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Prospect Hill, New Haven

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It has been suggested that Prospect Hill Historic District (New Haven, Connecticut) be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since February 2010.
Prospect Hill neighborhood planning area, bordered in red. Also displayed are approximate boundaries of the Prospect Hill Historic District, in blue, and outlined in green the Hillhouse Avenue Historic District.

Prospect Hill is a mostly residential neighborhood of the city of New Haven, Connecticut. It is located in the north central portion of the city, directly north of Downtown New Haven. The neighborhood contains Albertus Magnus University and a portion of the main campus of Yale University, including the Science Hill area, the Hillhouse Avenue area and the Yale Peabody Museum. The City of New Haven defines the neighborhood to be the region bounded by the town of Hamden in the north, Winchester Avenue in the west, Munson Street/Hillside Place/Prospect Street in the southwest, Trumbull Street in the south, and Whitney Avenue in the east. Most of the residential part of the neighborhood is part of the Prospect Hill Historic District. Prospect Street is the main thoroughfare through the neighborhood.

Most of the residential portion of the neighborhood is designated as the Prospect Hill Historic District, a 185-acre (75 ha) historic district that is significant primarily for its architecture. The historic district includes major collections of Queen Anne architecture, Shingle Style architecture, Colonial Revival architecture, and Tudor Revival architecture. Numerous other styles are also represented. Architects and firms represented include Boston's Peabody and Stearns and R. Clipston Sturgis; New York's Grosvenor Atterbury, Don Barber, J.C. Cady & Co., George S. Chappell, Delano & Aldrich, Ewing & Chappell, James Gamble Rogers, Rossiter & Muller, and Heathcote Woolsey; Philadelphia's Mantle Fielding; Connecticut's Henry Austin and numerous others.

Selected contributing properties

The Prospect Hill Historic District includes major collections of Queen Anne architecture, Shingle Style architecture, Colonial Revival architecture, and Tudor Revival architecture. Some of the more significant properties are listed below.

In addition to the Prospect Hill Historic District, the official neighborhood also includes the Hillhouse Avenue Historic District, an area adjoining Downtown New Haven south of Science Hill. The neighborhood also includes part of the Edgerton Park. The Prospect Hill Historic District excludes Yale University's relatively modern buildings on Science Hill as well as several Yale graduate student housing facilities (the Whitehall Apartment Complex, the Mansfield Apartments, and the Esplanade Apartments).

Demographics

The residential part of the neighborhood roughly corresponds to census tract 1418.. Census tract 1418 excludes the portion officially within Yale University. As of the 2000 census, the total population of census track 1418 was 4,052. Of the population, 43.02% identified as White, 32.33% as Black, 0.20% as Native American, 19.55% as Asian, 0.10% as Pacific Islander, 2.07% as some other race, and 2.74% as two or more races. Of the total population of any race, 4.94% identified as being Hispanic or Latino, while 11.77% identified as being of Chinese ethnicity.

References

  1. Prospect Hill (PDF) (Map). New Haven City Plan Department. Retrieved 2009-02-06.
  2. A small row of properties on the west side of Prospect Street south of Hillside Place is technically within the Dixwell neighborhood planning zone.
  3. ^ Susan Ryan (January 5, 1979). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Prospect Hill National Register District / Prospect Hill (pages 1-65 of combined PDF)" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 12 photos, from 2002 (photo captions at page 79 of text document)

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