Built in 1900 by what was probably then the town's wealthiest residents, this transitional Queen Anne/Colonial Revival house is one of the most architecturally sophisticated buildings in the rural mountain community.
It is a 2+1⁄2-story wood-frame structure, basically rectangular in shape, with a hip roof, clapboard siding, and a stone foundation.
Its shape is obscured by the exuberant Queen Anne wealth of projecting gables, turrets, bays, and porches.
Predominant features of the front of the house are a rounded two-story turret-roofed projection on the right, and a tall gable on the left, whose roof slopes down to the first floor and shelters a recessed porch.
[2] The house was built in 1900 by John Tudor, a Welsh immigrant who had made a fortune as a mill owner in northern Vermont and settled in Stamford in 1890.