Sargent Hunnewell (1854-1931), designed by
Shaw & Hunnewell, and including a large landscape designed by
Charles Eliot and organized around long directed 'view avenues' to Morse's Pond and other features. The original house was pulled down in 1953 and replaced with a more modest brick dwelling in 1954. • "The Morrill House" (1775) - residence of Dr. Isaac Morrill, purchased by John Welles in 1836, and passed from him to his daughter Isabella Pratt Welles, wife of H. H. Hunnewell. The house was greatly enlarged in 1891 along plans of
Shaw & Hunnewell as a residence for Jane Welles Hunnewell (1851-1936) and her husband Francis Williams Sargent. Jane Hunnewell Sargent was a grandmother of
Francis W. Sargent, Governor of Massachusetts from 1969-1975. • "The Pines" (1891) - residence of Isabella Pratt Hunnewell (1849-1934) and her husband Robert Gould Shaw, designed by Shaw & Hunnewell. Mr. Shaw is not to be confused with his cousin,
Robert Gould Shaw, who commanded the African-American
54th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry during the US Civil War. This property is no longer in the family, having been sold to
Wellesley College in the 1970s. residence of Walter Hunnewell (1844-1921) in the historic district. Architect:
Ware & Van Brunt. ==See also==