The Nickels-Sortwell House is set facing south on a sideways-sloping lot on the north side of Main Street (
U.S. Route 1) in the center of Wiscasset. It is a three-story wood-frame structure, five bays wide and deep, the length including a rear ell. It has a low-pitch
hip roof and is set on a granite foundation. The front facade is finished in flushboard, while the remainder of the house is
clapboarded. On the first floor, the middle three bays are outlined by slightly projecting arches, the central bay (where the entrance is) being slightly wider. The entry consists of a single door, flanked by
pilasters and sidelight windows embellished with oval tracery, and topped by a semi-elliptical
fanlight with similar tracery. The entry is sheltered by a
portico supported by four
Corinthian columns, with a latticework
balustrade on top. Above the central projecting arches, four fluted Corinthian pilasters rise to the roof level. The fenestration of the bays other than the central one is uniform; there is a
Palladian window at the second level in the center, and a half-round window at the third level, exhibiting tracery similar to that found in the entry windows. The interior of the house has a modified central-hall plan, with the central hall divided by a partition into a front public hall and a rear service hall, which is continued to the service rooms in the rear ell. The front hall is semi-oval in shape, and is divided crosswise by an arch. Doorways in the front half lead left and right into large parlor spaces, and a free-standing spiral staircase rises in the center. The interior retains much of its original woodwork, including window seats and recessed inside shutters for the windows. ==History==