Built about 1885, it is a well-preserved example of Queen Anne Victorian architecture, home to Frederick H. Daniels before he became president of Washburn and Moen, a leading Worcester industrial firm.
[1] The Frederick Daniels House is located northeast of downtown Worcester, in the city's Brittan Square neighborhood.
It is a 2+1⁄2-story structure, with a brick first floor and wood-frame upper levels, covered by a complex gabled roof.
The ground floor is trimmed with terra cotta panels and sandstone, with windows set in segmented-arch openings, while the upper floors are finished in a combination of clapboards and decorative shingles.
Its first owner, Frederick Daniels, was at that time a supervisor at the Washburn and Moen Wire Company who had worked his way up from humble beginnings.