The Hager–Mead House is a historic house at 411 Main Street in Waltham, Massachusetts.
[citation needed] It is five bays wide and two deep, with chimneys set in the ridge, and a center entry flanked by Doric pilasters and topped by a six-pane transom window and modillioned cornice.
The house was built by Samuel Hager, a farmer from Watertown, who promptly sold it Stephen Mead, a blacksmith, in 1796.
[2] The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.
This article about a Registered Historic Place in Waltham, Massachusetts is a stub.